<p>"Ununennium (eka-francium) is the temporary name of an undiscovered chemical element in the periodic table that has the temporary symbol Uue and has the atomic number 119. Like other alkali metals, it would most likely be extremely reactive with water and even explode in air at room temperatures. Interestingly, it would be the first **radioactive liquid<a href=“if%20guesses%20are%20right,%20although%20ununbium%20is%20also%20predicted%20to%20be%20a%20liquid”>/b</a> to be discovered. There are radioactive solids, and radon is a gas but there are no liquids (except possibly ununbium). It would also be only the second liquid metal (the other being mercury).</p>
<p>Element 119 would be the first element in the eighth period of the periodic table. Ironically, due to a nearby island of stability, element 119 may have one or more isotopes that are more stable than francium.</p>
<p>Ignoring instability due to likely radioactivity, scientists would expect that, when it had formed the usual ionic compounds, the alkali metal ion Uue+ would react like xenon or ununoctium and form covalent compounds such as Uue+F2, and that over the eighth and ninth periods of the periodic table, the boundaries between the periods would get fuzzy."
(emphasis mine)</p>
<p>Source: <a href=“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Element_119[/url]”>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Element_119</a></p>
<p>Found this amusing enough to post.</p>
<p>If it were up to me, I say that Element Q should be called Quebecium, to name it after [edit]a province that speaks French[/edit]*. Now Francium won’t be lonely.</p>
<p>I don’t think that IUPAC would agree with me much though.</p>
<p>*Brain fart. I swear I know that Quebec isn’t a country. >_<</p>