|
Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Indium
Pop-ups with explanatory texts appear by moving your mouse over tables, illustrations, links etc.
|
|
Multilingual dictionary
Indo-EuropeanLanguage key Germanic Indium en de lb nl af fy da sv no fo Indín is Italic Indium fr Indio es gl it Indi ca oc fur Índio pt Indiu ro Indiumu arm Slavic Èíäèé [indij] ru bg Iíäié [indij] uk Iíäûé [indyj] by Ind pl Jind kas Indium cs sk Indij sl hr bos Èíäèjóì [indijum] sr Èíäèóì [indium] mk Baltic Indis lt Indijs lv Indijan sud Celtic Indiwm cy Indiam ga gd Indjum gv Eyndyum kw Indiom br Other Indo-European Ινδιο [indio] el Indium sq Ինդիում [indium] hy Indo-Iranian Èíäèé [Indij] oss Uralic Indium fi et hu Инди [indi] mok Altaic İndiyum tr Èíäèé [indij] kk uz Indi' tg Èíäè [indi] mn Other (Europe) Indioa eu ინდიუმი [indiumi] ka East- & South-Asia インジウム [injiumu] ja 銦 [yin1 / yan1] zh (mand./cant.) 인듐 [indyum] ko Indi vi อินเดียม [indiam] th Indium ms இந்தியம் [intiyam] ta Afro-Asiatic انديوم [indiyūm] ar Indjum mt אינדיום [indium] he Africa Indi sw Artificial Indio eo New names Indion (IND) aen Vitaminium dms |
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
History & Etymology
Richter observed a bright blue stripe, unknown in any other spectrum and distinct from the blue stripe of Cesium. To this new element was given the name Indium because of the bright indigo blue spectral stripe. The pigment indigo, earlier indico, comes from Latin indicum, the Indian substance or dye. The Sanskrite name was nih, from nila, dark blue, and this through Arabic al-nil, annil, gives "aniline".
Native indium is extremely rare under natural conditions and only of scientific interest. Metallic indium was first obtained in 1867 by T. Richter.
Further reading
|
Last update:
© Peter van der Krogt