🧪 1. Hydrogen (H)
🧠 Basic Info:
Symbol: H
Atomic number: 1
Color: Colorless
Gas: Yes
Flammable: 💥 YES – super explosive
Cool Facts:
It's the lightest element in the universe.
Makes up 75% of the universe’s mass.
Was made just after the Big Bang.
Used in stars – including the Sun – to create energy via nuclear fusion.
Uses:
Rocket fuel (mixed with oxygen).
Making ammonia (for fertilizers).
In hydrogen fuel cells (clean energy cars).
2. Helium (He)
Basic Info:
Symbol: He
Atomic number: 2
Color: Colorless
Gas: Yes
Flammable: ❌ Nope
Cool Facts:
Second lightest element.
Inert gas – doesn’t react with anything.
Found in space and stars.
You sound like a chipmunk after inhaling it – BUT DON’T TRY THAT. It’s dangerous!
Uses:
Filling balloons and airships (lighter than air).
Cooling superconductors & MRI machines.
Space tech – used to pressurize fuel tanks.
3. Oxygen (O)
Basic Info:
Symbol: O
Atomic number: 8
Color: Colorless
Gas: Yes
Flammable: ❌ But makes other things burn faster!
Cool Facts:
Makes up 21% of Earth’s air.
Needed by humans and animals to breathe.
Plants give us oxygen via photosynthesis.
In water (H₂O = 2 hydrogen + 1 oxygen).
Uses:
Breathing (oxygen tanks, hospitals).
Welding & cutting metals.
Rocket fuel oxidizer.
Making steel, plastics, and textiles.
Why do you think hydrogen was the first element formed after the Big Bang?
How does helium help scientists when they use MRI machines?
If oxygen helps other things burn faster, how do firefighters stay safe around it?
Why is it important to use helium in balloons instead of hydrogen?
What might happen if Earth’s oxygen level changed by a lot — either too much or too little?