Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Caesium Cesium
Pop-ups with explanatory texts appear by moving your mouse over tables, illustrations, links etc.
previous Cs next
previous 55 next
Multilingual dictionary
Language key
Indo-European
Germanic
Caesium en
Cesium en(usa) nl fy da² sv no
Sesium af
Zäsium de lb
Cæsium da fo
Sesín is
Italic
Césium fr
Cesio es gl it
Cesi ca oc fur
Césio pt
Cesiu ro
Ceziu mo
Tseziumu arm
Slavic
Öåçèé [cezij] ru bg
Öåçié [cezij] uk
Öýçié [cèzij] by
Cez pl
Céz kas
Cesium cs
Cézium sk
Cezij hr sl bos
Öåçèjóì [cezijum] sr
Öåçèóì [cezium] mk
Baltic
Cezis lt
Cēzijs lv
Cezijan sud
Celtic
Cesiwm cy
Caeisiam ga gd
Kaishum gv
Cesyum kw
Seziom br
Other Indo-European
Καισιο [kaisio] el
Cezium sq
Ցեզիում [ts'ezium] hy
Indo-Iranian
Öåçèé [cezij] oss
Uralic
Cesium fi
Tseesium et
Cézium hu
Цези [cezi] mok
Altaic
Sezyum tr
Öåçèé [cezij] kk uz
Cezi' tg
Öåçè [cezi] mn
Other (Europe)
Zesioa eu
ცეზიუმი [c'eziumi] ka
East- & South-Asia
セシウム [seshiumu] ja
[se4 / sik7] zh (mand./cant.)
세슘 [sesyum] ko
Xezi, Xêzi vi
ซีเซียม [sīsiam] th
Sesium ms
சீசியம் [cīciyam] ta
Afro-Asiatic
سيزيوم [sīziyūm] ar
Siżjum mt
צזיום [cesium] he
Africa
Sizi sw
Artificial
Cezio eo
New names
Cesion (CES) aen
Sky Blue dms
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
Golden colored, incredibly soft solid which easily liquefies. Will catch fire and/or explode upon exposure to the atmosphere
m.p. 28.40±0.01 ºC; 83.12±0.02 ºF
b.p. 678.4 ºC; 1253.1 ºF
density 1.873 g/cc; 116.928 pound/cubic foot
memory peg

1860 Robert Bunsen & Gustav Kirchhoff, Germany
cæsius = sky blue (Latin)

History & Etymology

In the Spring of 1860 Robert Wilhelm Bunsen (1811-1899) and Gustav Robert Kirchhof (1824-1887) examined with the flame of a spectroscope a drop of Dürkheim mineral water. One would recognize the light of Sodium, Potassium, Lithium, Calcium, and Strontium. But after precipitating lime, strontia, magnesia, you see the lines of Sodium, Potassium, and Lithium, and in addition, two remarkable blue lines, very close together for which no known substance gives such rays. They wrote in 1860 that

"Spectrum analysis should become important for the discovery of hitherto unknown elements. If there should be substances that are so sparingly distributed in nature that our present means of analysis fail for their recognition and separation, then we might hope to recognize and to determine many such substances in quantities not reached by our usual means, by the simple observation of their flame spectra. We have had occasion already to convince ourselves that there are such now unknown elements. Supported by unambiguous results of the spectral-analytical method, we believe we can state right now that there is a fourth metal in the alkali group besides potassium, sodium, and lithium, and it has a simple characteristic spectrum like lithium; a metal that shows only two lines in our apparatus: a faint blue one, almost coinciding with Sr, and another blue one a little further to the violet end of the spectrum and as strong and as clearly defined as the lithium line." Note.
They proposed to give this new metal the name Caesium from cæsius (Latin), which the ancients used to designate the blue of the upper part of the firmament. This name seemed to them to be justified by the beautiful blue color of the incandescent vapor of this new element (note) Some of Bunsen's enthusiasm is readily apparent in a letter to Roscoe dated November 6, 1869:
"I have been very fortunate with my new metal...I shall name it cesium because of its beautiful blue spectral line. Next Sunday I expect to find time to make the first determination of its atomic weight."

Extraction of Caesium compounds by Bunsen involved concentration of the Caesium and other impurities by evaporation of large volumes of mineral water. Bunsen prepared chlorides, carbonates and other salts of Caesium. He studied the properties of these salts and attempted to prepare Caesium metal but was unsuccessful.

Bunsen and Kirchhoff's samples of Caesium and Rubidium salts. University of Heidelberg (Click on photo for source).

Chemistianity 1873
JEYAN
CÆSIUM, a kin to Kalium,
Is a white easily oxided metal
That closely resembles Rubidium,
And Potassium, in chemical properties;
The blue Spectrum lines only prove its diff'rence.
J. Carrington Sellars, Chemistianity, 1873, p. 118
Further reading

  • Mary Elvira Weeks, Discovery of the Elements, comp. rev. by Heny M. Leicester (Easton, Pa.: Journal of Chemical Education, 1968), pp. 598-603.

Last update:
© Peter van der Krogt