In 1902, having accepted the evidence for elements
helium and
argon, Mendeleev placed these noble gases in
Group 0 in his arrangement of the elements. As Mendeleev was doubtful of
atomic theory to explain the
law of definite proportions, he had no
a priori reason to believe
hydrogen was the lightest of elements, and suggested that a hypothetical lighter member of these chemically inert Group 0 elements could have gone undetected and be responsible for
radioactivity. Currently some periodic tables of elements put lone
neutrons in this place (see
neutronium) but no such element has ever been detected. The heavier of the hypothetical proto-helium elements Mendeleev identified with
coronium, named by association with an unexplained spectral line in the
Sun's corona. A faulty calibration gave a wavelength of 531.68 nm, which was eventually corrected to 530.3 nm, which
Grotrian and
Edlén identified as originating from
Fe XIV (i.e. Fe13+) in 1939. The lightest of the Group 0 gases, the first in the periodic table, was assigned a theoretical atomic mass between and . The kinetic velocity of this gas was calculated by Mendeleev to be 2,500,000 meters per second. Nearly massless, these gases were assumed by Mendeleev to permeate all matter, rarely interacting chemically. The high mobility and very small mass of the trans-hydrogen gases would result in the situation that they could be rarefied, yet appear to be very dense. Mendeleev later published a theoretical expression of
the ether in a small booklet entitled
A Chemical Conception of the Ether (1904). His 1904 publication again contained two atomic elements smaller and lighter than hydrogen. He treated the "ether gas" as an interstellar atmosphere composed of at least two elements lighter than hydrogen. He stated that these gases originated due to violent bombardments internal to stars, the Sun being the most prolific source of such gases. According to Mendeleev's booklet, the interstellar atmosphere was probably composed of several additional elemental species. == Notes ==