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Also known as Br, element 35, ₃₅Br
Bromine is a chemical element; it has symbol Br and atomic number 35. It is a volatile red-brown liquid at room temperature that evaporates readily to form a similarly coloured vapour. Its properties are intermediate between those of chlorine and iodine. Isolated independently by two chemists, Carl Jacob Löwig (in 1825) and Antoine Jérôme Balard (in 1826), its name was derived , referring to its sharp and pungent smell.
Bromine is a chemical element (symbol Br, atomic number 35) that exists as a red-brown liquid at room temperature and easily evaporates into a colored vapor, with properties that fall between those of chlorine and iodine. The element gets its name from its sharp, pungent smell and was independently discovered by two chemists in the mid-1820s.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).