palladium

[puh-ley-dee-uh m] /pəˈleɪ di əm/
noun, Chemistry
1.
a rare metallic element of the platinum group, silver-white, ductile and malleable, harder and fusing more readily than platinum: used chiefly as a catalyst and in dental and other alloys. Symbol: Pd; atomic weight: 106.4; atomic number: 46; specific gravity: 12 at 20°C.
Origin
special use of Palladium; named (1803) after the asteroid Pallas, then newly discovered; see -ium

Palladium

[puh-ley-dee-uh m] /pəˈleɪ di əm/
noun, plural Palladia
[puh-ley-dee-uh] /pəˈleɪ di ə/ (Show IPA)
1.
Also, Palladion
[puh-ley-dee-on] /pəˈleɪ diˌɒn/ (Show IPA)
. a statue of Athena, especially one on the citadel of Troy on which the safety of the city was supposed to depend.
2.
(usually lowercase) anything believed to provide protection or safety; safeguard.
Origin
< Latin Palladium < Greek Palládion, noun use of neuter of Palládios of Pallas, equivalent to Pallad- (stem of Pallás) Pallas + -ios adj. suffix
British Dictionary definitions for palladium

palladium1

/pəˈleɪdɪəm/
noun
1.
a ductile malleable silvery-white element of the platinum metal group occurring principally in nickel-bearing ores: used as a hydrogenation catalyst and, alloyed with gold, in jewellery. Symbol: Pd; atomic no: 46; atomic wt: 106.42; valency: 2, 3, or 4; relative density: 1202; melting pt: 1555°C; boiling pt: 2964°C
Word Origin
C19: named after the asteroid Pallas, at the time (1803) a recent discovery

palladium2

/pəˈleɪdɪəm/
noun
1.
something believed to ensure protection; safeguard
Word Origin
C17: after the Palladium

Palladium

/pəˈleɪdɪəm/
noun
1.
a statue of Pallas Athena, esp the one upon which the safety of Troy depended
Word Origin and History for palladium
n.

"safeguard," c.1600, originally (late 14c.) "sacred image of Pallas Athene," from Latin palladium, from Greek Palladion, noun use of neuter of Palladios "of Pallas." It stood in the citadel of Troy and the safety of the city was believed to depend on it.

metallic element, coined 1803 by discoverer William Hyde Wollaston (1766-1828), from Pallas, name of an asteroid discovered the previous year (by German astronomer Olbers) and named for the goddess (see Pallas).

palladium in Medicine

palladium pal·la·di·um (pə-lā'dē-əm)
n.
Symbol Pd
A soft ductile metallic element occurring naturally with platinum, especially in gold, nickel, and copper ores, and used as a catalyst in hydrogenation. Atomic number 46; atomic weight 106.4; melting point 1,555°C; boiling point 2,963°C; specific gravity 12.02 (20°C); valence 2, 3, 4.

palladium in Science
palladium
  (pə-lā'dē-əm)   
Symbol Pd
A malleable, ductile, grayish-white metallic element that occurs naturally with platinum. It is used as a catalyst in hydrogenation and in alloys for making electrical contacts and jewelry. Atomic number 46; atomic weight 106.4; melting point 1,552°C; boiling point 3,140°C; specific gravity 12.02 (20°C); valence 2, 3, 4. See Periodic Table.
Encyclopedia Article for palladium

Palladium

in Greek religion, image of the goddess Pallas (Athena), especially the archaic wooden statue of the goddess that was preserved in the citadel of Troy as a pledge of the safety of the city. As long as the statue was kept safe within Troy, the city could not be conquered. It was said that Zeus, the king of the gods, threw the statue down from heaven when the city of Ilium (Troy) was founded and that the Greek warriors Odysseus and Diomedes carried it off from the temple of Athena in Troy, thus making the Greek capture of Troy possible. Many cities in Greece and Italy claimed to possess the genuine Trojan Palladium, but it was particularly identified with the statue brought to Italy by the hero Aeneas after Troy's destruction and preserved in the shrine of the goddess Vesta at Rome. The Palladium was a common subject in Greek art, as was its theft in literature.

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