homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Superheavy element 117 confirmed

It’s a good day to be a chemist – a new, super-heavy element has been added to the periodic table after it was discovered by a team Germany’s GSI laboratory. The periodic table was (and still is) the foundation for modern chemistry – it is a tabular arrangement of all the chemical elements, organized on […]

Mihai Andrei
May 2, 2014 @ 9:29 am

share Share

It’s a good day to be a chemist – a new, super-heavy element has been added to the periodic table after it was discovered by a team Germany’s GSI laboratory.

The periodic table was (and still is) the foundation for modern chemistry – it is a tabular arrangement of all the chemical elements, organized on the basis of their atomic numbers, electron configurations (electron shell model), and recurring chemical properties. When you refer to a chemical element and say that it is the first (Hydrogen), the second (Helium), and so on, that “1st” or “2nd” or “117th” is the atomic number – the number of protons found in the nucleus of an atom of that element – this is the fundamental way of characterizing a chemical element.

Most chemical elements you can find in nature, relatively easily, but as you go forward to heavier and heavier atoms, things start to get more strange. Atoms after the number 104 are called superheavy elements, and generally speaking, they don’t occur in nature, and are stable only for a limited amount of time.

Initial reports about the discovery of an element with atomic number 117 were released in 2010 in Dubna, Russia, one of the facilities most known for finding new, heavier elements. However, only now have researchers provided the first actual clear evidence for the 117 element.

Via Physorg.

super-heavy element to be added to the periodic table following research published in the latest Physics Review Letters.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-05-superheavy-element.html#jCp

super-heavy element to be added to the periodic table following research published in the latest Physics Review Letters.

Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2014-05-superheavy-element.html#jCp

share Share

This New Catalyst Can Produce Ammonia from Air and Water at Room Temperature

Forget giant factories! A new portable device could allow farmers to produce ammonia right in the field, reducing costs, and emissions.

Astronauts will be making sake on the ISS — and a cosmic bottle will cost $650,000

Astronauts aboard the ISS are brewing more than just discoveries — they’re testing how sake ferments in space.

GeoPicture of the week: Biggest crystals in the world

Known as Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals), this hidden chamber in Mexico holds some of the largest natural crystals ever discovered. The translucent pillars, some as long as telephone poles and as wide as tree trunks, make for an eerie underground landscape, seemingly crafted by giants. But there’s no magic involved, just some […]

Pee-back time: Anti-Pee Paint Splashes Back at Public Urination

When man piss in wind, wind piss back, a modern Confucius states. In this line, the city of Hamburg ingeniously sought to address its growing public urination problem in the city's busy party center by painting walls with hydrophobic paint. Next time an unsuspecting person wants to take a load off in Hamburg's St. Pauli neighborhood, he might be in for a surprise - it'll splash back at him.

Mild Habaneros Are Here and They’re Packed With Flavor Without the Fire

Meet "Hotta Notta" and "Mild Things," the heat-free habaneros you've been seeking for decades.

Baseball's "rubbing mud" actually works — and science shows how

“It spreads like a skin cream and grips like sandpaper,” says

Could Spraying Diamonds into the Sky Be the Key to Cooling the Planet?

Nothing is more precious than our planet, and we must cool it fast. Scientists say this can be done by decorating the sky with diamonds.

Scientists create silk fiber that mimics Spider-Man’s web-slinging powers

This lab-made silk fiber can lift objects 80 times its weight.

This New Micronuclear Battery Could Last For Decades

Nuclear batteries offer a lifespan that lithium batteries can't match. But don't expect them powering consumer devices anytime soon.

The Pharaoh's Snake: A Chemical Reaction That Looks Like a Portal to Hell

Many chemical reactions are surprising, but this one is something else.