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3 Φεβ 2021 · Einsteinium is an incredibly scarce, artificial element that decays so quickly that researchers don’t know much about it. Now, using state-of-the-art technology, a team has examined how it...
4 Φεβ 2021 · Because of the element’s instability and the inherent dangers of studying a super radioactive element, the last attempts to measure einsteinium were in the 1970s, Harry Baker reports for Live...
3 Φεβ 2021 · The research team was working with a mere 200 nanograms of einsteinium, an amount about 300 times lighter than a grain of salt. According to Korey Carter, a chemist now at the University of Iowa...
11 Φεβ 2021 · What Abergel and her team found was that any einsteinium produced was heavily contaminated with californium. Since californium is element 98, with only one nuclear proton less than einsteinium, this was not totally unexpected, but it meant they needed to change their plans.
3 Φεβ 2021 · And so, when elements previously unknown to science were discovered in the chemical debris of a nuclear explosion 69 years ago, it was fitting that scientists named what they found after the great...
5 Φεβ 2021 · Now, nearly 70 years later, scientists have measured einsteinium for the first time, finally providing a close look at the element’s chemical properties and how it behaves.
9 Φεβ 2021 · Einsteinium is one of the cleverer-sounding elements you’ll see on your periodic table, but it’s a lot further down the list than something like carbon, or gold, or mercury. While carbon is number 6, gold is number 79, and mercury is number 80, einsteinium is the 99th element!