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Chemistry World September 30, 2009 Phillip Broadwith |
Element 114 confirmed US scientists have confirmed the discovery of element number 114, first made over a decade ago by a team in Russia. |
Chemistry World October 17, 2006 Richard Van Noorden |
Heaviest Element Awaits Confirmation A team of Russian and American scientists has claimed the discovery of element 118, the newest and heaviest addition to the periodic table. |
Chemistry World May 2, 2007 James Mitchell Crow |
Chemists Arrive at the Island of Stability Despite predictions of exotic properties, 'superheavy' element 112 behaves like one of the family, say radiochemists in Switzerland. |
Chemistry World January 7, 2016 Emma Stoye |
Confirmation of four new elements completes seventh row of periodic table Now that the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry has confirmed the discovery of the four new elements that complete the periodic table's seventh row, the institution will choose their names and element symbols |
Popular Mechanics June 15, 2009 Andrew Moseman |
10 Geekiest Elements Ever Created in a Lab The periodic table doesn't end at 92 -- not even close. Last week the official tally reached 112 |
Chemistry World February 10, 2010 Simon Hadlington |
Inching towards the island of stability An international team of researchers has for the first time directly measured the mass of an element heavier than uranium. |
Chemistry World August 30, 2013 Andy Extance |
Decays and x-rays build case for element 115 A Swedish-led team has become the second to spot element 115, which has a half-life of just 160 milliseconds, and potentially the first to capture its x-ray 'fingerprints'. |
Chemistry World May 30, 2012 Phillip Broadwith |
Flerovium and Livermorium take seats at the periodic table The elements will take names that recognize the joint efforts of scientists in the US and Russia to provide unequivocal evidence of their synthesis. |
Chemistry World May 2, 2008 Richard Van Noorden |
Heaviest element claim criticised Scientists claiming to have discovered the super-heavy element 122 have had their research dismissed by physicists who say their measurements are suspect. |
Chemistry World August 10, 2012 Nina Notman |
Tweaked weighing scales help map the island of stability The mass of the heavy element lawrencium has been measured directly for the first time by German scientists. |
Chemistry World January 5, 2016 Philip Ball |
The periodic table name game The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry works to standardize the names of new elements around the world. Now, following its confirmation of the discovery of four new elements it's time to choose new names that will forever remain a part of the periodic table. |
Wired January 18, 2008 Miyoko Ohtake |
Chemist Spins His Cyclotron to Create Impossibly Heavy Metals New research allows mutations of metal elements to include more atoms. |
Chemistry World December 20, 2010 Hayley Birch |
Atomic weights change to reflect natural variations The atomic weights for ten elements are to be expressed as intervals rather than single values, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry has announced. |
Science News November 25, 2000 |
Artistic Elements Providing an unusual perspective on the chemical elements, the Chemistry Societies' Network presents a stunning visual tour of the elements (109 in all) as seen through the eyes of artists... |
Chemistry World October 24, 2007 James Mitchell Crow |
Drip Line Slips Away Researchers have squeezed 29 neutrons into an atom of aluminum, bringing into doubt current theories which predicted that it would be too unstable to exist. |
Chemistry World June 20, 2012 Laura Howes |
94 Elements film project A new film project has been launched exploring how the chemical elements -- from hydrogen to plutonium -- affect our lives. |
Chemistry World November 22, 2013 Lars Ohrstrom |
30-second elements Periodic table aficionados and hardcore inorganic chemists will find amazing new facts, while the layman is offered captivating, albeit rhapsodic, insights into the world of chemistry and its applications in this book edited by Eric Scerri. |
Chemistry World November 13, 2012 Simon Cotton |
Periodically updated Any reader will glean much from A Guide to the Elements by Albert Stwertka. Some ill-informed critics claim that chemistry is a worked-out discipline: this book reminds readers that chemistry is alive and vital. |
Chemistry World May 11, 2011 Jon Cartwright |
New radioisotope bodes well for cancer treatment The isotope, terbium-161, emits a number of low-energy electrons upon decay, which should make it useful for treating small tumors. |
Science News December 7, 2002 |
TimeLine: December 3, 1932 New scientific high-speed photography can take 13 "frames" of motion pictures in a fortieth of a second... Super-radium supplied energy for rapid cosmic evolution... Neutron, element zero, may gain place in periodic table |
IEEE Spectrum April 9, 2008 Prachi Patel-Predd |
Antineutrino Detector Could Spot Atom Bomb Cheats A new type of detector that researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), and Sandia National Laboratories, recently tested detects particles known as antineutrinos that fly out of the reactor. The device can help in monitoring nuclear reactors. |
Chemistry World November 21, 2013 Mark Peplow |
A century of isotopes Glasgow will celebrate 'isotope day' on 4 December, 100 years after Frederick Soddy coined the word 'isotope' in Nature. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2013 William Sweet |
Could Fusion Clean Up Nuclear Waste? Physicists propose a marriage of fusion and fission reactors that could save both technologies |
Chemistry World May 27, 2015 Rhian Jones |
Isotope geochemistry Isotope geochemistry by William White is a comprehensive single volume that encompasses almost every imaginable aspect of both radiogenic and stable isotope geochemistry in remarkable detail. |
Science News June 26, 2004 |
From the June 23, 1934, issue Young Desert Hawks Secure in Natural Fort... New Element is "Relative" of Brittle Metal Manganese... Squeezing Turns Phosphorus From White to Black... |
Chemistry World November 12, 2012 Emma Shiells |
Visual elements In "Wonderful Life with the Elements," Japanese artist Bunpei Yorifuji has created a light-hearted, humorous book that's both engaging and educational at the same time. |
Wired Jonathon Keats |
Jargon Watch: Cowpooling, Tweetups, Dark Trading New lingo for current trends. |
Wired March 24, 2008 |
Three Smart Things You Should Know About Helium Some unknown facts about this second periodic element. |
JavaWorld July 2000 Jason Hunter & Brett McLaughlin |
Easy Java/XML integration with JDOM, Part 2 JDOM is a new API for reading, writing, and manipulating XML from within Java code. In Part 1 of this series, Hunter and McLaughlin explained how to use JDOM to read XML from an existing source. In this final part, they focus on how you can use JDOM to create and mutate XML. |