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Statistiche
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Element 115 approaching confirmation nearly ten years after its discovery
Scientists are one step closer to confirming the super-heavy Element 115.
Element 115, temporarily titled Ununpentium. (Credit: Greg Robson)
A Swedish team of scientists recent conducted experiments on Element
115 at the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Germany. An
element’s atomic number, 115 in this case, represents the number of
protons an element contains. For this study, LiveScience
explains that the research team “shot a super-fast beam of calcium
(which has 20 protons) at a thin film of americium, the element with 95
protons. When these atomic nuclei collided, some fused together to
create short-lived atoms with 115 protons.”
This new research was led by Dirk Rudolph, a professor at the
division of atomic physics at Lund University. He explains that,
although scientists from the Glenn T. Seaborg Institute and the Chemical
Biology and Nuclear Science Division at the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory announced the discovery of Element 115 in 2004, it has yet
to be officially acknowledged because independent confirmation is
required to measure the exact proton number. Rudolph and his team’s
recent experiments did that.
An illustration of the atom collision creating Element 115. (Credit: Thomas Tegge, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
The next step, as the BBC
explains, is for the potential new element to be “reviewed by a
committee which consists of members of the international unions of pure
and applied physics and chemistry. They will decide whether to recommend
further experiments before the discovery of the new element is
acknowledged.”
Element 115 received attention in 1989 when Area 51 whistleblower Bob Lazar
asserted that extraterrestrial spacecraft at Area 51’s S4 facility were
powered by the element. KLAS-TV investigative reporter George Knapp
published a story following the discovery of Element 115
in 2004. In the article, Knapp spoke with Lazar about the 2004
discovery, something to which Knapp referred as “a profound
development.”
Bob Lazar
But he pointed out that “the material decayed almost instantly.” Then
Knapp reported, “Lazar says the first batch was only a starting point
and that he will be proven right in the long run.” Lazar explained,
“I’d like to see them continue to work and produce different isotopes of
115 because they’re gonna come up with a handful of different varieties
and they’re gonna come up with a stable isotope, and that’s what we’re
interested.” But based on the new experiments, that hasn’t happened
yet. The element still only lasts for less than a second.
Nuclear chemist Glenn T. Seaborg proposed the possibility of an
“island of stability” in the late 1960s. Explaining this concept, Popular Science describes:
Nuclear physicists hypothesize that a magic number of
protons and neutrons could produce enough binding energy to counteract
the forces that tear apart the heavy nuclei, and render the new elements
as stable as the common elements that exist outside of atom smashers.
The physicists called these magic numbers the “island of stability”
because the elements with the numbers cluster together on the periodic
table, flanked on all sides by ephemeral elements that dissipate in
nanoseconds.
Unfortunately, due to its rapid decay, Element 115, like its
neighboring Element 114, doesn’t seem to occupy the “island of
stability.”
LiveScience explains that Element 115 has yet to be officially named,
“but it is temporarily called ununpentium, roughly based on the Latin
and Greek words for the digits in its atomic number, 115.”
The new research will be published in The Physical Review Letters.
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