Copernicium Confirmed As Element 112 183
Several sources are reporting that the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry has confirmed Copernicium as element 112 on the periodic table of elements with the symbol Cn. "The naming of the new element will be the culmination of a long, fraught journey involving fierce competition, dashed hopes, clever detective work and even a brush with scientific misconduct. With a nucleus containing 112 protons — 20 more than uranium, the heaviest of the naturally occurring elements — it will be the weightiest atom whose existence has been confirmed so far."
Take that china (Score:5, Funny)
Now there will never be a chinesium (although i guess we could re-name lead).
<troll/>
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try missedthejoke.cn
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Re:Take that china (Score:5, Informative)
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Americium, the most mass market radioactive element. Everyone has at least a few milligrams at home, right in your smoke detectors made in China.
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To spoil your joke, if an element was named after China, I don't think this would be a big problem. For example, Americium is Am, and the USA's ISO country code is US.
I'm sorry to spoil your patriotic pride, but Americium was named after the continent [wikipedia.org] in contrast to Europium.
:)
Polonium [wikipedia.org], though, was indeed named after a country, Poland.
And Copernicium [wikipedia.org] is named after Nicolaus Copernicus. Go Poland!
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Intriguing how copernicium was named after copper. Which is itself an element named after Copernicus. Are we that short of historical scientific figures? Ok, so maybe not exactly but one could wonder.
Note that in French copper is cuivre Cu, which actually is used to designate the "brass" section of philharmonic orchestra.
Ah the wonders of the English language: one drives in a parkway but parks in a driveway.
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Copper is apparently from the Latin cuprum, which is from the word cyprian, a more general word for copper and bronze alloys, itself derived from the name of the island Cyprus wh
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It's hardly patriotic pride when I'm not American. Dumbass.
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Yes, along with the continent of Eurasia.
Oh wait. No, there's no continent called Eurasia, and there's no continent called America.
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Can we make that official? ;)
I also suggest renaming America to PlasticFantastica ;)
(You are eligible to naming European countries. ;)
P.S.: <tag/> would be a tag that is closed in itself. So it would not include anyting before or after it. Not quite what you intended, I guess... ;)
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But But but (Score:2)
What about ununbium?
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What about ununbium?
Can't be worse than Unobtainium *gag*.
Thankyou Avatar, for the dumbest name of a substance in movie history.
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Unobtanium has been around for far longer than Avatar.
see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unobtanium
Re:But But but (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't forget the hardest material known to man fuckyeahsmium [imageshack.us].
Re:But But but (Score:5, Funny)
Exactly you can find it right between the unaffordium and the baloneyum.
Bloody Yanks - those of us who remember the Queen's English know it's spelled 'bolognium'...
... or was that 'bologniminium?'
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Re:But But but (Score:5, Informative)
Avatar wasn't the first use of that, they actually reused a name that had been used in literature for decades...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unobtainium [wikipedia.org]
Re:But But but (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, I've used Unobtainium for years, and everyone here at work knows what's meant. (Admittedly, I'm an Engineer.) Okay, not quite true, as two foreign Engineers didn't know what it was.
In Avatar, Unobtanium was the McGuffin -- it didn't matter what it was, just that there was a reason that Homo Sapiens was on a different, hostile planet that wasn't for xenorelations. Water's plentiful on comets, any minerals would be easier to get from asteroids, since there's way less of a gravity well, and so the only reason we'd be there is either to talk to aliens or to get a rare material.
A room-temperature superconductor is pretty much the Holy Grail of Physics.
It doesn't explain why the humans didn't just take the mountains and / or use orbital bombardment.
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Nuclear. Fucking. Weapons. There's no problem that cannot be made to go away with sufficient use of nuclear weapons.
Even nuclear proliferation! Set enough of 'em off and bam, no more problem.
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Nuclear. Fucking. Weapons. There's no problem that cannot be made to go away with sufficient use of nuclear weapons.
Your diction sounds like you're falling into a black hole, so I think you're going to need more than a cowboy hat and a crayon to catapult around the other side.
What kind of mind goes into a parking orbit between words?
I admit, it is kind of menacing to see a blood and guts marine in a stalled humvee bearing down on you with four sumo wrestlers tossing the vehicle forward in three foot increments. Anyone would think twice confronted with that spectacle.
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bass bass snare
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Why does that make stupid and unoriginal better than stupid but novel?
Re:But But but (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other hand, they had a pretty interesting scientific backstory [harpercollins.com] for the movie. When I was watching the movie, when the guy set down the "unobtanium" on a platform and it floated, I immediately thought, "Huh... I bet that's supposed to be a room-temperature superconductor. Which would explain the demand." And indeed, that's exactly the intent. According to the backstory, part of the reason for the intense initial interest in the moon was the very high magnetic field strength it displayed. And since superconductors expel magnetic fields, leading to stable levitation, the floating mountains and continents are actually scientifically plausible in such a scenario. The very high magnetic field and the presence of the moon orbiting in the radiation belt of a gas giant leads to very high levels of ionizing radiation at the poles and at the intense local distortions in the magnetic field from the "unobtanium" -- to the degree that they're not just deadly, but also lead to a large current flowing through the planet.
The explanation for the mineral name is that scientists frustrated on Earth used began using the name "unobtanium" in reference to high temperature superconductors (before stable versions were found on Pandora) that it stuck.
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And here was I thinking that the movie writers were too lazy to think of a name and just stuck in the generic term.
Also thanks for the backstory info, makes me want to read the book a whole lot more than the movie did.
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I internally rationalized with the idea that it could be e.g. ununoctium oxide, some theoretical super-heavy ore that got nicknamed "unobtainium" as a pun due to the native resistance to mining operations.
That's a pretty fascinating backstory, though.
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Radon is also a noble element, but is reactive. Many predictions suggest that 118 would be more reactive, but as only three or four atoms have been detected I wouldn't expect proof any time soon.
It's bad luck to throw words like "idiot" around...
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Ahhhhhhh... now the floating mountains make sense. Thanks for explaining it.
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The back story was pretty well thought out, even to how the spacecraft worked (very in-depth, although never explained in the movie). The sad part is they also went into great detail as to how the aliens didn't use DNA to encode their genes, but then go on to base the entire story on clones that combine human DNA with alien DNA.
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I'd bet dollars to donuts that that particular plot element was thrown in at the last minute to explain why they had to bring along this incompetent, untrained grunt to take part in a scientific mission. If the didn't have the DNA requirement, they could have used anyone.
I'm sure someone out there was reading over the script and said, "Hey, wait a minute -- why are they bringing HIM of all people?" To which Cameron probably debated the point for a while before ultimately conceding that they had to patch t
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"also lead to a large current flowing through the planet."
That could also partially explain bioluminescence of flora and fauna.
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According to Wikipedia, it's called "Roentgenium".
Later that night... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Later that night... (Score:4, Informative)
Interestingly enough, uranium isn't the heaviest naturally occurring element. It occurs in two ways. One is extremely small amounts [wikipedia.org] of natural Pu-244 The other is muromontite [theodoregray.com], which is a beryllium and sometimes uranium-containing form of allanite, making it a natural breeder reactor.
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Al: 2.7 g/cc
Fe: 7.8
Pb: 11.3
U : 19.1
W : 19.3
Pu: 19.8
Pt: 21.4
So while uranium is indeed really "heavy" (which is why depleted uranium is great for artillery projectiles), it's not quite the heaviest around.
But here's the real head scratcher: if you had a 1-kg i
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Uranium was seen at a local club with Copernicium, probably to make her feel better about herself.
Bystanders overheard Uranium note what a large prick Copernicium sported.
On Earth (Score:2, Insightful)
Minor quibble... it's the heavies of the naturally occurring elements on Earth. Heaver elements usually require different conditions (higher energy levels, gravity differences, etc) that can be found on earth. But there's nothing to say they can't be found elsewhere...
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Technically, it's inaccurate on Earth as well. Trace amounts of plutonium are found in concentrated uranium ore, particularly those deposits that have acted as a natural nuclear fission reactor, [wikipedia.org] the most famous being the Oklo [wikipedia.org] reactor.
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Considering the half lives of the ultra-heavy elements, they don't exist anywhere other than labs except for brief periods in supernovae.
Re:On Earth (Score:4, Interesting)
Except that the larger elements have much shorter half-lives. Unless there's a stable (or nearly so) element, we won't find anything hiher than ~Americium we won't find a quantity of higher elements worth mentioning. Uranium is the heaviest element in nature in any quantity (Plutonium and Americium occur in trace quantities due to spontaneous fission and the neutron irradiation that results) Supernovae and black holes might have the conditions neccessary to forge super heavy elements but the stability of these elements is the real problem.
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So you're not a believer in the Island of Stability [wikipedia.org] I take it?
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It's only an "island of stability", relatively speaking as I understand it. That's to say elements in the "island of stability" have half lives measured in a few tenths of a second to a few seconds, rather than milliseconds.
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Re:On Earth (Score:5, Informative)
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Worked for Helium, didn't it?
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shhh
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Re:On Earth (Score:5, Informative)
Hey jackass, how many people do we have trying to identify new elements anywhere else besides Earth?
Actually, Helium was discovered not on Earth, but the Sun.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium [wikipedia.org]
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Hey jackass, how many people do we have trying to identify new elements anywhere else besides Earth?
Actually, Helium was discovered not on Earth, but the Sun.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium [wikipedia.org]
By a French astronomer (Pierre Janssen) during a total eclipse. I'm guessing that since eclipses aren't exactly apparent when down there he wasn't exactly scraping around on the surface of the sun when he discovered. it. So it was discovered on Earth by observing the sun.
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Helium was first discovred in the Sun, donkey breath.
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is not the "man made" factor that makes them unstable.
plutonium is man made and is a helluva lot stabler than heavier atoms. thing is, at those high atomic numbers, it takes a whole lot of neutrons on the nucleus to make the atom stable, more neutrons than the colision of two lighter atoms provide. the result is a heavy element that lacks the neccessary neutrons to be stable. putting extra neutrons there is the tricky part.
natural? (Score:2)
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I believe that our drive to construct bigger elements helps confirm that our scientific model is correct - and should we discover any discrepancies (like say the UV Catastrophe) than that only helps us understand things better, since we reform our theories to fit the results.
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Because knowledge is a good thing? As it happens, Copernicium_285 has a halflife that is higher than elements 109 and up [wikipedia.org].
I find it interesting, but apparently you seem to think that knowledge is a bad thing.
Why? Who cares.
Could finding out possibly be of use? Who cares.
Suppose we find perfectly stable elements? Why bother?
Re:natural? (Score:5, Informative)
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If super-heavy elements are discovered which have longer half-lives (and this is suspected to be the case), these elements would be extremely valuable simply for their density if nothing else. Ion drives use heavy, inert atoms as their reaction material -- xenon, for instance. The efficiency of any propulsion system goes up as the per-particle mass of the propellant increases. So one application of stable, super-heavy elements would be as reaction material for ion thrusters. It doesn't even have to be stabl
another name that would have been good... (Score:3, Interesting)
Fibonaccium
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That's reserved for element 144.
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thats element 1123 or 11235
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That's the great thing about Fibonacci, he keeps coming round again!
Finally... (Score:2, Funny)
My breathless wait is over.
Beryllium (Score:2)
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That's okay, I kept trying to hug mercury.
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Uranium Not The Heaviest Natural Element On Earth (Score:4, Informative)
Since plutonium, element 93, is found in uranium ores (being bred there by neutron capture) and Pu-244 (half-life 80.8 million years) has also survived in detectable quantities from the formation of the Earth, uranium is not the heaviest natural element on Earth.
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Minor nit, but IIRC, plutonium is element 94. Neptunium is 93.
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Pu-244 does not have 244 protons, it still only has 94 protons.
The article was speaking of base atomic weight, they certainly weren't suggesting heavier isotopes did not exist. They were talking about the element itself, not its potential isotope. The element Plutonium has an atomic weight of about 188, Coppernicium has an atomic weight of about 224. Coppernicium is the heavier element. If you'll read more carefully, they are careful to refer to proton count so nit-pickers like you can understand their
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Since plutonium, element 93, is found in uranium ores (being bred there by neutron capture) and Pu-244 (half-life 80.8 million years)
Holy cr*p, dewd. 80 million years, that's a long time.
So, if they ever discover an element with a negative half-life, will they call it Banach-Tarskium?
A true injustice (Score:2)
The element's discoverer was, quite understandably, crushed by his lack of recognition.
http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=1621 [smbc-comics.com]
We Have An Element! (Score:2)
Reminds me of this flash fiction by Mike Swanwick [blogspot.com]. :D
copper (Score:2, Insightful)
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Actually, copper's name is derived from Cyprus. So Copernicium is an element named for a person named for an element named for an island.
That's enough for me to get over my love of ununbium.
Indeed he was (Score:3, Informative)
So, to nitpick, since transuranics use the actual form of scientist's names, it should really be Kupfernigkium, Kf.
(Otherwise, Einsteinium would have to be Unopetrium.)
Copernicium (Score:3, Insightful)
---
Nuclear Chemistry [feeddistiller.com] Feed @ Feed Distiller [feeddistiller.com]
Scientific misconduct? (Score:2)
I just want to know how it's pronounced (Score:2)
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That's some jewelry, with 50% of it disappearing every 9 minutes.
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Re:Cool name (Score:4, Insightful)
Element names are used to honour people and places for all sorts of reasons, and Copernicus clearly deserves it.
Röntgen's contributions were not exactly nuclear physics either, and Alfred Nobel wasn't even a physicist (neither was Vasili Samarsky-Bykhovets).
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Copernicus is widely credited as being a key figure in the birth of the scientific revolution. Which lead to nuclear physics, among other things.
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...remind me again, what did Copernicus do that was related to nuclear physics?
Dude, he only invented Newton ... and we all know Newton invented gravity and cool PDA's. This is /., try to keep up ;-)
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Honestly, the parent does have a point though- other than nobelium and copernicium, there seems to be a clear trend from americium (#95) onward to name elements either for their place of discovery or after important nuclear scientists. Although, you could make the case that Einstein was not primarily a nuclear physicist, and the nucleus wasn't even known when Mendeleev drew up his table, they had made important contributi
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Nucleus is to Sun
as
Electron cloud is to Planet
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It will in a Beowulf cluster.
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The element of surprise?
It has an atomic weight of: 0.o
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Heaviest -> most massive, Densest -> most dense. No better wording needed. Especially given that it specifies "elements" and not "single element materials"
You did remember to specify that your densities were at STP didn't you?