As the Chase For New Elements Slows, Scientists Focus on Deepening Their Understanding of the Superheavy Ones They Already Know (nature.com) 46
From a report: The quest to extend the periodic table is not over, but it is grinding to a halt. Since Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev published his periodic table 150 years ago, researchers have been adding elements to it at the average rate of one every two or three years. Having found all the elements that are stable enough to persist naturally, researchers started to create their own, and are now up to element 118, oganesson. Although they still hope to find more, they agree that prospects of venturing beyond element 120 are dim.
"We're reaching the area of diminishing returns in the synthesis of new elements, at least with our current level of technology," says Jacklyn Gates, who works on heavy-element chemistry at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. As a result, research on the edge of the periodic table is shifting focus. Rather than chasing new elements, scientists are going back to deepen their understanding of the superheavy ones -- roughly speaking, those with an atomic number above 100 -- that they have already made.
Studying the chemical properties of these elements could show whether the most massive ones obey the organizing principle of the table -- which sorts elements into groups with similar behaviours on the basis of periodically recurring patterns of chemical reactivity. And although the heaviest elements decay in less than the blink of an eye, researchers still hope that they might arrive at the fabled 'island of stability': a hypothesized region of element-land where some superheavy isotopes -- atoms that have the same number of protons in their nucleus, but differing numbers of neutrons -- might exist for minutes, days or even longer.
"We're reaching the area of diminishing returns in the synthesis of new elements, at least with our current level of technology," says Jacklyn Gates, who works on heavy-element chemistry at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. As a result, research on the edge of the periodic table is shifting focus. Rather than chasing new elements, scientists are going back to deepen their understanding of the superheavy ones -- roughly speaking, those with an atomic number above 100 -- that they have already made.
Studying the chemical properties of these elements could show whether the most massive ones obey the organizing principle of the table -- which sorts elements into groups with similar behaviours on the basis of periodically recurring patterns of chemical reactivity. And although the heaviest elements decay in less than the blink of an eye, researchers still hope that they might arrive at the fabled 'island of stability': a hypothesized region of element-land where some superheavy isotopes -- atoms that have the same number of protons in their nucleus, but differing numbers of neutrons -- might exist for minutes, days or even longer.
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You need to go further than Mars. Calvera [wikipedia.org] is the closest neutron star, located in Ursa Minor, about 1000 LY from earth. A neutron star is basically a giant nucleus, so it is technically an element.
Re:bah prertty sure there's more on Mars (Score:4, Informative)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] is closer (about 400LY) and there may be other cold ones even closer. They're hard to detect
Re:bah prertty sure there's more on Mars (Score:4, Informative)
A neutron star is basically a giant nucleus, so it is technically an element.
Not by a long shot. Neutron stars are made up of neutron degenerate matter [wikipedia.org] which is a press of multiple neutrons into an incredibly dense material. The neutrons are still separate and do not merge into one. Even the neutrons present can not be described as an element since they lack the other key features of an element, namely protons and electrons.
Your hypothesis is novel, but lacks a basic understanding of the phenomenon.
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Neutron stars are made up of neutron degenerate matter which is a press of multiple neutrons into an incredibly dense material.
What happened to all the protons and electrons? Did they "convert" into neutrons? If so, what does that tell us about "fundamental" particles?
The neutrons are still separate and do not merge into one.
What allows the neutrons to keep their "identity" under such extreme stresses?
They're not superheavy ... (Score:4, Funny)
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What? A day later, and still no mention of my mom...
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And the rights of women? You dont seem to have an issue making sure they dont have any rights.
That's all there will be? (Score:5, Funny)
So the idea of finding an 'island of stability' after all those shrinking half-lives didn't pan out, then?
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You'll just have to settle for a paper weight of Jumbo.
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It's still possible, but the probability halves with each successive element.
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Quantum Stability (Score:3)
I wonder if large elements become unstable because they're approaching the size at which quantum effects no longer manifest. I imagine it's known, but also wonder why certain non-isotopes are radioactive.
Re:Quantum Stability (Score:5, Interesting)
>> because they're approaching the size at which quantum
>> effects no longer
I don't think so - neutrons and protons are attracted together by the strong force, which is quite strong but weakens very rapidly with distance. Protons repel each other with their positive electrical charges. The electric charge is weaker than the strong, but weakens over distance more slowly. As God builds up nuclei by adding protons their mutually repulsive force is greater than the strong force because the protons on one side of the nucleus don't feel the distant protons' strong force, but they do feel the electric force. Neutrons stabilize the nucleus by adding more strong force without electric force, but again size matters, a proton at one extreme of a uranium nucleus feels almost no strong force from the other side so adding protons doesn't help. A friend that works in the weeds of this stuff told me that as a proton detaches from a radium atom and moves a nuclear radius away feels an electrical repulsion of something like 5 POUNDS from all the other protons and no attraction from the strong force. Zooom!
Re:Quantum Stability -Correction (Score:4, Interesting)
I said:
> so adding protons doesn't help.
Its neutrons, not protons - it should have been
Neutrons stabilize the nucleus by adding more strong force without electric force, but again size matters, a proton at one extreme of a uranium nucleus feels almost no strong force from the other side so adding *neutrons* doesn't help.
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I wasn't taught about neutron excess in school. I thought the number of neutrons and protons were always equal, except in isotopes. Or I just forgot.
Re:WTF is non-isotope (Score:5, Interesting)
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You might think it's odd, but it makes sense when you think about it.
Imagine the phase of the big bang where nucleons have just formed. As the temperature cools, most neutrons will decay into more stable protons; it is thought that the final ratio was about 7 : 1. Pairs of protons repel; you might think pairs of neutrons bind due to the strong force, but to exist together in such a bound state they need to be different enough and this requires them to have just enough extra energy that actually they don't s
Re:Quantum Stability (Score:5, Informative)
Basically it's mainly a quantum effect that makes larger nuclei unstable, specifically the Pauli-Exclusion-Principle. It's the same thing that hinders the electrons of an atom to all go to the lowest possible energetic state. They have to occupy different "orbitals", which pushes electrons to successively higher energy levels if they'd be added one at a time to a nucleus to form an atom.
The same happens to neutrons and protons in an atom core, and it's the reason why it isn't possible to just add an arbitrary number of neutrons to any atom core (they wouldn't be repelled due to electric forces and just "bond" with strong forces to other nucleons, so their contribution to the binding energy should be positive).
In the "Semi-Empirical Mass Formula" this contribution is called (a)symmetry term:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
This formula works quite well, and the asymmetry term (penalizing different numbers of protons and neutrons) is what hinders nuclei with arbitrary numbers of added neutrons to be stable. Without this contribution the model can't (approximately) reproduce what we find in nature, and any model of the nucleus needs some explanation for this. Somehow there must be some reason why that is so, and the best reason we found so far is the Pauli-Exclusion-Principle applied to nucleons, which is basically quantum mechanical.
obligatory sci-fi reference (Score:1)
Where superheavy elements form the basis of advanced technology
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
I'm not sure, but Mirkheim, by Poul Anderson, may contain similar elements (pun intended).
Both great book.s
The Quest (Score:2)
Naming Suggestion (Score:2)
Can we name one of them Felonium? That way, we can show that even the realm of physics has (puts on shades) a criminal element.