Arab Times

Periodic table expands:

Discovery

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Morita

Pamuk

The periodic table got larger Wednesday after four new elements were officially named and added to the chart, including ‘nihonium’ — the first ever to be discovered by Japanese scientists.

The new name for element 113, a highly radioactiv­e element with an extremely short half-life, comes from Japan’s name in Japanese — ‘nihon’, literally ‘the land of the rising sun’.

“The element, named for the first time by Japanese and in Asia, will occupy a place in the periodic table — an intellectu­al asset of mankind,” Kosuke Morita, who led the team that created the element, said in a statement.

The periodic table, pored over by science students the world over, arranges chemical elements in the order of their atomic number.

Some elements, such as hydrogen, carbon or magnesium, are found in nature while others, including nihonium — official symbol Nh — are synthesise­d in laboratori­es.

All the discovered elements after 104 are synthetic ones produced through laboratory experiment­s.

Tradition dictates that newly discovered elements be named after a place, geographic­al region, or scientist, according to the Internatio­nal Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC), which made the announceme­nt on the names Wednesday.

A joint team of Russian and US scientists named element 115 moscovium — symbol Mc — after the Russian capital, where much of the relevant research was conducted.

For similar reasons, they also named element 117 tennessine — symbol Ts — after the US state of Tennessee.

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