mendelevium

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mendelevium

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

mendelevium , artificially produced radioactive chemical element; symbol Md; at. no. 101; mass no. of most stable isotope 258; m.p. 827°C; b.p. and sp. gr. unknown; valence +1, +2, +3. Mendelevium is a metal of the actinide series in Group 3 of the periodic table . The ninth transuranium element to be discovered, it is named for the Russian chemist Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev . The symbol Mv was used at first, but it was changed to Md in 1963. Sixteen isotopes of mendelevium are known. Mendelevium-256 (half-life about 76 min) was the first isotope produced; it was detected in 1955 by Albert Ghiorso, Bernard G. Harvey, Gregory R. Choppin, Stanley G. Thompson, and Glenn T. Seaborg , who produced it one atom at a time by bombarding einsteinium-253 with alpha particles in a cyclotron at the Univ. of California at Berkeley. This technique of producing and detecting single atoms has become the standard for the discovery of the elements beyond mendelevium in the periodic table. Little is known of the properties of this element, since its isotopes are unstable and difficult to produce. Mendelevium-258 (the most stable isotope) has a half-life of 52 days; its synthesis (by bombarding einsteinium-255 with alpha particles) may make possible studies of the physical and chemical properties of the element.

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mendelevium

The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English | 2009 | © The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 2009, originally published by Oxford University Press 2009. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

men·de·le·vi·um / ˌmendəˈlēvēəm; -ˈlā-/ • n. the chemical element of atomic number 101, a radioactive metal of the actinide series. It does not occur naturally and was first made in 1955 by bombarding einsteinium with helium ions. (Symbol: Md)

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News Wire article from: University Wire; 9/11/1997; ; 621 words ; ...avoid naming elements after living scientists. The IUPAC Council also decided at its Aug. 30 meeting that elements 101 Mendelevium, 102 Nobelium, and 103 Lawrencium should retain their commonly accepted names. (c)Daily Californian via U-Wire
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Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 11/21/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...waiting to be discovered. He and his co-workers later made some of these: berkelium in 1949, californium (1950), mendelevium (1955) and nobelium (1958). In 1994, Seaborg was immortalised when the American Chemical Society named element 106...
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