Picture taken by Christina M. Marvin
A good chemist always keeps a periodic table of elements handy!

As of last month, the periodic table of elements hanging in your classroom, office, or bathroom is officially out of date. Early in December 2016, the chemistry community officially recognized 4 newly discovered elements that complete the 7th row of the periodic table. These highly elusive elements do not exist in nature and decay into other elements with half lifes ranging from 20 seconds to 0.89 milliseconds. However, scientists believed they could be created and proved their existence by briefly synthesizing them in a lab and forcing them to stick around long enough to be measured. The official recognition of the new elements by the scientific community came as a delight to science geeks, who can’t wait to hang  up a new periodic table above the towel rack.

Let’s give a big science world welcome to the four new elements! Feel free to celebrate…periodically.

Modified from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:113_nihonium_(Nh)_enhanced_Bohr_model.png
Nihonium means Japan and was named after the country where this element was discovered.

Element 113: Nihonium (Nh)

Kosuke Morita and colleagues at RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science (Japan) announced their discovery of nihonium in August, 2012 after smashing zinc nuclei into a thin layer of bismuth.

Nihonium is Japanese for Japan and literally means “the land of the rising sun”. It is the first atomic element to be discovered in Asia.

Modified from: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bc/115_moscovium_(Mc)_enhanced_Bohr_model.png and https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f3/117_tennessine_(Ts)_enhanced_Bohr_model.png
Both moscovium and tennessine were named after the places where they were discovered.

Element 115: Moscovium (Mc) and Element 117: Tennessine (Ts)

Moscovium and tennessine were discovered by collaborations between groups of scientists at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, Russia, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, Vanderbilt University in Tennessee, and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.

The names, moscovium and tennessine, were chosen to represent the homelands of the Russian and American scientists, respectively.

Modified from: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:118_oganesson_(Os)_enhanced_Bohr_model.png
Oganesson was named after a famous Russian scientist who performed pioneering work in the field of nuclear physics- it is the final element in the 7th row on the periodic table!

Element 118: Oganesson (Og)

Oganesson was discovered by scientists at the JINR and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.

The name oganesson honors the Russian scientist Yuri Oganessian “for his pioneering contributions to transactinide elements research”. Oganessian made significant advances in the discovery of the transactinide elements (numbers 104-120) and conducted research on the nuclear physics of super-heavy nuclei.

Although the extremely short lifetimes of these new elements prevent any real world applications, their creation helps scientists better understand the atomic nucleus. Moving forward, it will become even more difficult to create elements heavier than oganesson due to their decreased stability. However, science continues to inspire researchers to dig deeper into “unknown” elements and examine more complex atomic structures. Today, scientists estimate that a total of 170 to 210 can be created to produce an extended periodic table.

Peer edited by JoEllen McBride.

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