Researchers may be nearing the creation of element 120. Element 120 would add a new row to the periodic table. New ion-bombardment technique may be the key to synthesising unbinilium.
Where does the periodic table of chemical elements end and which processes lead to the existence of heavy elements? Researchers report on experiments to come closer to an answer. They gained insight ...
An international team of astronomers has inspected long-term evolution of quasi-periodic eruptions (QPEs) from a QPE source designated eRO-QPE2. The study found that QPEs from this source are ...
Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory say they have developed the technology that could finally produce the fabled element 120, which would require the addition of a new row to the ...
Researchers have long been hunting for a way to make the elusive elements more stable so they can be better studied.
On Oct. 25, 2024, LOUD released its latest research findings, titled "From 'Periodic Table of Data Elements' to 'Data ...
In recent decades, researchers have pushed the boundaries of the periodic table, synthesizing the heaviest elements known to ...
Scientists have found a way to create superheavy elements, leading to groundbreaking possibilities in chemistry.
Scientists might be close to producing a new, incredibly heavy element called "element 120." This element would be so massive that it would need a new row on the periodic table, which is the chart ...
Scientists have discovered a new way of creating superheavy elements by firing supercharged ion beams at dense atoms. The team believes this method could potentially help synthesize the hypothetical ...
It took weeks to observe the behavior of one and a half dozen precious, but very short-lived, atoms of these exotic elements.
For decades, scientists have looked for materials that could make superconductivity -- the lossless transmission of electricity -- possible at higher temperatures, such as room temperature. That would ...