Japan found the 113th chemical element
According to Today's THV, a Japanese research institute has invented an unknown chemical element - the 113th element.
Photo: Japanese scientists tested and tested
successfully demonstrated the existence of the 113th chemical element.
The research team at the RIKEN Institute of Science in Saitama, Japan found a new chemical element by bombarding bismuth zinc atoms in a particle accelerator.
The team closely monitored the transition of other chemical elements and came to the conclusion that there was a 113th chemical element not known to date.
If this result is recognized by international scientific organizations, Japan's RIKEN Science Institute will become Asia's first scientific institute entitled to name a new chemical element.
Kosuke Morita, a professor at the RIKEN Institute, expressed pride and pride in this achievement of Japan. He said that this would be a big step in the nation's science.
The periodic table of known chemical elements includes elements from 1 to 94 (from hydrogen to plutonium) that exist in natural form and elements from 95 to 116 (except elements 113 and 115) as raw materials Artificial elements are formed by particle accelerators.
Previously, by accelerators, it was discovered that atoms of elements 113 and 115 existed, but have not yet successfully synthesized these elements.
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