Synthetic element

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In chemistry, the chemical elements labeled as synthetic are unstable. These synthetic elements possess a half-life so short, relative to the age of the Earth that any atoms of these elements that may have existed when the Earth formed have long since decayed away. Because of this, atoms of synthetic elements are only present on Earth as the product of experiments involving nuclear reactors or particle accelerators.

The first synthetic element created was technetium. This discovery filled a gap in the periodic table, and the fact that no stable isotopes of technetium exist explains its natural absence on Earth (and the gap). With a 4.2 million year half-life, no technetium remains from the formation of the Earth, however, technetium is still naturally present on Earth as a by-product of the decay of uranium-238.

quasi-synthetic elements include:

(All elements with atomic numbers 1-94 are naturally occurring at least in trace quantities)

Provisional names for recently observed synthetic elements:

Provisional name for the synthetic element not yet proven to exist:

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