Search results for "transactinide"

showing 5 items of 35 documents

Super Heavy Elements - experimental developments

2018

With his theoretical work Walter Greiner, our mentor, pioneered super heavy element research and motivated us young scientists. He actively shaped the profile of GSI. We are happy that still during his lifetime we could prove some of his predictions: Fusion with magic nuclei paving the way to super heavy elements and the proof of the prediction of the nuclear species existing only by shell stabilization, super heavy elements. With the discovery of oganesson, Z=118, the heaviest element known today, we have come to the end of this era. New experimental developments will be discussed.

PhysicsTheoretical physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsPhysicsQC1-9990103 physical sciencesTransactinide elementHeavy element010306 general physics01 natural sciencesEPJ Web of Conferences
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Exploring the stability of super heavy elements: First Measurement of the Fission Barrier of $^{254} $No

2013

The gamma-ray multiplicity and total energy emitted by the heavy nucleus 254No have been measured at 2 different beam energies. From these measurements, the initial distributions of spin I and excitation energy E * of 254No were constructed. The distributions display a saturation in excitation energy, which allows a direct determination of the fission barrier. 254No is the heaviest shell-stabilized nucleus with a measured fission barrier. © Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2014.

Physicsta114Fissionheavy elementsPhysicsQC1-999Nuclear Theoryfission barrierTransactinide elementstability[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]7. Clean energyNuclear physicsmedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineNuclear structureMultiplicity (chemistry)Total energyAtomic physicsNuclear ExperimentSaturation (magnetic)NucleusExcitationComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Review of the SISAK system in transactinide research

1998

Abstract The performance of the SISAK 1 liquid–liquid extraction system applied in transactinide experiments has been improved with respect to the equipment itself and the way it is operated. The improvements were checked in on-line experiments, under conditions similar to those during transactinide experiments. As a result, the yield of the separation system was increased by a factor >5. Furthermore, a cleaner organic scintillation phase was obtained due to a better phase separation. This reduced the β-background, which disturbs the α-measurements. The sensitivity of the SISAK apparatus, including the gasjet and the detection system has been improved by more than one order of magnitude.

Separation systemChromatographyMechanics of MaterialsChemistrybusiness.industryMechanical EngineeringMaterials ChemistryMetals and AlloysTransactinide elementProcess engineeringbusinessJournal of Alloys and Compounds
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Historical Reminiscences: The Pioneering Years of Superheavy Element Research

2013

This chapter deals with the pioneering years of superheavy element research, from the mid 1960s to the mid 1980s. The prediction that superheavy nuclides could form an island around element 114 with half-lives long enough to have survived in Nature since nucleosynthesis led to intensive searches—not unlike “gold fever”—for such relic nuclei in all sorts of natural environments. Positive claims were raised from time to time but could not stand up under further scrutiny. Numerous attempts to synthesize superheavy nuclei by large leaps from the mainland of elemental stability to the island of superheavy elements went without success as well. The discovery of three more transactinide elements, …

Transactinide elementSociologyElement (criminal law)Superheavy ElementsSocial scienceAstrobiology
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Extraction Chromatographic Behavior of Rf, Zr, and Hf in HCl Solution with Styrenedivinylbenzene Copolymer Resin Modified by TOPO (trioctylphosphine …

2010

It is of great interest to study chemical properties of the transactinide elements with atomic numbers (Z) ≥ 104. One of the most important subjects is to establish the position of the elements at the extreme end of the periodic table. To this end we perform studies of chemical properties of these transactinides and compare them with those of their lighter homologues and with the ones expected from extrapolations in the periodic table. So far, chromatographic studies of the transactinides have provided experimental proof of placing rutherfordium (Rf, Z = 104) through hassium (Hs, Z = 108) into groups 4 to 8, respectively. 1-10 Quite recently, copernicium (Cn, Z = 112) has been shown to be a…

chemistry.chemical_compoundChromatographychemistryGroup (periodic table)RutherfordiumTransactinide elementchemistry.chemical_elementAtomic numberRelativistic quantum chemistryTrioctylphosphine oxideCoperniciumHassiumJournal of Nuclear and Radiochemical Sciences
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