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- Mendelevium - Wikipedia
It is the thirteenth actinide, the ninth transuranic element, and the first transfermium; it is named after Dmitri Mendeleev, the father of the periodic table Like all the transfermiums, it can only be produced in particle accelerators by bombarding lighter elements with charged particles
- Mendelevium - Element information, properties and uses | Periodic Table
Element Mendelevium (Md), Group 20, Atomic Number 101, f-block, Mass [258] Sources, facts, uses, scarcity (SRI), podcasts, alchemical symbols, videos and images
- Mendelevium | Radioactive, Synthetic, Actinide | Britannica
Mendelevium (Md), synthetic chemical element of the actinoid series of the periodic table, atomic number 101 It was the first element to be synthesized and discovered a few atoms at a time
- Mendelevium Facts, Symbol, Discovery, Properties, Uses
Mendelevium (pronounced as men-deh-LEE-vee-em) is a radioactive metal that belongs to the family of actinides and represented by the chemical symbol Md Its most stable isotope is Md-258 with a half-life of 51 5 days [1, 4]
- Mendelevium | Md (Element) - PubChem
Chemical element, Mendelevium, information from authoritative sources Look up properties, history, uses, and more
- Mendelevium Element Facts - chemicool. com
Mendelevium was the ninth synthetic transuranium element of the actinide series to be discovered It was first identified by Albert Ghiorso, Bernard Harvey, Gregory Choppin, Stanley Thompson, and Glenn Seaborg in 1955 at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, California
- Mendelevium (Md) - Periodic Table
Mendelevium is the 101st element in the periodic table and has a symbol of Md and atomic number of 101 It has an atomic weight of (258) and a mass number of 244
- Periodic Table of Elements: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Mendelevium is named after Dmitri Mendeleev It is the ninth transuranium element of the actinide series discovered It was first identified by Ghiorso, Harvey, Choppin, Thompson, and Seaborg in early in 1955 during the bombardment of the isotope 253 Es with helium ions in the Berkeley 60-inch cyclotron
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