At the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, 20 physicists from JINR and 10 from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the US sent a beam of calcium-48 ions into a target of californium-249 atoms to briefly create three representatives of element 118, which lies just beneath radon in the periodic table and is therefore a kind of noble gas. In separate runs with about 2 × 1019 calcium projectiles each, one atom of element 118 appeared in the year 2002 and two more in 2005; the exhaustive analysis took until now to complete. That analysis included the clear and unique decay sequence via the offloading of alpha particles: Nuclei of 294118 decay to become element 290116 (an isotope also first produced in these experiments), followed by 286114, 282112, and then the products of spontaneous fission. The average observed lifetime for element 118 was...

You do not currently have access to this content.