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Is There a "Hole" in the Periodic Table of Elements? (The Last Element?)
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All the elements above 92 (I believe it is) are Man-made. Although they are created in nature as well, they virtually immediately cease to be (just as in laboratories by us) due to instability from the high amounts of energy involved in making them, therefore the energy is trapped in the nucleus, and breaks it apart near immediately (in time from our perspective).

I was reading this:
http://www.livescience.com/technology/destroy_earth_mp-1.html

And the line, "Creating a microscopic black hole is tricky, since one needs a reasonable amount of neutronium, but may possibly be achievable by jamming large numbers of atomic nuclei together until they stick." made me realize that a "Black Hole" should be an atom on the Periodic Table of Elements" as, having an atom with "X" amount of protons and neutrons for a fleeting moment together in the smallest volume of space possible is sufficient to make a "Black Hole" therefore no real atom above it could ever exist!


The Periodic Table is now complete?

Does anyone else find this interesting?

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How to program: 1. Start with lots and lots of 0's. 10. Add 1's, liberally.
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Whoah!!! He spoke, a bit late.
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Re: Is There a "Hole" in the Periodic Table of Elements? (The Last Element?)
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@Atheist

You'd have a hard time placing that on the table. When does a black hole become a black hole, and exacly how many protons is that? Billions? That shoots it right past all the other elements that that end the proton count around what...104?

Just remember it's all theory anyway.

I liked # 10 "Total existance failure"

Plaz

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Re: Is There a "Hole" in the Periodic Table of Elements? (The Last Element?)
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*crickets*

Seems atomic science topics aren't big around here.

Plaz

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Re: Is There a "Hole" in the Periodic Table of Elements? (The Last Element?)
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@Plaz

Quote:

Plaz wrote:
Seems atomic science topics aren't big around here.
Plaz



Too much like work !

I used to work creating higher number elements like Neptunium and Plutonium at Dounreay, would you spend all day discussing your job on mailing lists. Boring or what !


Bill.

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Re: Is There a "Hole" in the Periodic Table of Elements? (The Last Element?)
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@BillE

Quote:
I used to work creating higher number elements like Neptunium and Plutonium at Dounreay, would you spend all day discussing your job on mailing lists. Boring or what !


Only if it worked as a babe magnet I guess.
"Is that an fusion reactor in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?"

So how is tha puppy at brewing beer? :)


Follow up:
Good greif man, I wouldn't have my beer any where near there. Sounds like a potential mess from the cold war days.....

Quote:
A 65-metre deep shaft used for intermediate level nuclear waste disposal is contaminating some groundwater, and is threatened by coastal erosion in about 300 years time. The shaft was never designed as a waste depository, but was used as such on a very ad-hoc and poorly monitored basis, without reliable waste disposal records being kept. In origin it is a relic of a process by which a waste-discharge pipe was constructed. The pipe was designed to discharge waste into the sea. Historic use of the shaft as a waste depository has resulted in one hydrogen gas explosion [2] caused by sodium and potassium wastes reacting with water. At one time it was normal for workers to fire rifles into the shaft to sink polythene bags floating on water.[3] There are fears that accumulated material might represent a potential critical mass



Plaz

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