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10028-14-5

10028-14-5 Structure

10028-14-5 Structure
IdentificationBack Directory
[Name]

Nobelium
[CAS]

10028-14-5
[Synonyms]

Unb
102No
Nobelio
Unnilbium
Chebi:33396
[Molecular Formula]

No
[MOL File]

10028-14-5.mol
[Molecular Weight]

259
Chemical PropertiesBack Directory
[Melting point ]

827°C
[form ]

metal
[color ]

metal
[CAS DataBase Reference]

10028-14-5
Hazard InformationBack Directory
[Chemical Properties]

synthetic radioactive element; one of the actinides; has nine very short?lived isotopes; discovered in 1958 by Ghiorso and colleagues [HAW93]
[History]

The name of No derives from “Alfred Nobel”, the discoverer of dynamite and founder of the Nobel prizes. It was first synthesized in 1966 by the Russian scientists from the JINR (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research) lab in Dubna, Russia under Georgi Flerov. Earlier claims to have synthesized “Nobelium” beginning in 1957 were shown to be erroneous but the original name was retained because of its widespread use throughout the scientific literature. In 1958 a group at Berkeley, California, USA reported that they were unable to reproduce this work, findings agreed by a Russian group at Dubna. However an authenticated discovery of nobelium was made in 1958 by A. Ghiorso, T. Sikkeland, G. T. Seaborg and J. R. Walton at Berkeley, California. Since then a number of isotopes with mass numbers in the range 250–259 have been made. The longest half-life associated with this unstable element is 58 minute 259No.
[Definition]

ChEBI: Nobelium is an actinoid atom and a f-block element atom.
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