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Do SF authors make up new elements? The elements don't seem to be in Seaborg's island of stability, either.
Actually, what I really mean is why would the sort of person who can't be bothered to look at a table of elements or think about the general decline in half-lives as atomic mass increases past a certain point bother with SF? What's the attraction for them?

Actually, what I really mean is why would the sort of person who can't be bothered to look at a table of elements or think about the general decline in half-lives as atomic mass increases past a certain point bother with SF? What's the attraction for them?

Re: Actually
Date: 2009-04-28 07:39 pm (UTC)For natural production, remember that most natural production of heavy elements is by neutron bombardment and that getting to the island means running a gauntlet of mili and microsecond half lives. It might not be possible to get there even with the r-process.
Re: Actually
Date: 2009-04-28 08:07 pm (UTC)Natural production, sure, very very very unlikely. But that hasn't stopped people from looking. After all, finding some would put you on the short list for a free trip to Stockholm.
IMS there's one guy -- an Israeli? -- who has claimed success a couple of times now. But nobody's ever been able to duplicate his results.
Doug M.