It’s easy to see why they use numbers.

“Tuesday, October 17, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM (from the Seattle Times)
Heaviest known element created

By Thomas H. Maugh II

Los Angeles Times

U.S. and Russian researchers said Monday they had created element 118, the heaviest known element.

It is the fifth ultraheavy element produced by the team at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, Calif., and the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, which has come to dominate the creation of rare, short-lived elements.”

I was able to find the other four other heaviest elementa and the latest and heaviest entry.

#114

101706black-forest-gateauwasfasahla.jpg

#115

101706miraclegrowhardwarestore-lawn-and-gardenshardwaretorecom.jpg

#116

101706royale.jpg

#117

101706English-Breakfastlondonbyclick.jpg

…and #118–by far the heaviest of the lot and capable of changing

the barometric pressure of the Northern Hemisphere…

101706bergmansextet.jpg

*

Please find the real article here.

Images: (breakfast) londonbyclick.co.uk; belins.com; (bugatti) clevelandmuseumofart.com; (man) sculpture by Nesse artauto.com; (chauffeur) soverereign-chauffeur.co.uk; (streetlamp) freeimage4u.com; (Bergman films) all are from amazon.com; except(Through a Glass)laserdisken.dk;
(silence)img.verycd.com;(soil) hardwarestore.com-lawn-and-garden.hardwarestore.com;

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.