Top Comments
All Comments (31)
-
We need more information on this element! Update, update! :P
-
@pooppeeyoupants Ah yes. You are right. I worded that incorrectly. Sorry. What I meant to say, was that only a few atoms have been synthasized. Not nearly enough to find a practical application, or even see it on a macroscopic level. But yes, they have been discovered. That was a stupid mistake of mine, sorry for the inconvenience.
-
@Crazynerd96 plus i get annoyed when people post random replies without doing any reasearch. Like that happens a ton.
-
@Crazynerd96 they have! dude! they wouldnt give it a name if not! ask anyone!
-
can we have more adverts please - i love it when I can't see the screen for them
-
@pooppeeyoupants Fermium through Lawrencium also have not yet been discovered.
-
@ElveeKaye Nothing. It is too radioactive. In fact its longest lived isotope (Seaborgium 269) has a half-life of only 2.1 minutes.
-
@pooppeeyoupants sry i had no more characters left so i had to cram some short words in.
-
@ElveeKaye Seaborgium is not used 4 anything, but any element with the different properties as 'other' elements besides the isotopes will be placed on a spot on the periodic table. However, from Rotherfordium to Ununoctium, they have been synthedically discovered, and has a very short halflife (or ta tim for half of the atoms to break up in a lump of pure element) and the radioactive elements polonium through present, will exist 4 short amounts of tim, so it izn uzed in anizing. Hope this helps!
-
@ElveeKaye Seaborgium is radioactive.
Seaborg... Sounds like somekind of monster :P
Airsofter1995 2 years ago 28
But what, exactly, is Seaborgium used for?
ElveeKaye 3 years ago 28