History
(Alfred Nobel, discoverer of dynamite) Nobelium was unambiguiously discovered
and identified in April 1958 at Berkeley by A. Ghiorso, T. Sikkeland, J.R.
Walton, and G.T. Seaborg, who used a new double-recoil technique. A heavy-ion
linear accelerator (HILAC) was used to bombard a thin target of curium (95%
244Cm and 4.5% 246Cm) with 12C ions to produce 102No according to the 246Cm(12C,
4n) reaction.
In 1957 workers in the United States, Britain, and Sweden announced the
discovery of an isotope of element 102 with a 10-minute half-life at 8.5 MeV, as
a result of bombarding 244Cm with 13C nuclei. On the basis of this experiment,
the name nobelium was assigned and accepted by the Commission on Atomic
Weights of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
The acceptance of the name was premature because both Russian and American
efforts now completely rule out the possibility of any isotope of Element 102
having a half-life of 10 min in the vicinity of 8.5 MeV. Early work in 1957 on
the search for this element, in Russia at the Kurchatov Institute, was marred by
the assignment of 8.9 +/- 0.4 MeV alpha radiation with a half-life of 2 to 40
sec, which was too indefinite to support discovery claims.
Confirmatory experiments at Berkeley in 1966 have shown the existence of
254-102 with a 55-s half-life, 252-102 with a 2.3-s half-life, and 257-102 with
a 23-s half-life.
Following tradition giving the right to name an element to the discoverer(s),
the Berkeley group in 1967, suggested that the hastily given name nobelium
along with the symbol No , be retained.
Isotopes
Ten isotopes are now recognized, one of which -- 255-102 -- has a half-life
of 3 minutes.
Page Source: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Last Updated: 12/19/97, CST Information Services Team
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