
Monthly Archives: April 2018
Questions of Science: The Periodic Table
Q: Does every element in the Periodic Table have a practical use?
THE Periodic Table is an elegant arrangement of chemical elements ordered by their atomic number and properties. Created by Russian chemist Dmitry I. Mendeleyev in the mid-19th century, it has been invaluable in the development of chemistry.
Most of the first 92 elements have some practical use while none of the chemical elements with atomic numbers higher than 98 – from einsteinium (99) to oganesson (118) – have any real applications. They are too dangerous, too expensive or too scarce – many can only be created in tiny amounts.
Thulium (atomic number 69) was once the butt of scientific jokes and parody because for many years it was not considered to have any practical applications. However, a thulium laser is being developed within medical science for the treatment of cancer.
Extremely short-lived elements such as actinium (89) and astatine (85) are used only in research or to produce isotopes of other elements for medical purposes.
Protactinium (91) is listed between uranium and thorium, which both have numerous applications. But owing to its scarcity, high radioactivity and high toxicity, there are no known uses for protactinium. The most stable isotope of francium (87), francium-223, has a half-life of 22 minutes, which means it does not have a practical use.
The extremely rare berkelium (97) has no known practical applications.

The Periodic Table

Science-in-motion: a series of short articles following topics in science.
. Isotopes
Chemical elements can exist as two or more isotopes that have different numbers of neutrons in the nucleus. For example, while carbon always has six nuclear protons, it exists as three different naturally occurring isotopes with six, seven or eight neutrons. These isotopes are often written carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14.
Chemically, different isotopes of an element are usually identical because their chemical properties are determined by their outer electrons. But different isotopes undergo nuclear decay at different rates. For instance, while most carbon on Earth is the stable isotope carbon-12, the isotope carbon-14 is radioactive and decays with a half-life of 5,700 years.
This underpins the technique of carbon dating. Constant interchange with the environment makes the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 constant in a living tree, for instance, but the ratio drops with time in a predictable way after the tree dies. If ancient wood has just half the expected ‘living’ value of carbon-14, it must be about 5,700 years old.
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Syria: How Britain strategically could become involved
IN BRIEF
By Air: Eight GR4 Tornados based at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus could be dispatched to fire Storm Shadow missiles at ground targets.
These missiles have a range of more than 150 miles, helping pilots to keep out of range of Syrian anti-air defences. The 2,900lb Storm Shadows use GPS systems and terrain-following equipment to fly low under radar to their targets.
Reaper MQ9 drones based in Kuwait but controlled by the RAF could be ordered to fire Hellfire missiles at Syrian military installations.

An RAF GR4 armed with Storm Shadow missiles.
By Sea: The Royal Navy could fire Tomahawk missiles from its nuclear-powered Trafalgar-class submarines, one of which is constantly on patrol in the region. The vessels, whose immediate location is kept secret, carry a large number of the cruise missiles, which are exceptionally accurate.
Appendage:
