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roentgenium
[ rent-gen-ee-uhm, -jen-, ruhnt- ]
noun
Chemistry, Physics.
- a superheavy, synthetic radioactive element with a very short half-life. : Rg; : 111.
roentgenium
/ ĕԳ-ĕ′ŧ-ə,-ĕ′-,ŭԳ-,ղԳ-ĕ′- /
- An artificially produced radioactive element with a mass number of 280. Its most stable known isotope has a half-life of 3.6 seconds. Atomic number 111.
- See Periodic Table
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of roentgenium1
First recorded in 2000–05; named after German physicist Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen.
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
They are Darmstadtium, or Ds, which has 110 protons in its nucleus and was named after the town in which it was discovered; Roentgenium, or Rg, with 111 protons, named after the discoverer of X-rays Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen; and Copernicium, or Cn, which has 112 protons and is named after the Polish astronomer Copernicus, who disrupted the view that the Earth was the center of the universe.
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