Rare Metals Becoming More Common

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Paul M. Tyler Colin G. Fink
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
481 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

THE field of rare metals is so broad that progress can be reported upon many important fronts. Not satisfied with the 92 elements that Mendeleeff and his followers have accepted as legitimate, scientists are trying now to complicate matters by making new elements. Enrico Fermi announced the fabrication of "Element 93". Uranium, instead of being allowed to disintegrate slowly according to its normal habit, was bombarded with neutrons until some of them seemed to have stuck in the nucleus. To understand just what is alleged to have happened all one has to do is to line up the elements in their usual order of ascending atomic weight and imagine, as physicists do, that each atom is a little solar orbit comprising a central mass or planet about which other masses revolve like satellites. Ordinary hydrogen, being very light, consists of only one positively charged proton center, with only one positively charged electron revolving about it. Other atones are progressively more complicated until we come to uranium, which has a relatively big center and 92 particles revolving around it.
Citation

APA: Paul M. Tyler Colin G. Fink  (1935)  Rare Metals Becoming More Common

MLA: Paul M. Tyler Colin G. Fink Rare Metals Becoming More Common. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.

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