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Reports on these early experiments usually refer to dubnium as hahnium.
The team then took just 50 seconds to carry out a chemical separation of the hahnium from other elements in the mixture.
The collisions between atomic nuclei created hahnium and a variety of other substances.
It has been named eka-tantalum, hahnium and unnilpentium but is now named dubnium.
Consequently, hahnium has a chance of rejoining the periodic table, and even the French joliotium might make it into the pantheon.
Electronic structure of hahnium oxyhlides as analogs of group 5 elements oxihalides.
Element 105: joliotium; changed from hahnium.
The Americans wished to name element 105 hahnium, while the Russians preferred the name dubnium.
This was a surprise because the chemistry of seaborgium's nearest lighter neighbors, rutherfordium and hahnium, does not fit the table nearly so neatly.
Using a mist of potassium chloride particles, Dr. Hoffman's group captured the hahnium on a microscope cover slip.
But why should such relativity effects alter the chemical properties expected for rutherfordium and hahnium, but not alter seaborgium the same way?
Hahnium Goren reportedly yelled at Mamet Goren.
The American team proposed that the new element should be named hahnium (Ha), in honor of the late German chemist Otto Hahn.
And the American group probably wont, in practice, accept dubnium in place of hahnium which they had proposed in honour of Otto Hahn.
Originally named "hahnium" in honor of Otto Hahn (1970) but renamed by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
In addition, given that many American books had already used rutherfordium and hahnium for 104 and 105, the ACS objected to those names being used for other elements.
Once manufactured in the laboratory, the element, which has been named hahnium or unnilquintium, decays radioactively so rapidly that within 35 seconds, half of any given quantity of it disappears.
Along the same lines, the German group protested against naming element 108 by the American suggestion "hahnium", mentioning the long-standing convention that an element is named by its discoverers.
With a half-life of only 35 seconds, hahnium, which was found to belong to Group 5 of the periodic table of elements, does not seem likely to find applications outside the laboratory.
Element 108, which the German discoverers provisionally named hassium (for the Latin name of Hesse, a German province), would be renamed hahnium, under the international union's scheme.
Hahnium Goren, speaking to the jury through a Turkish interpreter, testified that after the schoolgirl's disappearance, her husband "attempted to beat me up a few times" for repeatedly confronting him about Tu lay.
Consequently, hahnium was the name that most American and Western European scientists used and appears in many papers published at the time, and nielsbohrium was used in the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries.
Dropped from the union's previous list of provisional names are "joliotium" for Element 105, for the French physicist Frederick Joliot-Curie, and "hahnium" for Element 108, honoring the German physicist Otto Hahn.
The international group proposes that Element 105, now commonly called hahnium (for the German Otto Hahn, discoverer of nuclear fission), should be called joliotium, named for Frederic Joliot-Curie of France, a pioneer in nuclear physics.
His original name for element 105 (hahnium) was changed by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) to dubnium, to recognize the contributions of the laboratory at Dubna, Russia, in the search for trans-fermium elements.