
We're referring to the long-lived story of Robert ("Bob") Scott Lazar, who in 1989 went public with what he said was top-secret information about element 115. So far, moscovium doesn't have a practical use outside of scientific study.Įlement 115 was only discovered in 2003, but it may sound familiar because the name has been around for decades in connection with UFOs, aliens and other related phenomena. In doing so, they managed to produce roughly one atom of moscovium per day, and that atom was captured by an instrument called FIONA (For the Identification Of Nuclide A), which to the untrained eye looks like a small metal bank vault. To nab this vital number, they repeated the process that the first discoverers used to pin down the element. It wasn't until 2018 that Berkley Lab scientists figured out that the element's mass or atomic weight (the total number of protons and neutrons in an atom) was 288. It took years for researchers to work out some of the details about moscovium. "This new element was then separated from all the other reaction products using the Dubna gas-filled recoil separator and then implanted into a detector where scientists were able to watch element 115 decay into element 113."

"The new element that they made had 115 protons (20 from the 48Ca and 95 from the 243Am)," she says. This process produced four atoms of moscovium. "To create a super-heavy element, you need the complete fusion of two lighter elements," she notes. Through this bombardment, they were able to successfully fuse the nuclei of 243Am and 48Ca atoms, says Gates.

To make this element, the scientists accelerated ions of calcium-48 (48Ca) to around 10 percent of the speed of light and then bombarded americium-243 (243Am) with them. The element was eventually named moscovium because Dubna is in Moscow. Instead of living for less than a second, they could exist for minutes, days or even years! That is long enough that we might be able to use them for practical applications," she says.Įlement 115 was discovered in 2003 in Dubna, Russia at the Flerov Laboratory for Nuclear Reactions by a group of scientists led by nuclear physicist Yuri Oganessian. "It is special because it is near a predicted 'island of stability' where some super-heavy nuclei might have much longer lifetimes. It exists for just a fraction of a second before it decays into another element.

Gates says that element 115 is an extremely rare element that's made one atom at a time in particle accelerators. (As with all elements on the periodic table, the element's number corresponds to the number of protons in the nucleus of the element's atom.) "That is 23 more protons than the heaviest element that you can find in large quantities on Earth, uranium." "Element 115, or moscovium, is a man-made, super-heavy element that has 115 protons in its nucleus," emails Jacklyn Gates, a scientist with the Heavy Elements Group in the Nuclear Science Division for Berkeley Lab in California.
