103
Transition Metals
Seaborgium
Sg
106
Atoms of seaborgium break apart in about
three minutes, so little is known about it.
Scientists think it may be a metal. The element
was isolated in 1974 in a machine called the
Super Heavy Ion Linear Accelerator at the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. It was
named after the US scientist Glenn T Seaborg.
This huge
machine was
used to discover
five new
elements.
Nobel Prize medal
Glenn T Seaborg and his fellow US researcher
Edwin McMillan were awarded the Nobel
Prize for Chemistry in 1951 for their work
in creating neptunium. This was the first
element to be isolated that was heavier than
uranium – the heaviest natural element.
Super Heavy Ion Linear Accelerator, Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, California, USA
Glenn T Seaborg
This giant tube forms part
of the Super Heavy Ion Linear
Accelerator, which is a type
of particle accelerator – a
machine in which atoms
are smashed together.
106 106 163
State: Solid
Discovery: 1974
NOBEL PRIZE IN CHEMISTRY
102-103_Rutherfordium_Dubnium_Seaborgium.indd 103 02/12/16 6:53 pm