(Fm), synthetic chemical element of the actinide series in Group IIIb of the periodic table, atomic number 100. Fermium (as the isotope fermium-255) is produced by the intense neutron irradiation of uranium-238 and was first positively identified by Albert Ghiorso and coworkers at Berkeley, Calif., in debris taken from the first thermonuclear or hydrogen-bomb test explosion (November 1952), in the South Pacific. All fermium isotopes are radioactive. Mixtures of the isotopes fermium-254 (3.24-hour half-life), fermium-255 (20.1-hour half-life), fermium-256 (2.7-hour half-life), and fermium-257 (80-day half-life) can be produced by the intensive slow-neutron irradiation of elements of lower atomic number, such as plutonium. The stability of the isotope fermium-257 makes it possible to work with weighable amounts of fermium. Fermium-250 (30-minute half-life), the alpha decay product of nobelium, served to ascertain the existence of nobelium-254. Fermium exists predominantly in the +3 oxidation state; there is also some evidence for the +2 state. atomic number 100 stablest isotope 257 valence 2,3 electronic config. 2-8-18-32-30-8-2 or (Rn)5f 127s2
FERMIUM
Meaning of FERMIUM in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012