A Note on the Prehistory of Superheavy Elements
Helge Kragh

TL;DR
This paper explores the early scientific curiosity and theoretical questions about superheavy elements and the periodic table's limits before nuclear physics was well established, highlighting historical perspectives.
Contribution
It provides a historical analysis of pre-1930s scientific inquiries into superheavy elements and the potential upper limits of the periodic system.
Findings
Early speculations lacked experimental basis.
Questions about the existence and limits of superheavy elements were prominent.
Historical interest in the topic predates modern nuclear physics.
Abstract
Artificially produced chemical elements heavier than uranium have been known for more than seventy years and the number of superheavy elements continues to grow. Presently 26 transuranic elements are known. This paper examines the earliest scientific interest in the very heavy elements and the related question of an upper limit of the periodic system. In the period from the 1880s to the early 1930s, three kinds of questions appealed to a minority of physicists, chemists and astronomers: (1) Why is uranium the heaviest known element? (2) Do there exist transuranic or superheavy elements elsewhere in the universe, such as in stellar interiors? (3) Is there a maximum number of elements, corresponding to a theoretical limit for the periodic system? The early attempts to answer or clarify these questions lacked a foundation in nuclear physics, not to mention the total lack of experimental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical and nuclear sciences · Nuclear physics research studies · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques
