News

A new version of the periodic table of elements has predicted hundreds of highly charged ions that could be used to create the next generation of optical atomic clocks.
It's been almost two years since I've done a roundup of periodic tables (and six years since I posted the first one). Oh, you know the periodic table of elements; you may have even studied it. But ...
But as the new version of the periodic table underlines, we must do all we can to conserve and recycle the 90 precious building blocks that make up our wonderfully diverse world.
Dmitri Mendeleev created an early version of the periodic table by arranging the 63 known elements by weight and grouping them by similar properties.
Following from 2018-unveiled artwork, The Periodic Table of the DJ, a new and updated version has just been released. The artwork, which was influenced by Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton’s book Last ...
The periodic table is an icon. But chemists still can’t agree on how to arrange it New data about the elements and their relationships have led to debate over the 150-year-old table’s optimum ...
Originally created by XebiaLabs, now part of Digital.ai, the Periodic Table of DevOps Tools V4 reflects the votes of over 18,000 DevOps practitioners and serves as the industry’s go-to reference ...
A new study lays the groundwork to expand the periodic table with a search for element 120, to be made by slamming electrically charged titanium atoms, or ions, into a californium target.
It is amazing to think that everything around us is made up from just 90 building blocks – the naturally occurring chemical elements. Dmitri Mendeleev put the 63 of these known at the time into order ...
“The original print run has now sold out, so for 2021 I have an updated edition which widens the history including many more key figures and a new design,” he posted on Instagram. Misfit also added ...