articlecrossroad.com articlecrossroad.com
   Home Page :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article
Search:   
Get Free Links
 
   

Garden & Home

   

Cooking & Drinking

   

Business & Services

   

Automobiles

   

Relationship & Lifestyle

   

Policies & Law

   

Finance & Banking

   

Education & Reference

   

Internet & Computers

   

Society & Issues

   

Self Enhancement

   

Sports & Adventure

   

Property & Agents

   

Technology & Science

   

Fitness & Health

   

Tour & Travel

   

Healthcare & Treatment

   

Issues & News

   

Jobs & Careers

   

Recreation

   

Culture & Art

   

Teens & Kids

   

Malls & Shopping

   

Online & Board Games

 

Home Page › Education & Reference › Science Programs
 

The Straight Scoop on Uranium

 

Author: James Finch

Blame the scientist who almost discovered uranium on why this atomic element is named after the seventh planet from the sun. Imagine if the sequence below had taken place in any other way. What would we now be calling the yellowcake that powers nuclear reactors across the world? You would be surprised. This is the story behind uraniums name.

The word uranium has a confusing past, but through no fault of its own. Since the beginning of the sixteenth century, in a silver mining town in an area which is now part of the Czech Republic, miners discovered a black mineral they called pechblende. Pitchblende, or uraninite as it is now better known, is a uranium-rich mineral which is also comprised of lead, thorium, radio and rare earths. In the late 19th century, it was from this same northwest Bohemian town where Marie Curie got her pitchblende and isolated radium and polonium from the ore.

European scientists Roentgen, Becquerel, Villard, and others were aggressively experimenting with pitchblende and discovered ionizing radiation, X-rays, beta radiation and gamma rays. Pierre and Marie Curie named the gamma ray phenomenon, attributed to the radium in pitchblende, radioactivity. MIT professor of biology Samuel Prescott, who was closely following Madam Curies research, began testing those gamma rays on food. He discovered the gamma rays destroyed bacteria in food. From Prescotts work, food manufacturers discovered they could extend the shelf life of canned goods. Since then, radiation and radioactivity have become an integral part of both the medical profession and the food industry.

Lets go back about one century. In 1789, Martin Heinrich Klaproth presented his discovery of a strange kind of half metal to Berlins Royal Academy of Sciences. The German chemist had, on the face of it, isolated uranium oxide from pitchblende. Klaproth suggested this new atomic element (number 92 on the periodic chart) be called uran.

Not until 1841 did another European scientist, Eugene-Melchior Peligot, finally isolate uranium as an atomic element. Klaproth was just stabbing in the dark when he tried to identify what uranium was. He failed to explain what uranium was, or even to understand it. Nonetheless, his credibility remained intact as a pioneering scientist. Martin Klaproth was later credited for isolating zirconium, chromium and cerium.

Klaproths naming ceremony for uranium was a political move, moreso than a scientific christening of the 92nd element. It was because of Dr. Bode. His Royal Academy colleague, German astronomer Johann Elert Bode, had been fuming since Englands William Herschel had discovered the seventh planet. Herschel honored King George III by calling this planet, the Georgium Sidus (the Georgian Planet). Bode argued the new planet be renamed to conform to the classically mythological names of the other planets, such as Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. Bode chose Uranus, the Greek name for the earliest supreme god.

The Uranus planetary debate went on for about, and was finally settled in 1850, about the same time that a British firm began using uranium in glass to give it a fluorescent yellow or greenish appearance. The point is this: If Klaproth hadnt contributed to the Uranus-versus-Georgium Sidus debate by naming his strange half metal uran, we might be call uranium stocks something else.

Author Bio:
James Finch is a notable scripter. James likes to pen down articles about this field.
You can also reach this article by using: social sciences, health colorado at denver & health sciences, 10 social sciences
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Energy Aware and Waste Wise
 
American Theocracy, a Book Review
 
'Guerrilla Marketing' Sells Itself!
 
Solar Power, Worth The Hassle?
 
The Ultimate University and College Freshers Guide Part 1 ?C It??s all about meeting people.
 
Faith and (a) Mystery
 
Book Publishing Services
 
Review: Profit From The Author Inside You
 
Animals in Captivity May Not Take Learned Skills Back to the Wild
 
Jill 9 ? Book Review
 
 
 
Home Page :> Privacy Policy :> ToS  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlecrossroad.com