Review by Booklist Review
Chapman, a science journalist, guides readers through the story of the superheavy elements, 104-118 on the periodic table. Ranging from Lavoisier's first attempt at organizing the periodic table to interviews with researchers currently working with elements 119 and 120, Chapman provides a solid introduction to the field and the equipment used. Also included are entertaining anecdotes ranging from the time the publisher of the Superman comics was asked to remove state secrets from the comic to the challenges of mailing radioactive samples from the United States to Russia. (It took 25,000 air miles for the sample to finally arrive at its destination.) Chapman makes himself a part of the story, and lends immediacy to the text, as he visits sites of historical interest and shares quotes and stories from current experts in the field around the world. He also conveys the complex science and challenges faced in creating these short-lived superheavy elements, and how the periodicity of the periodic table is challenged by these elements' behavior. An entertaining look at a (super)heavy subject.--Maren Ostergard Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
British science journalist Chapman takes readers on a tour of the far end of the periodic table in his lively debut, chronicling the discoveries of the transuranium chemical elements-those with atomic numbers greater than uranium's 92. Using a mix of secondary sources and new interviews, he narrates the experiments that, between 1945 and 2016, yielded elements 93 to 118. Chapman emphasizes the fierce competition between the U.S. research group, led by Glenn Seaborg and Albert Ghiorso in Berkeley, and their Soviet (later, Russian) counterparts, led by Georgy Flerov and Yuri Oganessian, in the small town of Dubna. However, he doesn't neglect the two other teams, in Tokyo and in Darmstadt, Germany, also responsible for filling in some of the blanks on the periodic table. Chapman's sweeping narrative includes plenty of memorable incidents and details, from Ghiorso's 1955 midnight run in a supercharged VW Beetle in the hills above San Francisco Bay to deliver a new sample of element 101 to the lab before it decayed, to the injustices weathered by nuclear chemist Darleane Hoffman, twice robbed by institutional sexism of an element discovery during her career. This is a must-read for anyone interested in how humans have expanded, and continue to expand, the boundaries of scientific knowledge. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Perhaps the first popular-science exploration of the weird world of huge, unstable, laboratory-generated elements.In his debut, British journalist and broadcaster Chapman first explains that elements from one (hydrogen) to 92 (uranium) exist in nature. Transuranium elements (greater than 92) are produced in nuclear explosions, nuclear reactors, or nuclear accelerators. All are unstablei.e., radioactiveso they gradually break down, and the heavier they are, the quicker they disappear. This is no problem for plutonium, element 94, which is only mildly radioactive, and Chapman describes the huge industry that generates tons for use in bombs and nuclear power. Just beyond plutonium (Americium, Curium, Berkelium, Californium), they can be produced in visible quantities and are found in X-ray spectrometers and smoke detectors. Those after Einsteinium (element 99) exist in microscopic amounts and have no commercial use, but they continue to fascinate groups of researchers, including one formerly led by Chapman's hero, Nobel Prize winner Glenn T. Seaborg (1912-1999), who discovered 10. Based in California, Germany, Sweden, and Russia, these groups compete fiercely to generate heavier elements, often in minuscule quantities, study their properties, and quarrel over who was first. The book's title refers to elements after 103, which are increasingly hard to produce in vanishingly small quantities but hold out the possibility of an "island of stability," a massive atom that reverses the trend toward increasingly fleeting existence. "The superheavy elementselements from 104 and beyondmight last for seconds, but that's what makes them so cool," he writes. "When an atom of a superheavy element is created, it is probably the only atom of that element in existence in the universe." Chapman has done his homework, traveled the world to interview a colorful fraternity of scientists, and delivered an entertaining account of their struggles to create elements that have never existed and that may or may not reveal spectacular new features.A fine pop-science account of elements that "are rewriting the laws of atomic structure." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.