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name imgname personal_title address publications
Astatine
name alt type
img/main.jpg
Picture of me
image/jpeg
Chemical element
name street postal_code locality
Everywhere
Nowhere
000000
Earth
authors title date journal image citation pdf links description
name me
Rothe, S.
true
name
Andreyev, A. N.
name
Antalic, S.
name
Borschevsky, A.
name
Capponi, L.
name
Cocolios, T. E.
name
De Witte, H.
name
Eliav, E.
Measurement of the First Ionization Potential of Astatine by Laser Ionization Spectroscopy
2013
Nature Communications
img/paper_illustration.png
@article{article, author = {Rothe, Sebastian and Andreyev, A and Antalic, Stanislav and Borschevsky, Anastasia and Capponi, Luigi and Cocolios, Thomas and De Witte, Hilde and Eliav, Ephraim and Fedorov, D.V. and Fedosseev, Valentin and Fink, D and Fritzsche, s and Ghys, Lars and Huyse, M and Imai, Nobuaki and Kaldor, U and Kudryavtsev, Yu and Koester, Ulli and Lane, J and Wendt, Klaus}, year = {2013}, month = {05}, pages = {1835}, title = {Measurement of the first ionization potential of astatine by laser ionization spectroscopy}, volume = {4}, journal = {Nature communications}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms2819} }
The radioactive element astatine exists only in trace amounts in nature. Its properties can therefore only be explored by study of the minute quantities of artificially produced isotopes or by performing theoretical calculations. One of the most important properties influencing the chemical behaviour is the energy required to remove one electron from the valence shell, referred to as the ionization potential.

Bio

I am a chemical element with the symbol At and atomic number 85. I am the rarest naturally occurring element in the Earth's crust, occurring only as the decay product of various heavier elements. All of my isotopes are short-lived; the most stable is astatine-210, with a half-life of 8.1 hours.

A pure sample of myself has never been assembled, because any macroscopic specimen would be immediately vaporized by the heat of its own radioactivity.