According to Table I built in elements of the chemical elements, starting from hafnium nuclear charge increases. Are the any Laboratory James Chadwick repeated experiments to measure the charge of the atomic nuclei? It is desirable to measure nuclear charges from silver, hafnium and like cheaper, lead. It is important for uranium, which is used in nuclear power plants.
The rule of Van den Broeck, a lover of nuclear physics, turned out to be more general than Mendeleyev's periodicity and calculations of quantum mechanics. The table should be filled with all cells according to the law or the rules, and if somebody does not fill in, there should be an explanation of this by this law or rule. Therefore, the cells of the physical table were filled in both at http://matterdark-hfilipen.blogspot.com and unknown items with numbers 72-75 and 108-111 appeared. Which required explanation. When examining the results of measuring the charges of nuclei or atomic numbers by James Chadwick, I noticed that the charge of the core of platinum is rather not 78, but tends to 82, which corresponds to the developed table. For nearly 30 years I have raised the question of the repetition of measurements of the charges of atomic nuclei. Uranium is probably more charged than accepted, and it is used at nuclear power plants.
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According to Table I built in elements of the chemical elements, starting from hafnium nuclear charge increases. Are the any Laboratory James Chadwick repeated experiments to measure the charge of the atomic nuclei?
It is desirable to measure nuclear charges from silver, hafnium and like cheaper, lead.
It is important for uranium, which is used in nuclear power plants.
The rule of Van den Broeck, a lover of nuclear physics, turned out to be more general than Mendeleyev's periodicity and calculations of quantum mechanics. The table should be filled with all cells according to the law or the rules, and if somebody does not fill in, there should be an explanation of this by this law or rule. Therefore, the cells of the physical table were filled in both at http://matterdark-hfilipen.blogspot.com and unknown items with numbers 72-75 and 108-111 appeared. Which required explanation. When examining the results of measuring the charges of nuclei or atomic numbers by James Chadwick, I noticed that the charge of the core of platinum is rather not 78, but tends to 82, which corresponds to the developed table. For nearly 30 years I have raised the question of the repetition of measurements of the charges of atomic nuclei. Uranium is probably more charged than accepted, and it is used at nuclear power plants.
Nobody is answering. Neither IUPAC nor the IAEA.
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