Top 10 similar words or synonyms for joliotium

nielsbohrium    0.845531

hahnium    0.799914

kurchatovium    0.793761

unnilpentium    0.753875

nchik    0.732041

santificau    0.731042

bathymasteridae    0.706882

scytalinidae    0.705461

peisinoe    0.691950

zaproridae    0.691172

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for joliotium

Article Example
Group 5 element Dubnium was first produced in 1968 at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research by bombarding americium-243 with neon-22. Dubnium was again produced at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in 1970. The names "neilsbohrium" and "joliotium" were proposed for the element, but in 1997, the IUPAC decided to name the element dubnium.
Nobelium In 1969, the Dubna team carried out chemical experiments on element 102 and concluded that it behaved as the heavier homologue of ytterbium. The Russian scientists proposed the name "joliotium" (Jo) for the new element after Irène Joliot-Curie, who had recently died, creating an element naming controversy that would not be resolved for several decades, which each group using its own proposed names.
Dubnium In 1994, the IUPAC published a recommendation on naming the disputed elements following the previous reports. For element 105, they proposed the name "joliotium" (Jl), after the French physicist Frédéric Joliot-Curie, a significant contributor to the development of nuclear physics and chemistry; this name was originally proposed by the Soviet team for element 102, which by then had long been called nobelium. (The name "nielsbohrium" for the element 107 transformed to "bohrium" to conform the practice set by all then-current elements.) This recommendation paper was generally met with criticism from the American scientists: their recommendations were scrambled (i.e. the name "rutherfordium", originally suggested by Berkeley for element 104, was used for element 106); both elements 104 and 105 were given names suggested by the Russian team despite earlier recognition of the Berkeley team as of an equal co-discoverer; and especially because the name "seaborgium" for element 106 was rejected for honoring a living person (Glenn Seaborg was an American nuclear chemist and a principal pioneer in the research on transuranium elements), a rule that had only just been approved. These names were to be accepted on a Council meeting in 1995.