Names for four new elements get seal of approval

Countless periodic table posters are now obsolete

periodic table

NEW NAMES The periodic table’s newest elements now have names. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry approved the names nihonium (Nh), moscovium (Mc), tennessine (Ts) and oganesson (Og) on November 28.

E. Otwell

Countless periodic table posters are now obsolete.

Meet the newest elements: nihonium (Nh), moscovium (Mc), tennessine (Ts) and oganesson (Og). On November 28, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry gave their seal of approval to the names proposed for the four elements, which take slots 113, 115, 117 and 118 on the periodic table.

The new names, proposed in June, underwent five months of public comment and review. IUPAC decided to let the names stand, and unwieldy placeholder names — ununtrium, ununpentium, ununseptium and ununoctium — assigned when the elements were added to the periodic table in December 2015, can now be scrubbed.

Three of the elements were named for the places they were discovered. The name of element 113, “nihonium,” comes from the word “Nihon,” a Japanese word for the country of Japan. Element 115 is dubbed “moscovium,” after Moscow. And element 117, tennessine, is named after Tennessee. Element 118, oganesson, honors physicist Yuri Oganessian.

Physics writer Emily Conover has a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago. She is a two-time winner of the D.C. Science Writers’ Association Newsbrief award.

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