moscovium
0 sources
moscovium
Summary
moscovium is a chemical element[1]. moscovium draws 3,984 Wikipedia views per month (chemical_element category, ranking #48 of 144).[2]
Key Facts
- moscovium is credited with the discovery of Joint Institute for Nuclear Research[3].
- moscovium's instance of is recorded as chemical element[4].
- moscovium's instance of is recorded as synthetic element[5].
- Moscow Oblast is named after moscovium[6].
- moscovium's location of discovery is recorded as Joint Institute for Nuclear Research[7].
- moscovium's element symbol is recorded as Mc[8].
- moscovium's element symbol is recorded as Uup[9].
- moscovium is part of period 7[10].
- moscovium is part of group 15[11].
- moscovium's Commons category is recorded as Moscovium[12].
- moscovium's Unicode character is recorded as 鏌[13].
- moscovium's time of discovery or invention is recorded as August 2003[14].
- moscovium's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Moscovium[15].
- moscovium's Commons gallery is recorded as Moscovium[16].
- moscovium's atomic number is recorded as {'amount': '+115'}[17].
- moscovium's different from is recorded as Moscovian[18].
- moscovium's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Wikipedia:Vital articles/Level/4[19].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include chemical element[4] and synthetic element[5].
Origins
Moscow Oblast is named after moscovium[6].
Use and Application
Part of include period 7[10], a period[20] and group 15[11], a group[21].
Why It Matters
moscovium draws 3,984 Wikipedia views per month (chemical_element category, ranking #48 of 144).[2] moscovium has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22] moscovium is known by 56 alternative names across languages and contexts.[23]