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polonium
[ puh-loh-nee-uhm ]
noun
- a radioactive element discovered by Pierre and Marie Curie in 1898; : Po; : 84; : about 210.
polonium
/ pəˈləʊnɪəm /
noun
- a very rare radioactive element that occurs in trace amounts in uranium ores. The isotope polonium-210 is produced artificially and is used as a lightweight power source in satellites and to eliminate static electricity in certain industries. Symbol: Po; atomic no: 84; half-life of most stable isotope, 209Po: 103 years; valency: –2, 0, 2, 4, or 6; relative density (alpha modification): 9.32; melting pt: 254°C; boiling pt: 962°C
polonium
/ pə-lō′nē-əm /
- A very rare, naturally radioactive, silvery-gray or black metalloid element. It is produced in extremely small amounts by the radioactive decay of radium or the bombardment of bismuth or lead with neutrons. Atomic number 84; melting point 254°C; boiling point 962°C; specific gravity 9.20; valence 2, 4.
- See Periodic Table
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of polonium1
Example Sentences
He later fell violently ill, and doctors determined he had ingested polonium-210, a radioactive isotope.
Relations with the UK soured when a former KGB agent and Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko was murdered in London using radioactive polonium-210.
Alexander Litvinenko, a former KGB agent and critic of Putin, died in London in 2006, three weeks after drinking a cup of tea that had been laced with deadly radioactive element, polonium-210.
Curie used the building for some of her pioneering work on radioactivity and later became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, for discovering polonium and radium.
“The Kremlin doesn’t have enough polonium for everyone,” she said.
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