http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2058054/Elementary-dear-Copernicus-Three-new-members-join-periodic-table.html?mid=52070

Elementary, dear Copernicus!
Three new members join the Periodic Table

By Anthony Bond

Last updated at 9:08 PM on 5th November 2011

 Schoolchildren now have a bigger task on their hands when studying
science after three new elements were added to the Periodic Table.
The General Assembly of the International Union of Pure and Applied
Physics (IUPAP) has approved the names of the new elements - including
one which will honour the astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus.

The elements are numbered 110, 111 and 112 and are called darmstadtium
(Ds), roentgenium (Rg) and copernicium (Cn).

The General Assembly, which consists of 60 members from different
countries, approved the new names at its meeting at the Institute of
Physics (IOP) in London yesterday.

Dr Robert Kirby-Harris, chief executive at IOP and Secretary-General
of IUPAP, said: 'The naming of these elements has been agreed in
consultation with physicists around the world and we’re delighted to
see them now being introduced to the Periodic Table.'
Although they have only just been approved to the table, the elements
were discovered a long time ago.

But names need to be officially given to them by scientific organisations.

Generally, new elements are named after the person who discovered them.

According to Universe Today, Copernicium was created on February 9,
1996, but its original name – ununbium – didn’t get changed until
almost two years ago when German scientists proved its existence.
IUPAP accepted the proposed name and symbol for it on February 19,
2010, the 537th anniversary of Copernicus’ birth.

The Prussian astronomer, who died in 1543, was the first person to
suggest that the Earth revolves around the sun.

The General Assembly includes delegates from national academies and
physical societies around the world.

The five-day meeting, which had been running since last Monday and
finished yesterday, has included presentations from leading UK
physicists,
 and the inauguration of IUPAP’s first female president, Professor
Cecilia Jarlskog from the Division of Mathematical Physics at Lund
University in Sweden.

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