Einsteinium is used only for nuclear physics research or as a raw material to obtain new heavier isotopes.
Einsteinium compounds haven't uses.
Einsteinium is mainly used for basic scientific research as a step in the production of other elements. Other than that Einsteinium has no known uses.
Einsteinium is used only for nuclear physics research or as a raw material to obtain new heavier isotopes.
As only very little einsteinium has ever been made, einsteinium has no uses, it gets destroyed within fractions of a second and therefore can have no use.
Einsteinium is a synthetic element that has no practical applications besides scientific research. It is mainly used for studying nuclear properties and as a radiation source in some specialized fields.
Einsteinium is primarily used for research purposes in nuclear physics due to its high radioactivity and ability to undergo nuclear reactions. It can also be used in certain types of radiation therapy for cancer treatment. Additionally, einsteinium isotopes can be used as radiation sources for industrial radiography.
Einsteinium is obtained only in quantities of milligrams/year. Also has uses only in some laboratories.
These elements are used only for nuclear physics research or as a raw material to obtain new heavier isotopes.
Besides scientific research, Einsteinium has no other known uses. Since the element does no occur naturally, it has to be made synthetically. Only small amounts have been made and I would doubt that it is for sale.
Einsteinium is used only in nuclear physics laboratories: for the preparation of mendelevium (and possible other super-heavy elements), calibration of an alpha spectrometer mounted on a lunar probe, etc.
Einsteinium (atomic number 99) has no practical uses, because it exists only in tiny amounts created artificially in reactors and cyclotrons. Currently this is about 1 milligram per year. The half-life of the most stable isotope 252Es is only 472 days, and the common 253Es only 20.47 days.
Einsteinium is unique because it is a synthetic element that does not exist naturally on Earth and was first discovered in the debris of the first hydrogen bomb test in 1952. It is classified as a transuranic element, meaning it has an atomic number higher than uranium. Einsteinium is highly radioactive and has only limited uses in scientific research.