Yes, nobelium is an artificial element and radioactive.
Nobelium is not found in nature. It is a synthetic radioactive element.
Nobelium is a radioactive, artificial chemical element.
As a radioactive element nobelium can be dangerous.
All the isotopes of nobelium are radioactive and unstable.
Nobelium is a synthetic element, number 102. It is not a compound. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobelium for more information.
Nobelium is a chemical element, artificial and radioactive. Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemical engineer.
Being very radioactive probably nobelium is hot; but we have not a sufficient sample to test this hypothesis.
No (sic). Nobelium is a synthetic element with the symbol No and atomic number 102, named after Alfred Nobel.
The Synthetic Element Nobelium was named for Him.
All transuranic elements are synthetic and radioactive.
The element with chemical symbol No is Nobelium. It is named after influential scientist Alfred Nobel who invented Dynamite and founded the Nobel Prize. Nobelium is a synthetic, radioactive element in the unofficial Ytterbium family. It is also an Actinide and resides next to Mendelevium (named after the inventor of the Periodic Table) and Lawrencium (named after scientist Ernest Lawrence).
All of the actinides are radioactive, and almost all are synthetic.