The first synthetic element to be made by a particle accelerator was technetium
The first synthetic fiber, Nylon, was created by Wallace Carothers in 1935.
This particle was the electron in 1897 (J.J. Thomson).
rayon
w.h chathors
The search for the first array element begins at the assembly plant. As they array is being constructed, the element itself is one of the first components to be completed.
curium
curium
Technetium is the only element below uranium that does not exist on Earth. It is a synthetic (man-made) element produced in a particle accelerator
The first and the most common one is a simple radio
The first particle accelerator was built more around the time of 1927 (resonance linear accelerator) about eight years after Rutherford first split the nucleus. But not too sure one that, I have other sources saying 1929, but definitely not as late as 1972. I do know that the first successful cyclotron (a type of circular particle accelerator, which was basically the ground work for the cynchrocyclotron spelling?) was built and tested in 1931 by Ernest Lawrence.
The synchrotron was invented and first constructed by Edward McMillan in 1945. The machine is a particle accelerator that is derived from the cyclotron.
Technetium. Now technetium is considered also a natural chemical element.
Seaborgium was obtained for the first time, simultaneously, by Albert Ghiorso, J.M. Nitschke, J.R. Alonso, C.T. Alonso, M. Nurmia, E. Kenneth Hulet, R.W. Lougheed, Glenn T. Seaborg from Berkeley, USA and by a team from Dubna, Russia - in 1974. The nuclear reaction used was: 249Cf + 18O---------263Sg See the link below for details.
Zirconium is a natural element. According to wikipedia it was first chemically isolated by Berzelius in 1824.
Yes, they can. In fact, they're absolutely necessary these days due to the energies needed to create them. There are two main labs in the world that focus on doing this. The first is the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt, Germany. The second is Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, California.
It already has. Its first successful proton circulation was in September 10, 2008. But was shut down after some faults. And resumed almost an exact year afterwards.
Bohrium is probably lethal. It is a completely synthetic element first created in 1976 in the USSR, and discovered in Germany in 1982.