Bohrium was for the first time obtained by Gottfried Münzenberg, Sigurd Hofmann, Fritz Peter Hessberger, Willibrord Reisdorf, Karl-Heinz Schmidt, J.R.H. Schneider W.F.W. Schneider, Peter Armbruster, Christoph-Clemens Sahm, B. Thuma from Gesselschaft für Schwerionenforschung (Darmstadt, Germany) in 1981.
Bohrium is an artificial chemical element.
Bohrium is an artificial element.
Bohrium is not found in nature, but in its artificial form it appears as a silvery-white metallic color.
Today only one compound of bohrium is known: BhO3Cl.
Bohrium is a synthetic element and is not found naturally. It is not used for any practical applications due to its extremely short half-life and radioactivity. Bohrium is mainly used for scientific research purposes to study nuclear structure and properties.
Only in nuclear physics/nuclear chemistry laboratories.
Bohrium has not practical applications.
Bohrium has not practical applications.
Bohrium has not practical applications.
Seaborgium is an artificial element, not found in the nature.
Bohrium is a radioactive element that is not found in nature and has no known biological function. It is highly unstable and poses significant health risks if exposed to humans. Therefore, bohrium is not good for humans and should be handled with extreme caution.
There are no uses for Bohrium. It is a synthetic element with a half-life of 61 seconds.