Irene Curie (daughter of Marie Curie) and her husband produced the first artificial radioisotope.
Technetium gets its name from the Greek word "technetos," meaning artificial, as it was the first element to be artificially produced. It was discovered in 1937 by Italian scientists in a cyclotron experiment.
In the Greek language the meaning of technetos is artificial.
Element 43 was named technetium as a reference to the Greek word "technetos," meaning artificial. This name was chosen because technetium is the first element to be artificially produced in a laboratory rather than being found in nature.
The name "technetium" comes from the Greek word "technetos," meaning "artificial" or "man-made." This name was given to the element because technetium is the first element to be artificially produced in a laboratory rather than being found naturally in the Earth's crust.
Physicists Enrico Fermi and his team at the University of Chicago were the first to produce and describe an artificial nuclear reaction in 1942. They created the first controlled nuclear chain reaction as part of the Manhattan Project.
Paulo C. Campos initiated the construction of the first radioisotope laboratory in the Philippines.
Madamme Curie is the first on record, that figured out what she was doing.
In the 1940s, a programmable computer was produced that was said to have artificial intelligence. It did not have intelligence in the common sense of the word, though. There has yet to be a device created that has intelligence matching to that of a human being.
Technetium gets its name from the Greek word "technetos," meaning artificial, as it was the first element to be artificially produced. It was discovered in 1937 by Italian scientists in a cyclotron experiment.
Technetium is named after the Greek word "technetos," meaning artificial, as it was the first element to be artificially produced.
Diamonds were not invented; beautiful diamonds are natural gems. But from many years artificial diamonds are produced for industrial goals.
Thomas Edison is credited with inventing the first commercially practical incandescent light bulb in 1879. However, many other scientists and inventors made contributions to the development of artificial lighting before Edison's breakthrough.
In the Greek language the meaning of technetos is artificial.
There are many different famous Filipino scientists. Some of these include Julian Banzon who produced alternative fuels, Benjamin Almeda who designed a food processing machine, and Paulo Campos who built the first radioisotope laboratory in the Philippines.
The first Contributions badge is added to profiles for 10,000 contributions.
The Swiss chemist, Georges Audemars invented the first crude artificial silk around 1855, by dipping a needle into liquid mulberry bark pulp and gummy rubber to make threads.
The first artificial ice was tested in London, England in December 1841.