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2006-09-21 11:48:10 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

1 answers

The cost is massive, considering you'd have to make it yourself.

It doesn't occur naturally in nature and its half-life is so short that by the time it was shipped to you it would all be gone. Well, not really... one isotope has a half-life of 100 days or so... but you get my point.

There's so little Fermium that's ever been made that much about it is still a mystery. Few people are inclined to investigate much further. What would be the point of learning the chemistry of something that's never really around?

Still, the first Fermium was found in the crater of a test nuclear bomb explosion. If you can get to other test sites fast enough, maybe you can find some too!

2006-09-21 11:49:36 · answer #1 · answered by Doctor Why 7 · 0 0

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