• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Earth’s Rarest Natural Element Will Vaporize Itself If You Collect Too Much Of It

February 17, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

At last count, there are 118 confirmed elements in the periodic table – yet, out of that huge number, you’re more than nine times more likely to come into contact with just five than the other 113.

That’s because, out of all of the dozens of elements found in the Earth’s crust, it’s those five – oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, and calcium – which make up a total of more than 92 percent. In fact, almost half of the atoms we encounter every day are oxygen, making it by far the most abundant element on the planet.

Advertisement

At the other end of the scale, though, we have astatine: the rarest naturally-occurring element on Earth. It’s thought that less than 25 grams – that’s less than a single ounce – of the stuff exists planet-wide at any one time. In fact, it’s so rare that scientists still don’t know basic information about the element, like what it looks like.

Astatine is named after the Greek word for “unstable”, and it’s a fitting moniker: it’s incredibly radioactive, with a half-life of just over eight hours even in its most stable form, astatine-210. That means that even if you managed to get your hands on some, after 24 hours, just one-eighth of it would be left – the rest having decayed into either bismuth-206 or polonium-210.

And that’s the most stable isotope – most forms of astatine have half-lives of a single second or less. In its elemental form, things get even more volatile: it’s so radioactive that if you had enough to see with the naked eye, it would literally vaporize itself under its own heat.

While scientists are sort of able to deal with astatine directly, they can only do so by artificially creating it through nuclear reactions – usually by bombarding bismuth-209 with alpha particles. 

Advertisement

Most of what we know about the element, therefore, comes from theoretical work rather than practical experimentation. For example, we think astatine probably looks like a black solid, because it lies in the halogen column of the periodic table. Halogens get darker as they get heavier: fluorine is essentially colorless, chlorine is yellow-green, bromine is red-brown, and iodine is dark grey-violet – hence, the logic goes, astatine, as the next halogen in the list, should be darker still.

Of course, that’s assuming the element isn’t in fact more like a metal than a halogen – a question that divides chemists, since astatine also lies along a diagonal line in the periodic table which contains metalloids like boron and silicon. In chemical reactions, it sometimes acts like a halogen and other times like a metal, resisting easy classification even by experts.



Despite being so rare as to be practically non-existent – and so confounding that we know basically nothing about it for sure – astatine may turn out to have some pretty important practical applications. As the element decays, it emits α particles: radioactive particles formed from a combination of two protons and two neutrons, which are, for various reasons, really good at targeting cancer cells.

“Astatine is the Goldilocks of α emitters,” Mehran Makvandi, a radiologist at the University of Pennsylvania’s medical school, told Chemical and Engineering News, a magazine published by the American Chemical Society, back in 2020. It emits fewer α particles than other isotopes like actinium-225, Makvandi explained – that makes it less potent, but more focused in its emissions. It has an extremely short half-life, meaning it won’t hang around for a long time. Importantly, it only emits α particles – the least harmful of the various types of radiation.

Advertisement

If scientists could attach astatine isotopes to cancer-targeting molecules, then, they might be able to create an anti-cancer treatment that could slice through the DNA of a cancerous cell, and leave the surrounding tissue relatively unharmed. When it comes to potential cancer treatments, Makvandi said, “nothing can even come close to having that same targeted potency.”

Of course, there’s a pretty big caveat to all that: researchers need to get their hands on the stuff first. Since it’s so rare and unstable, that’s no easy task – which may be why the element is still officially listed as having no known biological role or uses outside of research.

But maybe that’s for the best. After all, if we knew it was really important, we’d probably need a lot more than 25 grams of the stuff, wouldn’t we?

An earlier version of this article was published in March 2023.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Manchester test likely to be postponed after India COVID-19 case
  2. EU to attend U.S. trade meeting put in doubt by French anger
  3. Elevate launches its approach to managing pre-tax benefits with $12M Series A
  4. Formula Calculate Any Digit Of Pi, Nobody Noticed For Centuries

Source Link: Earth's Rarest Natural Element Will Vaporize Itself If You Collect Too Much Of It

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Meet Sutter Buttes: “The World’s Smallest Mountain Range”
  • As The Rest Of The World Heats Up, “The North Atlantic Warming Hole” Is Set To Get Even Cooler
  • What Are The White Stripes You Find On Chicken Breasts?
  • The Biggest Explosion Event Since The Big Bang, Dead Sea Scrolls May Have Been Written By Original Authors Of The Bible, And Much More This Week
  • The Strange “Egg-Laying” Rockfaces Of Planet Earth
  • One Of The World’s Largest And Rarest “Fancy Red” Diamonds Has Been Studied For The First Time
  • The Simple Rule That Seems To Govern How Life Is Organized On Earth
  • This Paradisiacal Island In The Philippines Had Advanced Maritime Culture 35,000 Years Ago
  • Neanderthals Faced A Catastrophic Population Collapse 110,000 Years Ago
  • Why Travelers Are Putting Their Luggage In Hotel Bathtubs
  • NSFW Video Shows Two Male Gray Whales Seemingly Having Sex
  • Space Explosions, Dead Sea Scrolls, And Why It’s So Hard To Sex A Dino
  • This Image Of Earth (And Saturn) Will Change You
  • Watch Inquisitive Humpback Whales Blow Bubble Rings At Whale Watchers
  • How Long Did Neanderthals Live For?
  • Want To Use Dragons As Dice? Now You Can, Thanks To Math
  • Why Did Humans Start Using Fire? New Theory Suggests It Wasn’t To Cook Food
  • Controversial “Alien’s Math” Has A New Translator. Can He Reform Its Reputation?
  • How To Watch A Rare Daytime Meteor Shower This Weekend
  • Over 250 Years After Captain Cook Arrived In Australia, Final Resting Place Of HMS Endeavour Confirmed
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version