To date, 118 chemical elements have been found. Professor Mario Markus, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Physiology, Dortmund, Germany, takes a look at each element, presenting a poem based on its natural properties along with a scientific overview of each element.
All 118 poems – as well as some poems about elements that only exist in theoretical simulations – are published in the book Chemical Poems: One On Each Element by Mario Markus. ChemViews Magazine publishes a selection of these poems.
Uus |
Ununseptium |
|
When the book was written, this element had not yet been discovered. Attempts to view it were being made through astronomical observations of supernovas, i.e., exploding stars. However, during a revision of the manuscript of the book, it became known that eka-astatine was detected in Dubna, Russia, by shooting calcium at berkelium for 150 days. Five atoms, having a half-life of 14 milliseconds, and one atom with a half-life of 78 milliseconds were registered. This finding is still awaiting confirmation by other groups and a study of the properties of the element. |
I At this very moment One hundred seventeen We can only say: II The phone just rang. |
Professor Mario Markus, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Physiology, Dortmund, Germany.
www.mariomarkus.com
Chemical Poems – One On Each Element,
Mario Markus,
Dos Madres Press 2013.
ISBN: 978-1-933675-98-5
Perfectbound, 308 pages, English, $30
Interview with Mario Markus: Poetry and Chemistry,
ChemistryViews 2013.
https://doi.org/10.1002/chemv.201300010
The poems have also been published in German in:
- Chemische Gedichte,
Mario Markus,
Shaker Media, Herzogenrath, Germany, 2011.
ISBN: 978-3868587012
See all poems published so far by ChemViews Magazine.