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You answered your own question before you asked it, it means another entry on the periodic table.
originally posted by: AfterInfinity
The periodic table has just officially inducted the newest member of its extensive atomic family, an as-yet unnamed element which decays into elements 115 and 113.
I'm no chemist, so...what does this mean for the world of science?
Source?
originally posted by: AfterInfinity
They already have, multiple times. Fortunately, the black holes created have always been so small and brief that they never posed any threat at all.
Right. It was theorized as possible they might produce some in the LHC at CERN which would be extremely short-lived if it ever happened, but such an event has never been confirmed to my knowledge.
originally posted by: ErosA433
A black hole has never been created in the lab.
None of this gives Lazar any credibility, quite the opposite. He claimed to have some stable ununpentium, and all lab results so far show that it's not stable so what Lazar claims about stable 115 is not confirmed in any lab, in fact it's highly unstable.
originally posted by: amazing
Good for Bob Lazar!
originally posted by: amazing
Good for Bob Lazar!