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Einsteinium was discovered as the debris of the first hydrogen bomb explosion in 1952, and named after Albert Einstein.
Its most common isotope einsteinium-253 ( half life 20. 47 days ) is produced artificially from decay of californium-252 in a few dedicated high-power nuclear reactors with a total yield on the order of one milligram per year.
The reactor synthesis is followed by a complex procedure of separating einsteinium-253 from other actinides and products of their decay.
Other isotopes are synthesized in various laboratories, but at much smaller amounts, by bombarding heavy actinide elements with light ions.
Owing to the small amounts of produced einsteinium and the short half-life of its most easily produced isotope, there are currently almost no practical applications for it outside of basic scientific research.
In particular, einsteinium was used to synthesize, for the first time, 17 atoms of the new element mendelevium in 1955.

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