On 3/9/2018 9:29 AM, via Unicode wrote:
Documented increase such as scientific terms for new elements, flora and fauna, would seem to be not more one or two dozen a year.

Indeed. Of the "urgently needed characters" added to the unified CJK ideographs for Unicode 11.0, two were obscure place name characters needed to complete mapping for the Japanese IT mandatory use of the Moji Joho collection.

The other three were newly standardized Chinese characters for superheavy elements that now have official designations by the IUPAC (as of December 2015): Nihonium (113), Tennessine (117) and Oganesson (118). The Chinese characters coined for those 3 were encoded at U+9FED, U+9FEC, and U+9FEB, respectively.

Oganesson, in particular, is of interest, as the heaviest known element produced to date. It is the subject of 1000's of hours of intense experimentation and of hundreds of scientific papers, but:

   ... since 2005, only five (possibly six) atoms of the nuclide ^294
   Og have been detected.


But we already have a Chinese character (pronounced ào) for Og, and a standardized Unicode code point for it: U+9FEB.

Next up: unobtanium and hardtofindium

--Ken

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