Atomic and nuclear properties of positronium (Ps):
  
Positronium (Z = 1 atom with e+ as nucleus)
| Quantity | Value | Units | Value | Units
 |  |  Atomic number
 |   
  1
 | n
 | n
 | n
 |  |  Mass*
 |   
1.097 526 752 (5)
 | 10-3 u
 | 
 1.021 991 03 (9)
 | MeV
 |   Mean lifetime (annihilation)  |  
 Singlet (p-Ps): 125 
 (Predominately Ps→2γ) | 
ps |  
Triplet (o-Ps): 142.05 ± 0.02  
(Predominately Ps→3γ) |  ns
 |   
* Ground state binding energy = Ry/2.
  
Is it reasonable to consider Ps as a chemical element?
- 
It is bound electronically. If we consider atoms as having orbital 
electrons,
  then the positron plays the role of nucleus.
 - 
It has a rich chemistry, as Google searches on "positronium halides,"
 
"positronium compounds," and other strings show. There are international 
conferences on positronium chemistry.
 -  
In other exotic atoms such as muonium, pionium, and kaonium, the bound
 
muon or meson plays the role of an orbital electron instead of being the  
nucleus.  Although e−π+ and other such 
atoms might equally well be  regarded as elements, as would atoms with 
hypernuclei, these contain  unstable particles. 
An isolated positron is presumably as stable as an electron.
 - 
One serious objection is that the positronium "nucleus" has non-zero 
lepton 
  number.
(e−π+ and atoms with hypernuclei have nuclei with lepton number 
zero, as do "normal" nuclei.)
 -  We are physicists, not chemists.
  
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