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a_sh-v [17]
3 years ago
15

What is the splitting of atoms called what is the word

Chemistry
2 answers:
Olegator [25]3 years ago
4 0
The answer is fission
Aneli [31]3 years ago
3 0
Splitting the Uranium Atom – Nuclear Fission Uranium is the heaviest metal that can be mined from the earth. Uranium was discovered about 200 years ago, but it had no practical use until the beginning of World War II. In 1938-39 scientists discovered that an atom of uranium can be broken into two or three pieces when struck by a fast-moving particle called a neutron. The splitting of a uranium atom releases energy. This process is called “nuclear fission”, since the centre of an atom is called its nucleus. When a uranium atom splits it gives off more neutrons, which can then split more atoms, and so the energy level rapidly multiplies. When trillions of atoms are split almost simultaneously, the energy released is the power of the atomic bomb. The atomic bomb was the first practical use of uranium. Figure 1 shows a model of the uranium atom; it is on display at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. That is where the uranium explosive was prepared for the bomb that destroyed the city of Hiroshima. Much of the uranium needed for that bomb came from a mine at Great Bear Lake in the Northwest Territories. Figure 2 shows a Russian monument built to celebrate the splitting of the atom. The semicircles represent the energy that is released when the atom is split. The two small hemispheres represent the broken pieces of the uranium atom, called “fission products”. These fragments of uranium atoms are in fact the atoms of new radioactive materials, most of which cannot be found in nature. There are over three hundred different kinds of fission products. They are much more radioactive than uranium, and are therefore much more harmful to living things. Fission products are scattered high in the air when an atomic bomb is exploded above ground; the solid varieties return to earth as radioactive fallout. The Inuit people received more radioactive fallout in their bodies than other Canadians because they ate the meat of the caribou who in turn ate contaminated lichen. Uranium is the only naturally-occurring material that can be used to make an atomic bomb. Plutonium is also used for this purpose, but it is man-made; in fact it is made from uranium. Speaker’s Notes for the Nunavut Planning Commission Gordon Edwards Ph.D. (all photos copyright R. Del Tredici except 3, 7, 9, 11, 19) Gordon Edwards ~ Speaker’s Notes for the Nunavut Planning Commission 2 Figure 3 Figure 4 Henri Becquerel discovered radioactivity Radioactive materials lodge in the body Atomic Radiation – Radioactive materials In 1896 Henri Becquerel (Figure 3) discovered radioactivity. He found that a chunk of uranium ore gives off an invisible kind of light, now called “atomic radiation”. One type of atomic radiation has great penetrating power, similar to X-rays; this type is called “gamma radiation”. Less penetrating forms of atomic radiation also exist, called “alpha” and “beta” rays. Atomic radiation is harmful to living things because it damages cells and often makes them grow wrong. Atomic radiation is caused by the spontaneous disintegration of unstable atoms. Any material which gives off atomic radiation is said to be “radioactive”. There are dozens of radioactive materials that exist in nature and hundreds more are created by man as fission products. One “becquerel” of radioactivity indicates that one atomic disintegration is taking place every second. Radioactivity is not the same thing as nuclear fission; unlike fission, it cannot be controlled. Scientists do not know how to speed up, slow down, start or stop radioactivity. By the 1930s it was well known that exposure to atomic radiation can cause many kinds of biological damage, including radiation burns, anemia (blood damage), cataracts (eye damage), cancer, leukemia, damage to unborn babies, and damage to the sperm and eggs of men and women. Thus radiation protection is very important. However, once radioactive materials enter the body, the damage is done internally and protection becomes difficult or impossible (Figure 4). Each radioactive material has its own characteristics, and each one behaves differently in the environment and in the body. Radium-226 behaves like calcium, so inside the body it goes to the bones, the teeth, and mother’s milk. Radon-222 is a gas; it is inhaled into the lungs. Cesium-137 resembles potassium; it goes into muscles. In these cases, the damage is done inside the body. The consensus of scientific knowledge is that any exposure to atomic radiation increases the risk of cancer and leukemia. There is no truly safe dose, but the risks are small when the doses are small.
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Thinking and questioning is the start of the scientific inquiry process. Please select the best answer from the choices provided
aev [14]
Yes thats true! You always have to think about the question or project before you start a science experiment! :) 




8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
For a steel stack that exhausts 1,200 m3/min of gases at 1 atm and 400 k, calculate the inner diameter if you are designing for
bonufazy [111]

The inner diameter for a steel stack that exhausts 1,200 m3/min of gases at 1 atm and 400 k is 1.45 m

<h3>What is Stack Height ?</h3>

Stack height means the distance from the ground-level elevation at the base of the stack to the crown of the stack.

If a stack arises from a building or other structure, the ground-level elevation of that building or structure will be used as the base elevation of the stack.

Given is a steel stack that exhausts 1,200 cu.m/min of gases

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T= 400 K

maximum expected wind speed at stack height of 12 m/s

The formula for the diameter of chimney

\rm d=\sqrt{\dfrac{4Q}{\pi v} }

Q =1200 cu.m/min

= 1200 * 0.0166 = 19.92 cu.m/sec

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\rm d=\sqrt{\dfrac{4\times 19.92}{3.14*12} }\\

d= 1.45 m

Therefore The inner diameter for a steel stack that exhausts 1,200 m3/min of gases at 1 atm and 400 k is 1.45 m.

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8 0
2 years ago
what mass of carbon dioxide will be produced when 12.9 g of butane reacts with an excess of oxygen in the following reaction?
Nadya [2.5K]
39.1 gCO2
I think if that’s an option
3 0
3 years ago
How many molecules are in 1 mole of H2O
Olegator [25]

Answer:

A mole (mol) is the amount of a substance that contains 6.02 × 10 23 representative particles of that substance. The mole is the SI unit for the amount of a substance. There are, therefore, 6.02 × 10 23 water molecules in a mole of water molecules. Water (H2O) is made from 2 atoms of hydrogen and 1 atom of oxygen.

8 0
2 years ago
Pick the TWO conversions which are exact. 1 yd = 36 in 454 g = 1 lb 1 kg = 1000 g 1 kg = 2.204 lb
Alexeev081 [22]
1 yd = 36 in  and  1 kg = 1000 g

Hope this helps!
5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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