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Stellar Evolution: 33.2
Stellar Evolution: 33.2

Chemistry 1 CP Concept 4 Nuclear Chemistry Study Guide
Chemistry 1 CP Concept 4 Nuclear Chemistry Study Guide

13.4 The nucleus 3 - Nuclear fission and nuclear fusion
13.4 The nucleus 3 - Nuclear fission and nuclear fusion

... uranium that has not been enriched so much, and by using control rods of materials that absorb neutrons. The atomic bomb exploding over Nagasaki In nuclear power stations, workers must be protected from γ-rays by thick shields of lead and concrete. Nuclear fusion is the process of joining together t ...
SMP Quiz Session 1
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... 4.  Some  black  holes  stars  exploded.   5.  These  elements  were  made  by   radioacIvity  in  the  Earth's  core.   ...
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... Band of Stability • N/P ratio of stable nuclei • Stable small atoms (atomic # less than 20) are near 1/1 ratio • Stable large atoms are near 1.5/1 ratio. • Predict the stability of the following: carbon-12 mercury-200 hydrogen-3 uranium-238 ...
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... carrying one negative electric charge. In an electrically neutral atom, the positive charge of the nucleus is balanced by the negative charges of electrons. When there is not perfect balance, the atom is called an ion; an ion can be positively or negatively charged. At a very high temperature, such ...
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... lighter nuclei. It is possible for atoms heavier than Fe because the binding energy decreases with the atomic number. Fission does not require extreme conditions and could be easily controlled. The first controlled fission reaction was achieved in 1939 . Fission animation ...
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06Radioactivity - Catawba County Schools

... unstable nucleus into two smaller nuclei.  Either 2 or 3 neutrons are also produced with the products; these neutrons act as “bullets” to ram into other unstable nuclei and split them, resulting in a chain reaction. All nuclear reactors in the world are fission reactors.  They cannot “blow up” lik ...
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25.3 section summary

... Nuclear fission occurs when fissionable isotopes are bombarded with neutrons. The fissionable atom breaks into two fragments of about the same size, and in the process they release more neutrons and energy. Neutron moderation is the process that reduces the speed of neutrons. Sometimes water is used ...
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Muon-catalyzed fusion

Muon-catalyzed fusion (μCF) is a process allowing nuclear fusion to take place at temperatures significantly lower than the temperatures required for thermonuclear fusion, even at room temperature or lower. It is one of the few known ways of catalyzing nuclear fusion reactions.Muons are unstable subatomic particles. They are similar to electrons, but are about 207 times more massive. If a muon replaces one of the electrons in a hydrogen molecule, the nuclei are consequently drawn 207 times closer together than in a normal molecule. When the nuclei are this close together, the probability of nuclear fusion is greatly increased, to the point where a significant number of fusion events can happen at room temperature.Current techniques for creating large numbers of muons require large amounts of energy, larger than the amounts produced by the catalyzed nuclear fusion reactions. This prevents it from becoming a practical power source. Moreover, each muon has about a 1% chance of ""sticking"" to the alpha particle produced by the nuclear fusion of a deuterium with a tritium, removing the ""stuck"" muon from the catalytic cycle, meaning that each muon can only catalyze at most a few hundred deuterium tritium nuclear fusion reactions. So, these two factors, of muons being too expensive to make and then sticking too easily to alpha particles, limit muon-catalyzed fusion to a laboratory curiosity. To create useful room-temperature muon-catalyzed fusion reactors would need a cheaper, more efficient muon source and/or a way for each individual muon to catalyze many more fusion reactions.
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