Koenig, L. A., Mattauch, J. H. E., and Wapstra, A. H., 1960 Nuclear Data Tables, Part 2 (Nat. Acad. Sci., Washington, D.C.). Glendenin, L. E., Coryell, C. D., and ...
It is the opposite of nuclear fission, in which heavy atoms are split apart. Nuclear power stations currently use nuclear fission to generate electricity. Nuclear fission produces radioactive ...
Nuclear fission does not release the greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide. A controlled nuclear fission reaction releases one million times more energy per kg than a chemical reaction such as burning ...
Normally, natural uranium has 0.72% of the uranium-235 (U-235) isotope, which is sought in the nuclear fission process. However, the Oklo samples possessed a slightly lower isotopic concentration, ...
Back in October, I wrote about current nuclear fission energy sources in consultation with Todd Allen, professor and chair of the nuclear engineering and radiological sciences department at the ...
Its two sources of fuel, hydrogen and lithium, are widely available in many parts of the Earth. What’s the difference between nuclear fission and nuclear fusion? Both are nuclear processes, in that ...
Fermi, among others, realized that nuclear fission was accompanied by the release of colossal amounts of energy from the conversion of mass into energy (according to Einstein's mass-energy ...