Wikianswers does not do diagrams. If you go to Wikipedia article on Pressurised Water Reactors you will find a diagram there.
fully explain independent particle or single particle model as a factor responsible for nuclear stability
thomson
Yes, a model shows just as much info as a diagram. They are so similar you can use either one when graphing/plotting data. (Highskool questions suck! I no!!)
The energy level model of the atom was proposed by Niels Bohr.
The word 'model' in scientific terms mean a diagram or some sort of picture with words pointing out what bit means which.
It contains a model nuclear reactor. It used to be double this price.
This is a link to the model of a CANDU reactor. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:CANDU_Reactor_Schematic.svg This is a link to a page that shows the models for several generation IV (not yet-existing) reactors. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_IV_reactor
website for gunpartscorp, letter S, Savage, Model 73, and there is a parts diagram.
Please see the related link below for the only detailed diagram I could find
Please reask question with a make and model of the car you are asking about.
If you want to make a WORKING model for nuclear physics, look at the Manhattan Project, and you'll be joining Miss Curie. Please rephrase the question or figure out what it is exactly you should be asking for.
yes it is a diagram its a cb4 diagram
Not enough info. Please ask a new question and include the year make and model.
As the structural diagram of methane has more chemicals in it, then the model.
The Air Force did a little bit of stuff with nuclear-powered aircraft in the 1950s. They built a couple of nuclear-powered J58 turbojets and ran them to nearly-full throttle, but never installed them in aircraft. They also mounted a reactor in a B-36 bomber, but never connected it to the engines. As far as I can tell they didn't put any fuel in the reactor - they just put the reactor vessel in the plane and went flying. In the end, the amount of shielding it would have taken to keep the crew from dying in mid-flight was impossible to put in a flyable aircraft.In the early to mid 1960s they also talked about building nuclear-powered civil airliners. Back then EVERYTHING was going to be nuclear-powered - cars, trucks, ships, houses...The Navy had a lot more luck with nuclear reactors. A ship can accommodate the shielding, so several classes of ship have had nuclear power. All our current carriers and subs are nuclear. The Navy also built nine nuclear-powered cruisers to accompany carriers, all of which were decommissioned at the end of the Cold War. There were some nuclear civil ships too - the US, Japan, Germany and the Soviet Union all built nuclear cargo ships, and the Russians built nine nuclear icebreakers. Of all these ships, three cargo ships have been decommissioned, the German-owned one has been converted to diesel power, and six of the nine icebreakers are still in service.
enrico fermi made an atom model out of clay.
A particle model