Nuclear fission concerns the behaviour of the nucleus, the protons and neutrons in it and their binding energy. The electrons don't affect the fission, but they get shared out between the two fission fragments.
It is Fissured, or Split, into usually three smaller Atoms. This is concurrent with a vast release of Energy.
{In E=mc squared - c is 297,000 [m/s] and c squared is 297,000 times 297,000; m is mass in grams, E is energy in Ergs.}{An Erg is a very, very small measurement quantity yet c-squared is a very much more massive quantity.}
In fission, the atom is split into several pieces. Most often it is TWO medium size atoms of unequal mass (such as strontium and xenon) and several (1-5) separate neutrons. While trinary fission (three small atoms) occurs, binary fission is much more probable.
The speed of light, c is 2.997 x 10^{8} m/s (1000 x bigger than the answer by Marque Allien). Also to get "ergs", one must not only use grams, but use c in cm/s, another factor of 100, then squared). Using mass in kg with c in m/s one gets joules.
Nuclear energy is the energy that is released during nuclear fission. Ways to describe nuclear energy include an inexhaustible source of energy and it is calculated as Kilo calories.
a very large amount of energy is produced from a very small mass<novanet>
they become stable
No. Nuclear fission is a process that involves the nucleus, not electron shells.
nuclear fission
FISSION. nobody on this website knows the answer..... SHAME
Nuclear fission
nuclear fission is the process of splitting atoms.
No. Nuclear fission is a process that involves the nucleus, not electron shells.
Nuclear fission is defined as splitting large nuclei into smaller ones.
You think probable to nuclear fission.
You get nuclear fission in:nuclear fission reactorsatomic fission bombs
a nucleus in an electron cloud.
nuclear fission
nuclear fission
Nuclear fission
FISSION. nobody on this website knows the answer..... SHAME
Nuclear fission.
Nuclear fission
The Sun get it power by nuclear FUSION not by nuclear fission.