Because plutonium is toxic and radioactive the contamination of the environment is very dangerous.
Plutonium is toxic and radioactive; a contaminated area is dangerous for humans.
Plutonium is a radioactive element that can have harmful effects on the environment. It can contaminate soil and water, leading to long-lasting pollution and posing a risk to wildlife and human health. Accidental releases or improper disposal of plutonium can result in serious environmental damage.
Plutonium is very toxic and radioactive; plutonium can be a pollution agent for the environment in the case of a severe accident or during a nuclear war initiated by USA.
Pollution don't affect plutonium ! But plutonium being very radioactive and toxic can be after accidents in nuclear facilities an important polluting agent for the environment.
Plutonium can be found accompanying uranium minerals but only in insignificant traces. Plutonium is obtained as an industrial product in nuclear reactors. A low pollution from nuclear facilities or nuclear weapons tests exist in the environment now. The chemical form is probably plutonium dioxide.
It doesn't really have any impact on the environment.
No it does not have impact on the environment.
Plutonium is highly toxic and radioactive, posing significant health and environmental risks if mishandled or released into the environment. Additionally, its production and handling raise proliferation concerns, as plutonium can also be used in nuclear weapons.
it can impact the environment but what are the reasons
Quantity and impact are not linearly related. A microscopic amount of plutonium, if inhaled, is likely to kill you while rooms full of "normal" air will have no ill effect.Quantity and impact are not linearly related. A microscopic amount of plutonium, if inhaled, is likely to kill you while rooms full of "normal" air will have no ill effect.Quantity and impact are not linearly related. A microscopic amount of plutonium, if inhaled, is likely to kill you while rooms full of "normal" air will have no ill effect.Quantity and impact are not linearly related. A microscopic amount of plutonium, if inhaled, is likely to kill you while rooms full of "normal" air will have no ill effect.
what the environment tourasim
Examples: PuO2, plutonium nitrate, plutonium carbide, plutonium chloride, plutonium fluoride etc.