answersLogoWhite

0

How is the curium normally found?

User Avatar

Anonymous

13y ago
Updated: 8/20/2019

Curium is an artificial element; only infinitesimal amounts of curium can exist in uranium ores.

User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What period is curium found?

Curium is a member of the actinoids family.


What group is the element curium found in?

Curium is a member of the actinoids family.


What does curium look like?

Curium is a silvery-white, radioactive metal that tarnishes in air. It is not found in the natural environment and is typically produced in laboratories through nuclear reactions. Its most stable form is curium-247.


Physical state of cerium at room temperature?

The metal curium is normally a solid at anything close to "normal" temperature. It melts at well in excess of 1000 °C. Curium is a synthetic trans-uranium element; it is not found in nature. A link can be found below.


What was curium named after?

Curium was named after Marie Curie because they haven't have found another name that they thought of so they named it after the scientist who found radium


Where do you bump into curium in your everyday life?

Curium is not found naturally on Earth and is primarily created in laboratories for research purposes. It is not used in everyday life due to its radioactive properties and limited availability.


How it curium found?

- in laboratory, following the nuclear reaction: 239Pu + 4He → 242Cm + 1n - curium isotopes are also obtained in nuclear power reactors


What is an example for curium?

Curium, the chemical element is only curium !


How much is curium?

Curium is not for sale.


How did curium get its symbol?

Cm from CuriuM.


Is curium metal or nonmetal?

Curium is a metal. It belongs to actinides.


Where is curium found on earth?

Curium is a synthetic element that does not occur naturally on Earth. It is typically produced in nuclear reactors or particle accelerators by bombarding plutonium or other heavy elements with neutrons.