Applications of uranium:
- nuclear fuel for nuclear power reactors
- explosive for nuclear weapons
- material for armors and projectiles
- catalyst
- additive for glass and ceramics (to obtain beautiful green colors)
- toner in Photography
- mordant for textiles
- shielding material (depleted uranium)
- ballast
- and other minor applications
atomic bombs, magnet extractors some other things probably aren't very commerically owned items though. stuffs dangerous
Uranium is an element, it does not 'use' any products.
It is possible to obtain very beutiful objects from uranium glass (a glass with some percent of uranium oxide).
The answer is FALSE. Products of Nuclear fission of Uranium are highly radioactive.
Up to uranium elements are made by stellar nuclear synthesis; after uranium elements are man made.
Yes. Plutonium (atomic number: 84) is a trans-uranium element (meaning it has a higher atomic number than uranium (82)). Every element on the periodic table after uranium is man-made.
Uranium is an element, it does not 'use' any products.
It is possible to obtain very beutiful objects from uranium glass (a glass with some percent of uranium oxide).
The answer is FALSE. Products of Nuclear fission of Uranium are highly radioactive.
Nobody throws Uranium out. Some people throw their wives or husbands out. Some people let their exclusive golf-club memberships lapse. The nasty by-products of uranium fission, when they are no longer useful, get sent to a giant pool in Idaho. They don't throw the Uranium out either.
Isotopes of lead are the final products of the decay chain of uranium.
In uranium plants
Uranium is not made of any material because Uranium is an element and elements are not made of something else.
Australia exports a wide variety of products. Some of these include fruit, daily products, coal, uranium, as well as wine.
Up to uranium elements are made by stellar nuclear synthesis; after uranium elements are man made.
pampas, minerals, lead, zinc, tin, copper, iron, oil and ,uranium and maganese
Uranium and Diamonds
Yes. Plutonium (atomic number: 84) is a trans-uranium element (meaning it has a higher atomic number than uranium (82)). Every element on the periodic table after uranium is man-made.