Nuclear bombs!
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 or yellow colors)
- toner in Photography
- mordant for textiles
- shielding material (depleted uranium)
- ballast
- and other minor applications
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
Nuclear power plants for making energy. Also, for atomic bombs.
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 or yellow colors)
- toner in photography
- mordant for textiles
- shielding material (depleted uranium)
- ballast
- and other minor applications
Uranium fuels for nuclear power reactors Depleted uranium for munitions, armors and shields Uranium in nuclear bombs Other minor uses: colouring agent for glass and ceramics, catalysts in organic chemistry, mordant for textiles, in dentistry, photographic material, etc.
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 or yellow colors)
- toner in photography
- mordant for textiles
- shielding material (depleted uranium)
- ballast
- and other minor applications
The most common uses of uranium are in nuclear weapons and in nuclear power stations.
Bombs, nuclear reactions, etc.
The natural resource of nuclear energy is uranium. Uranium is abundant everywhere on earth. However, the cost of its extraction is the limiting factor for the feasibility of any uranium resource. Among the countries with high uranium resources are Australia, Canada, Kazakhstan, Niger, Chad, and South Africa.
Yes, many reactors use uranium as their nuclear fuel, but some use plutonium or a uranium-plutonium mix.
Becquerel in 1896 hadn't the possibility to identify the radiations emitted from uranium.
The metal most commonly used is enriched uranium, meaning that it has a higher percentage of uranium-235 than occurs in nature. Plutonium is also used in some reactors, in combination with uranium. And thorium can also be used, though research on its use has only just begun. Usually it is not the metal that is used in any case, but a compound of the metal. There is a link below.
Nuclear energy as applied to power plants uses uranium, which can be made to produce a chain reaction in which atoms of uranium are constantly splitting and releasing energy in the form of heat. The heat is then used to produce electricity through a steam turbine/generator.
to lick your mom
uranium -just an elemet uranium 235 -element but this is radioactive
Uranium hasn't uses for health.
Andersonite is used in the process of concentrating uranium.
Nuclear power. Military use.
Uranium is not used to fight against cancer !Inhalation of fine powders of uranium or uranium compounds may be a cause of lung cancers.
Uranium hasn't medical uses.
it gets you uranium, if you have uses for uranium. beyond that i am not sure exactly what kind of answer you were looking for. there are several hundred possible uses for uranium, most of them totally non-nuclear.
No home uses of uranium, excepting decorative coloured glass objects.
used in the nuclear power industry to generate electricity
I believe Uranium is also used in smoke alarms, Granite countertops, Your grandma’s dinnerware, Uranium-tainted glassware, Old watches that glow used to use uranium,Older, box-shaped televisions, self-illuminating emergency "Exit" signs, and a couple of other appliances.
Nuclear energy sometime uses uranium for its energy source.