The main product is a new isotope; ionizing radiations are also emited.
nuclear fission
During a nuclear fission reaction, products such as two or more lighter nuclei, neutrons, gamma rays, and energy are given off. These products can vary depending on the specific isotopes involved in the reaction.
Less than 1%.
Uranium-235
Uranium-235
A chain reaction is a type of reaction that keeps going on its own once it starts due to the products of the reaction continuing to fuel the reaction. Nuclear fission reactions in nuclear power plants and explosions are examples of chain reactions that continue on their own once initiated.
The products are very different.
The reactants are on the left side of the equation, and the products are on the right side of the equation. The reactants are used up in a chemical reaction, and the products are the substances made by the reaction.
To calculate the mass defect in a nuclear reaction, subtract the total mass of the reactants from the total mass of the products. The difference represents the mass that was converted into energy during the reaction, according to Einstein's equation Emc2.
Nuclear
Products of a nuclear fission reaction typically include smaller atomic nuclei (fission fragments), neutrons, and a release of energy. However, products that are not generated in a fission reaction include unchanged parent nuclei, as they undergo transformation, and stable isotopes that do not result from fission. Additionally, elements heavier than uranium, such as some transuranic elements, are not direct products of fission but may be formed from neutron capture processes.
another name for nuclear fission is: E=MC squared