Generally many countries has a national authority in the field of nuclear energy; all companies must be authorized to work with uranium. Also the IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency has a very important role in supervising nuclear activities in the world by the intermediate of Nuclear Safeguards System.
Now liquid uranium has not applications.
There are tons of companies out there willing to use your money to make money for themselves, and Gold is booming right now. It would be easy to find a company willing to invest if you have gold.
The government and industry use uranium. Uranium is very important for its use as a nuclear fuel. Energy companies purchase it from the government or licensed suppliers. It also has military applications such as in kinetic energy munitions (as the bullet) and in uranium armours. (Its use for nuclear weapons has been displaced by plutonium, but plutonium is made in nuclear reactors from uranium.) Uranium and uranium compounds have also another applications in industry such as a coloring agent for glasses and ceramics, mordant for textiles, in Photography, bricks for protection against gamma radiation, ballast, catalysts, etc.
would you use uranium-lead radiometric dating to finnd an igneous rocks age
I would find an internet source online. There are many comparative website where you can compare insurance companies. It would be very useful to use one of those. Or, there may be an insurance company willing to do that for you themselves. Usually, if they're willing to do that, they're willing to negotiate with you to give you the best price possible.
U from uranium235U and 238U (recommended); also possible U-235 and U-238 or uranium-235 and uranium-238.
Of course, no !! Uranium being pyrophoric might make a very effective "flint" in cigarette lighters, but its alpha decay would make such a use craze due to inhalation and ingestion risks of the Uranium oxides. Match heads would have no use at all for it.
Uranium-234 has any practical use.
Uranium is an element, it does not 'use' any products.
Coal dont't use uranium ! But coal ashes contain traces of uranium.
There isn't any location on Earth at which it would be impossible to use uranium. It is, however, a nonrenewable resource. You could use it everywhere, but only for a limited period of time before it runs out.
To find the number of uranium atoms in 6.2 g of pure uranium, you would first determine the molar mass of uranium, which is approximately 238.03 g/mol. Next, use Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 atoms/mol) to convert the grams of uranium to number of atoms. So, 6.2 g of uranium would equal approximately 6.2 x (6.022 x 10^23 / 238.03) uranium atoms.