Fission fragments, neutrons, gamma radiations; and all the radiations emitted by these fission fragments.
No, uranium will not become iron. Uranium is a radioactive element that will not naturally transform into iron. Iron is a different element and the two elements do not undergo a natural transformation process from one to the other.
Chewing physically breaks food, while the saliva chemically breaks it down.
The homonym of "breaks" is "brakes." "Breaks" refers to a pause or interruption, while "brakes" are the devices in a vehicle that enable it to slow down or stop.
They both break down a certain thing. Bile breaks down fats while chewing breaks down carbohydrates in simple sugar
because you are resting while your stomach breaks down all the food
Amylase is an enzyme that breaks down carbohydrates (starches) into sugars, while lipase is an enzyme that breaks down fats into fatty acids and glycerol. Both enzymes play important roles in the digestion process in the body.
Radon gas is produced from the natural decay of uranium in soil, rocks, and water. When uranium breaks down, it forms radium, which then decays to produce radon gas. Radon can seep into buildings through cracks in the foundation or gaps in walls and floors.
A condensation reaction builds them up while hydrolysis breaks them down into their constituent parts.
This reaction is called nuclear fission; a extremely great quantity of energy is also released. The two fragments are called fission products.
1.) What breaks down food into what that cells can absorb what breaks down food ? The answer is B wich is Digestion . = Lexy.B
Saliva contains amylase, which breaks down complex sugars such as starch. However starch can't ever be broken down into proteins. They are fundamentally different, starch is a polysaccharide while protein is a polypeptide.
An electron is fired into the reactor core containing the radioactive material, usually uranium, and as it hits the radioactive nucleus the uranium atom breaks down forming two daughter nuclei and emitting another electron (beta radiation particle) which continues as a chain reaction.