Uranium is a metal. In its pure state, it is not vary radioactive, being only an alpha emitter, and an occasional neutron/beta/gamma emitter - and alpha can be stopped with only a piece of paper - while the neutron/beta/gamma production rate is not dangerous. After having been in a reactor, however, it is highly radioactive due to mixed fission byproducts, and you would not want to be close to it - most facilities manipulate spent fuel under 40 feet of water or behind massive shielding.
the nucleus, the mitochondrion, the chloroplast, the Golgi apparatus, the ribosome, the cytoskeleton, the endoplasm reticula. ha hah h ahahahahahahahahahahahah....
nothing
a nucleus is smaller than an atom, and since we can not feel an atom, somthing smaller than an atom, a nucleus, is impossible to feel
It feels like super heated lead. Uranium actually comes in these little pebbles the put in rods. Don't touch it it may cause cancer.
No. Heavy Water moderated reactors like the CANDU type can go critical and run on natural (0.72%) Uranium just fine.
Examples:Oxides: uranium dioxide, uranium trioxide, uranium octaoxideSalts: ammonium diuranate, uranyl nitrate, uranyl acetate, uranium hehxafluoride, uranium chlorideand many others because uranium is a reactive metal.
Isotopes Uranium 235 and uranium 238 are only natural isotopes of the element uranium.
The percentage of uranium in uranium dioxide is 88,149.
It feels like super heated lead. Uranium actually comes in these little pebbles the put in rods. Don't touch it it may cause cancer.
Nothing !
Uranium is just like nuclear energy
Uranium like most metals is Silvery-Grey in colour, somewhat like Lead
The fresh surface of uranium has a metallic aspect, similar to steel.
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Uranium has more than 200 minerals ! Each mineral has another appearance.
The fresh surface of uranium metal is similar to the surface of steel; but in air the superficial oxidation is rapid.
No. Heavy Water moderated reactors like the CANDU type can go critical and run on natural (0.72%) Uranium just fine.
Yes, although you'll need special equipment depending on what you'd like to prepare the uranium for. - in a nuclear physics laboratory artificial uranium isotopes can be obtained - if you think to the preparation of uranium (as a metal) from other compounds this is very possible but not in a simple laboratory - uranium has 3 natural isotopes
Uranium, Neptunium, Plutonium
Examples:Oxides: uranium dioxide, uranium trioxide, uranium octaoxideSalts: ammonium diuranate, uranyl nitrate, uranyl acetate, uranium hehxafluoride, uranium chlorideand many others because uranium is a reactive metal.