Plutonium is a solid metal, radioactive, very toxic, silver-white color.
Uranium metal is a silvery grey color which oxidises in air to give a black oxide covering.
Fresh pure uranium metal surface has the appearance of a steel.
Silver is as a silver-white solid, radioactive metal.
Plutonium is a radioactive metal, toxic, very dense, silvery white colour.
The fresh uranium surface has the appearance of steel.
Uranium is a natural chemical element, radioactive, dense; the fresh surface of uranium has an appearance similar to steel.
The fresh surface of plutonium is metallic, silvery.
The fresh surface of a pure uranium metal sample has the appearance of a steel.
it looks like u
Example: the atomic mass number of uranium is 238,02891 - exprimed in atomic mass units.
Of course not ! But note that all the foods and drinking waters have an extremely small concentration of uranium - it is inevitable, it is a natural phenomenon because uranium is a common element and very disperse.
No. Heavy Water moderated reactors like the CANDU type can go critical and run on natural (0.72%) Uranium just fine.
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.
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.
The fresh surface of uranium has a metallic aspect, similar to steel.
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.
Miners in Australia look for things like Uranium,Metal,Lithium and all that some also look for gold.
It looks green, and glowing.
The fresh cleaned surface of uranium metal has the appearance of steel.
Uranium is just like nuclear energy
Uranium like most metals is Silvery-Grey in colour, somewhat like Lead
Example: the atomic mass number of uranium is 238,02891 - exprimed in atomic mass units.
typically black and the corrosion products tend to flake off and crumble to dust (which is a severe inhalation hazard)
I like tuna!
Of course not ! But note that all the foods and drinking waters have an extremely small concentration of uranium - it is inevitable, it is a natural phenomenon because uranium is a common element and very disperse.