This reaction doesn't exist now.
Plutonium and uranium can form alloys.
yes it does
Element 106 is named seaborgium. Seaborg was instrumental in the discovery of plutonium and worked on the Manhattan Project.
Yes, seaborgium can form compounds with other elements, such as oxygen, carbon, and halogens. These compounds are primarily studied through theoretical calculations and have not been extensively researched due to seaborgium's short half-life.
Plutonium, as a metal, loss electrons.
When you combine plutonium and uranium, a nuclear reaction can occur which releases a large amount of energy in the form of heat and radiation. This process is known as nuclear fission, where the nuclei of the atoms split into smaller fragments, releasing energy and additional neutrons. This reaction is the basis for nuclear power plants and nuclear weapons.
Glenn Seaborg and co-workers discovered plutonium, americium, curium, berkelium, californium, einsteinium, fermium, mendelevium, nobelium, seaborgium.
you die!
plutonium plus weapons
After chemical reactions plutonium can form many compounds with the majority of nonmetals.
Nothing
Seaborgium is a metal.