An atomic pile is an early form of nuclear reactor fuelled by uranium and moderated with graphite.
If the aluminum has iron attached to it it will be picked up by the magnet otherwise it will remain on the ground.
If you have a pile of pure sodium chloride, it would be a compound. A lot of the salt used as table salt, though, is not pure sodium chloride and would be a mixture of several compounds. This is particularly true if you have a pile of sea salt.
this elemnt has an atomic number that is double the atomic number of silicon?
There is a pile of sand and flattens
The atomic number and atomic masses increase as you move from left to right.
It means, "pile." It could mean a pile of wool, a pile driven into the ground, a Voltaic pile (battery), or an atomic pile (nuclear reactor).
Enrico Fermi
There was not one person. An entire group of scientists led by the Italian physicist, Enrico Fermi, and Leo Szilard, who I believe was Polish, built the atomic pile under the squash courts at the University of Chicago. Many other people were also involved.
A pile of wrappers!A pile of wrappers!A pile of wrappers!A pile of wrappers!
This was built as part of the Manhattan Project in WW2, to demonstrate the principle of the chain reaction. The results were used to design the Hanford piles to produce plutonium. The chief scientist for the Chicago pile was Enrico Fermi, first criticality in 1942
Spun Pile is the pile that they produced at the factory and bring it to the worksite.It is almost the same with Bored Pile,but in side is hole.
A skirt pile can refer to a pile of clothing in a female's dressing room. Also, a skirt pile can be a pile of dirt or rocks that are pushed to the side when clearing with large equipment.
A pile show is a piece of metal that goes onto the end of a pile. It is used to aid the pile when it penetrates dirt, and it also protects that pile while it is driving.
Pile.
Pile is either a noun (as in 'there's a pile of clothes') or a verb (as in 'I will pile the clothes up').
A pile of things can be called: mound - an amount of something in a pile heap - a large pile of something, especially an untidy pile stack - a pile of things placed one on top of the othe mountain - a large pile or amount of something pyramid - a pile of things arranged in the shape of a pyramid bank - a long pile of earth, snow, or sand drift - a large pile of snow or sand formed by the wind wad - a thick pile or ball of papers, money, or thin cloth
Yes, the noun 'pile' is a collective noun, it can be used as a general collective noun and is often used for a pile of trash, a pile of laundry, a pile of newspapers, etc.