Plutonium...
The Latin name is also plutonium.
The Latin word for plutonium is also plutonium.The Greek word for plutonium is Î?λουτωνιο.
The name of the chemical element plutonium (Pu) is derived from the name of the dwarf planet Pluto.
- Plutonium can react with other elements to form chemical compounds- Plutonium can be transformed in other elements by nuclear reactions or radioactive decay
Plutonium is the name of an artificial chemical element; the chemical symbol is Pu. This name is derived from the name of the dwarf planet Pluto.
It is impossible to tell. Plutonium is found as isotopes with atomic weights in the range 238 to 244. Your equation seems to involve plutonium with another 39-78 neutrons! How that decays is anyone's guess.It is impossible to tell. Plutonium is found as isotopes with atomic weights in the range 238 to 244. Your equation seems to involve plutonium with another 39-78 neutrons! How that decays is anyone's guess.It is impossible to tell. Plutonium is found as isotopes with atomic weights in the range 238 to 244. Your equation seems to involve plutonium with another 39-78 neutrons! How that decays is anyone's guess.It is impossible to tell. Plutonium is found as isotopes with atomic weights in the range 238 to 244. Your equation seems to involve plutonium with another 39-78 neutrons! How that decays is anyone's guess.
such heavy elements as plutonium or uranium.
Some plutonium chemical compounds; plutonium dioxide, plutonium nitride, plutonium carbide, plutonium nitrate, plutonium trifluoride, plutonium chloride, etc.
Examples: PuO2, plutonium nitrate, plutonium carbide, plutonium chloride, plutonium fluoride etc.
1. The isotope 238Pu: a power o,5 W for 1g. 2. For the nuclear fuels containing plutonium: this is another problem !
No. Melting does not change one element into another.
There's no plutonium here. I haven't even seen any plutonium, recently.