If you use a heavier isotope of iodine, it should be radioactive.
No, fission is still a fuel in - waste out reaction. Eventually the supply of nuclear fuel would run out.
Iodine. If you ever get iodine on your clothing, it will leave a permanent stain because of the starch.
Most world religions dislike nuclear bombs because they cause so much destruction.
Yes, check the package for it.
The minimum amount of unstable atoms needed to produce an uncontrolled chain reaction is called critical mass.
Iodine can exist as a solid, liquid, or gas. Its normally solid at STP, but with slow heating you can get it into its liquid form. It sublimes, so the heat must be well controlled. After he pours liquid bromine, this person then shows some liquid iodine.
no.
No
None do. Let's look at each compound: BiCl2... this is Bi2+ and Cl- Na2SO4... this is Na+ and SO42- NaCl... this is Na+ and Cl- BiSO4... this is Bi2+ and SO42- So as you can see, nobody is changing its charge, so everyone's oxidation number stayed constant. Of course I am a bit confused by the fact that Bismuth does not ever form a +2 ion (only +3 and +5), so I would have to assume you meant Ba2+. But it would not change what I wrote up there. It would simply be a precipition reaction, not an oxidation-reduction reaction.
The atomic bomb was the first nuclear weapon ever made during World war two and it was the first weapon that have been tested before Hiroshima was under attack.
Who ever has nukes.
The biggest nuclear bomb ever detonated is called the Tsar Bomba. It was detonated by the Soviet Union in 1961 and had a yield of 50 megatons, making it the most powerful nuclear weapon ever tested.