it will last roughly 10 days
Uranium is indeed toxic, primarily due to its radioactive properties. Exposure to uranium can cause a range of health problems, including kidney damage, increased cancer risk, and other long-term health effects. Handling uranium requires proper safety precautions to minimize exposure and potential health hazards.
Some examples of uranium compounds are: uranyl nitrate, uranium dioxide, uranium hexafluoride, uranium tetrachloride, triuraniumoctaoxide, uranyl acetate, uranium iodide, uranium nitride, uranium, sulfide, uranium carbide, uranyl sulfate, etc.
Uranium oxide is a compound made up of uranium and oxygen, and is not considered a metal. Uranium itself is a metal, but when combined with oxygen to form uranium oxide, it becomes a ceramic material.
Uranium-238 and uranium-234 are not "elements", but they are natural isotopes of the chemical element uranium. The atoms are neutral.
The uranium oxide U3O8 contain 84,8 % uranium.
Depending on the annual production !
Today a correct answer is not possible.
Depends on what is in the atomic bomb. Most atomic bombs contain Uranium 235 and the half life of it is 703 Million years. So it would last a long time, this is due to the alpha particles produced from uranium.
Probably 100 years with thermal reactors , but a correct answer is impossible today.
Depends on how its used. If breeder reactors are used to convert the nonfissionable Uranium-238 to fissionable transuranics, it will last more than 100 times as long as it will if they are not used.
Radioactivity can persist on uranium for billions of years, as uranium has a very long half-life. The most common isotope of uranium, uranium-238, has a half-life of about 4.5 billion years. Uranium-235, another isotope, has a shorter half-life of about 700 million years.
Uranium is only the last natural element. We know many artificial transuranic elements.
Cheap notebook computers can last just as long as the more expensive ones. As long as the cheaper one will do everything you need for it to do there is no need to pay more for practically the same thing.
q tip
the supplie store
The long vowels are the 'i' in 'admire,' 'arrive' and 'science,' and the 'a' in 'reputation' and 'uranium.'
In August or September