Krypton is a gas and Uranium is a solid
Plutonium and enriched uranium are different materials.Enriched uranium is uranium with a concentration of the isotope 235U greater than the natural concentration of 0,7 %.
No, the three known forms of uranium - uranium-238, uranium-235, and uranium-234 - are isotopes of uranium with different numbers of neutrons. They have distinct nuclear properties that make them useful in various applications.
Krypton is a noble gas and is classified as a representative element.
Krypton gas is non-reactive and inert when combined with fluorine, so it is not inherently dangerous. However, compounds formed by krypton and fluorine may have different properties and behaviors, so caution is still advised when handling any chemical compounds.
The mass number of krypton is 84.
The fission of uranium-235 release krypton and barium (and other isotopes) as fission products.I don't know if the fusion of uranium and krypton is possible in laboratory.
Uranium does not naturally turn into krypton and barium. These elements are created through nuclear reactions, typically in a nuclear reactor or during nuclear fission processes. During these reactions, uranium atoms can split into smaller atoms like krypton and barium, releasing energy in the process.
Uranium-235 and uranium-238 are different isotopes of the element uranium. They have different mass numbers due to different numbers of neutrons.
Fission products, in the case of uranium, krypton 92 and barium 141.
Yes, it is true.
Krypton is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, inert gas, and considered to be non-toxic. Although it is extremely unreactive krypton can react with fluorine, and a few compounds of the element have been prepared, including krypton (II) fluoride and krypton clathrates. Krypton is characterized by several sharp emission lines (spectral signatures) the strongest being green and yellow. It is one of the products of uranium fission. Solidified krypton is white and crystalline with a face-centered cubic crystal structure, which is a common property of all noble gases.
Uranium-235 and uranium-238 are isotopes of uranium, meaning they have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. Uranium-235 is used in nuclear reactors and weapons due to its ability to sustain a nuclear chain reaction, while uranium-238 is more abundant in nature but less useful for these purposes.
Krypton is a noble gas found in trace amounts in the Earth's atmosphere, primarily produced by the decay of uranium and thorium. It is also released during volcanic eruptions and is extracted commercially from liquid air through distillation.
The average number of neutrons per nuclear fission is 2,5.
Fission is a form of nuclear transmutation because the resulting fragments are different elements from the original atom. A neutron-induced fission of U-235 results to krypton and barium.
Uranium-235 is a natural isotope with 143 neutrons. Uranium-231 is an artificial isotope with 139 neutrons.
After the nuclear fission of uranium-235 many fission products (other elements) are formed.