Do you have a nuclear reactor or a high beam current particle accelerator with a neutron beam output? If so yes.
I know exactly how to do it for both bomb grade and reactor grade plutonium, the tedious details are all in public domain literature most of it published by the U.S. Government. Nothing classified in this area in decades as any nuclear physicist or engineer could figure it out anyway and they need the data to properly perform their jobs in nuclear power plants, even if they never come near bomb work.
1 plutonium (solid) gallon = 71,337 kg
Nothing !
isotope
Plutonium was discovered in 1941 by Glenn T. Seaborg, Edwin M. McMillan, Joseph W. Kennedy, and Arthur C. Wahl at the Berkeley Laboratory of the University of California (United States) after the bombardment of uranium with deuterons. Now plutonium is obtained in the nuclear reactors.
Plutonium was discovered by Glenn T. Seaborg, Edwin M. McMillan, Joseph W. Kennedy and Arthur C. Wahl at the Berkeley Laboratory of the University of California (United States) after the bombardment of uranium with deuterons, in 1940. Now plutonium is obtained in the nuclear reactors. Plutonium is also in traces in uranium minerals.
in doodle god episode 2 you can make plutonium by mixing metal and radiation and to make a nuclear bomb you mix plutonium with weapon
Plutonium is not used in batteries.
Any link between plutonium and alchemistry.
The isotope uranium-238 is the source of plutonium.
plutonium + weapon
Yes. We normally don't "put a little plutonium" in something else to make an alloy, but sometimes we alloy a bit of something else in with it. For instance, a bit of gallium us used to make a plutonium alloy. The gallium helps stabilize plutonium and reduce phase transitions.
Some plutonium compounds: Hydrides: Plutonium dihydride: PuH2, Plutonium trihydride: PuH3 Fluorides: Plutonium trifluoride: PuF3, Plutonium hexafluoride: PuF6, Plutonium tetrafluoride: PuF4 Chlorides: Plutonium trichloride: PuCl3 Bromides: Plutonium tribromide: PuBr3 Iodides: Plutonium triiodide: PuI3 Oxides: Plutonium oxide: PuO, Plutonium dioxide: PuO2, Diplutonium trioxide: Pu2O3 Sulfides: Plutonium sulphide: PuS, Plutonium disulphide: PuS2, Diplutonium trisulphide: Pu2S3 Selenide: Plutonium selenide: PuSe Nitrides: Plutonium nitride: PuN Carbides: PuC, Pu2C3 Borides: PuB2,Pu2B4, PuB6, PuB100 Nitrate : Plutonium (III) nitrate: Pu(NO3)3, Plutonium (IV) nitrate: Pu(NO3)4 And many others.
Pure plutonium is obtained as a result of the reaction of PuF4 with calcium, barium or lithium.
An atom of plutonium contain protons, neutrons and electrons - not other elements.
plutonium & weapons :)
Plutonium + Weapons.
- Plutonium can react with other elements to form chemical compounds- Plutonium can be transformed in other elements by nuclear reactions or radioactive decay