$1,000,000,000,000.99
divide 140 by the atomic weight of the uranium you want to know about. it will be different if you are asking about natural, enriched, or depleted uranium and how much its enriched or depleted.
Depleted uranium is uranium with a content of the isotope uranium-235 under 0.7 %. Natural uranium has been processed to change (increase) the concentrations of lighter isotopes, and the "leftovers" are termed depleted uranium. Let's look at this heavy metal and sort things out. Without splitting hairs, the element uranium as it comes out of the ground is almost 99.27% U-238, and about 0.73% U-235. There's also a trace of U-234 in it. The isotope U-235 is the desired one for use in nuclear fuels and in nuclear weapons. Uranium is processed or "enriched" to increase the amount of the lighter isotope in the the finished product. This leaves the rest of the uranium "depleted" of some (or much) of its U-235 (and U-234, for what it's worth). The term depleted uranium is then applied to the remaining uranium. A link can be found below to check facts and gather more information.
Approx. 99 US $ for 1 kg of unrefined oxide U3O8 (spot price at 30.07.2012).
Approx. 125 US $ for 1 kg of unrefined uranium oxide U3O8.
I have been able to buy it for about $285 per ounce.
South Africa production: - uranium: approx. 1 000 t/year - coal: approx. 200.106 t/year - oil: approx. 200.103 barrels/day
approx. 70 tonnes.
Approx. 90 000 US $ for 1 000 kg of unrefined uranium octaoxide (U3O8).
Approx. 70 US $ for 1 kg of nuclear reactor grade uranium doxide (with natural uranium); the enriched uranium is more expensive, depending on enrichment.
Cubic meter is not an unit for uranium.The price of natural uranium as U3O8 is approx. 90 US $/kg.
Approx. 40 000-50 000 t.
Approx. 90 % in 2010.