There is a misunderstanding here. It is a fine, but very important point. Mass can neither be created nor destroyed, and energy can neither be created nor destroyed.
There is a relationship between mass and energy, in the relativistic framework set down by Einstein in his famous mass-energy equivalence equation e = mc2. Do not misunderstand, however - this does not mean that mass can be converted to energy and vice versa - it means that mass has energy, and energy has mass, all depending on relativistic velocity.
In nuclear fission, the nuclear force (residual binding energy) that holds protons and neutrons together in an atom is greater than the nuclear force required to hold the protons and neutrons together in the split atoms that result from the fission process. The differential nuclear force, or mass deficit, is released during fission. It is more correct to say that the mass is carried away with the energy, because the mass is the energy and the energy is the mass, as stated above.
Reactions that involve nuclei, called nuclear reactions, result in a tremendous amount of energy. Two types are fission and fusion.
I currently use nuclear fusion.
Reactions that involve nuclei, called nuclear reactions, result in a tremendous amount of energy. Two types are fission and fusion.
The difference between Fusion and Fission is that Fission is easier to do and produces more energy than fusion reactions. However fission can be dangerous and is used in Nuclear reactors. Fusion however is safer and produces less energy but safely. It is quite difficult to cause a Fusion reaction however.
No, nuclear reactions refer to any processes involving changes in the nucleus of an atom, which includes both nuclear fission and fusion. Nuclear fusion specifically refers to the process where two atomic nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus, releasing a large amount of energy.
During nuclear fission and fusion, matter that seems to disappear is actually converted into energy.
One type of atom (element or isotope) is converted to another. This is called nuclear reaction.
fusion nuclear reaction followed by fission nuclear reaction
Nuclear bombs can use either nuclear fission or nuclear fusion as the primary mechanism of energy release. Most nuclear bombs in current arsenals rely on nuclear fission reactions, while thermonuclear bombs use a fission reaction to trigger a fusion reaction.
fission and/or fusion
Nuclear energy is either:fission reaction, orfusion reaction, orradioactive decay
Reactions that involve nuclei, called nuclear reactions, result in a tremendous amount of energy. Two types are fission and fusion.
I currently use nuclear fusion.
To some degree. Hydrogen bombs release energy via nuclear fusion, but they use a fission reaction to trigger the fusion.
In the so-called "hydrogen bomb" or fusion bomb, yes, there is energy released from the same reaction (hydrogen fusing to helium) as in the Sun.However, many if not most atomic bombs are fission bombs that do not involve fusion. In a fission bomb, the nuclei of uranium atoms are split, converting some of their mass to energy.All current fusion bombs include fission reactions to trigger the greater energy release from fusion. But most of the energy in very large fission-fusion bombs comes from a third-stage reaction: the fusion causes an exceptionally powerful fission reaction in a uranium shell around the bomb. This called a Teller-Ulam device or fission-fusion-fission bomb.
Definition: energy from nuclear fission or fusion: the energy released by nuclear fission or fusion
Reactions that involve nuclei, called nuclear reactions, result in a tremendous amount of energy. Two types are fission and fusion.