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No. Nuclear fusion is the process by which 4 hydrogen atoms are fused into a single helium atom, releasing huge amounts of energy. This is the process that powers our sun. Radioactive decay of isotopes is described by the concept of the half life. The half life of an isotope is the time it takes for 1/2 of a sample of that isotope to decay into a daughter product.

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Is the parent element always radioactive in a nuclear reaction?

No, the parent element in a nuclear reaction is not always radioactive. While many parent isotopes are indeed radioactive and decay into stable or unstable daughter isotopes, there are also stable isotopes that can undergo nuclear reactions without being radioactive themselves. For example, stable isotopes can be involved in nuclear reactions such as neutron capture or fusion, but they do not decay over time like radioactive isotopes.


Why is nuclear fusion clean?

Nuclear fusion is considered clean because it produces energy by fusing two light atomic nuclei, releasing vast amounts of energy and generating minimal radioactive waste. Unlike nuclear fission, fusion reactions do not produce long-lived radioactive waste or emit greenhouse gases. Additionally, fusion uses hydrogen isotopes - deuterium and tritium - which are abundant and non-radioactive.


What term indicates the process in which unstable nuclide release radiation?

If it is related to Nuclear studies, then the answer would be fusion.


Are there any non examples of radioactive decay?

Nuclear fusion and nuclear fission are processes that involve nuclear reactions but are not examples of radioactive decay. Chemical reactions, such as burning wood, do not involve nuclear processes and are also not examples of radioactive decay.


If a fusion reaction produces no appreciable radioactive isotopes then why does a hydrogen bomb produce significant radioactive fallout?

A hydrogen bomb is actually a fission-fusion-fission reaction. The primary fission trigger (plutonium) supplies the energy to induce fusion, but then the fusion energy is used to initiate the secondary fission, which is a large amount of uranium. (in a "clean" H bomb, the uranium is replaced with lead, making it much weaker) also, the radiation will affect the surrounding area, creating a large number of isotopes, dramatically increasing the radioactive fallout.-Akilae

Related Questions

Is the parent element always radioactive in a nuclear reaction?

No, the parent element in a nuclear reaction is not always radioactive. While many parent isotopes are indeed radioactive and decay into stable or unstable daughter isotopes, there are also stable isotopes that can undergo nuclear reactions without being radioactive themselves. For example, stable isotopes can be involved in nuclear reactions such as neutron capture or fusion, but they do not decay over time like radioactive isotopes.


Does fusion produce radioactive waste?

No. The products of nuclear fusion are not radioactive.


Why is nuclear fusion clean?

Nuclear fusion is considered clean because it produces energy by fusing two light atomic nuclei, releasing vast amounts of energy and generating minimal radioactive waste. Unlike nuclear fission, fusion reactions do not produce long-lived radioactive waste or emit greenhouse gases. Additionally, fusion uses hydrogen isotopes - deuterium and tritium - which are abundant and non-radioactive.


Does nuclear fusion produce radioactive waste?

Yes, nuclear fusion produces some radioactive waste, but it is generally less than what is produced by nuclear fission.


Does nuclear fusion create radioactive waste?

Nuclear fusion does not create long-lasting radioactive waste like nuclear fission does. However, some materials used in fusion reactors may become radioactive and need to be handled carefully.


How are isotopes are formed?

Isotopes are formed either naturally through radioactive decay of elements or artificially through element irradiation by particles as neutrons, protons, electrons, or alpha particles in accelerators or nuclear reactors through nuclear fission or nuclear fusion reactions in nuclear reactors.supernovasparticle acceleratorsnuclear reactorsnuclear explosionsradioactive decay


Does fusion produce radioactive waste?

Yes, fusion does not produce long-lived radioactive waste like nuclear fission.


What is nuclear fusion and what is the product?

Nuclear fusion is the merging of two atoms into a single atom. All atoms in nature that are heavier than hydrogen have been through fusion at some point. Energy from nuclear fusion powers the hydrogen bomb. It might also power fusion power plants at some time in the future. In these cases, the products of fusion are helium and neutrons. The neutrons are ionizing radiation, but they have a half life of less than 15 minutes, so they do not last long at all. Some of the neutrons will interact with atoms in the environment, and some of the result will be radioactive isotopes, but these are as unpredictable as the environment in which the fusion takes place, though statistically, these radioactive isotopes mostly also have short half lives.


What substances does nuclear fusion use?

Experiments in fusion have used deuterium and tritium, both isotopes of hydrogen


What term indicates the process in which unstable nuclide release radiation?

If it is related to Nuclear studies, then the answer would be fusion.


Describe the energy of nuclear fusion?

Nuclear fusion has not yet been achieved on Earth but it is the process by which the un and stars are believed to gain their energy. At the moment nuclear reactors use nuclear fission, which is the splitting of radioactive nucleii. Nuclear fussion is the combining, or the fusion, of atoms which would release much much more energy. Many scientists believe that this is the way we need to go to solve the energy crisis.


What is the main type of fusion taking place in the sun?

Nuclear fusion of hydrogen isotopes take place to form helium.