Decompose.
When rock fragments fall freely through the air, they experience acceleration due to gravity and air resistance. As they fall, they may break into smaller pieces due to impact with each other or the ground, ultimately becoming sediment or debris. This process is known as erosion.
Branching decay occurs in the thorium series because there are multiple pathways for the decay of thorium nuclei. Thorium can decay through alpha decay, beta decay, gamma decay, and other processes, leading to different end products with varying probabilities. These branching decay pathways contribute to the overall complexity of the thorium decay chain.
When asteroids collide, the pieces of rock or metal that break off are called "fragments" or "debris." Specifically, if these fragments are large enough to survive their journey through the atmosphere and land on Earth, they are referred to as "meteorites." Smaller pieces that burn up upon entering the atmosphere are known as "meteoroids."
Radium naturally decays into radon, which is a radioactive noble gas. This decay process is one of the steps in the radioactive decay chain of uranium-238.
Yes, radon-222 is produced through the decay of radium-226, which is a product of uranium decay. While radon is not directly produced from organic decay, radon can be found in soil and rocks where decay of radioactive elements occurs.
disintegrate, collapse, deteriorate, decay, fall apart, degenerate, crush, fragment, pulverize, go to pieces
Here are the list of words: break down, crumble, decay, dissolve, fall apart, pieces.
I Fall to Pieces was created on 1960-11-16.
maybe
Patsy Cline sang "I fall to pieces"
Before I Fall to Pieces was created on 2006-12-18.
so your teech don't fall out and u can die if they decay and the decay will get into the bloodstream but that's only in extreme cases
decay
Let's Fall to Pieces Together was created on 1983-07-19.
Fall to Pieces - Avril Lavigne song - was created in 2004.
The average pieces of hair fall out of a persons head a day is about 80 pieces.
It depends on which isotope you are asking about. Some decay through alpha, some decay through beta, some decay through other processes. All can leave the nucleus in an excited state, resulting in gamma emission.