- additive for glass and ceramics (to obtain beautiful green or yellow colors)
- toner in Photography
- mordant for textiles
Some uranium mines in Argentina: Cachocira and Engenlio; in the past Don Otto.
Uranium is an element, it does not 'use' any products.
Yes, the government uses uranium. Uranium is mined, refined and then enriched to provide nuclear fuel for nuclear reactors. Depleted uranium, the uranium "left over" from enrichment, is used in munitions to defeat armor, and in some types of armor. On a related note, enriched uranium is in demand by some sovern states and religeous/political factions to make nuclear weapons, though the "modern" nuclear powers use plutonium as the fissionable element in their nuclear devices. The plutonium is made by "soaking" uranium in the neutron flux of an operating nuclear reactor for a time. This changes (transmutes) some of the uranium to plutonium, which is then recovered and processed.
We usually find that uranium is used as fuel in nuclear reactors (though some use plutonium).
Uranium is used especially as nuclear fuel.
Yes, uranium was mined in the past in Ontario.
Predominantly enriched uranium, but some reactors can use natural uranium.
Because in the past was an uranium mine near this small village.
Some do. Others use Uranium.
Some uranium mines in Argentina: Cachocira and Engenlio; in the past Don Otto.
Nuclear power. Military use.
Uranium-234 has any practical use.
Uranium is an element, it does not 'use' any products.
Coal dont't use uranium ! But coal ashes contain traces of uranium.
Yes, the government uses uranium. Uranium is mined, refined and then enriched to provide nuclear fuel for nuclear reactors. Depleted uranium, the uranium "left over" from enrichment, is used in munitions to defeat armor, and in some types of armor. On a related note, enriched uranium is in demand by some sovern states and religeous/political factions to make nuclear weapons, though the "modern" nuclear powers use plutonium as the fissionable element in their nuclear devices. The plutonium is made by "soaking" uranium in the neutron flux of an operating nuclear reactor for a time. This changes (transmutes) some of the uranium to plutonium, which is then recovered and processed.
In the past, highly enriched uranium (cca. 99 % uranium 235); but now nuclear weapons generally have plutonium.
In the past uranium mining was a source of environment contamination.Now the negative effects are minor and is possible to be remedied.