Plutonium has not taste or odor.
Typically, a nuclear bomb would use plutonium-239 as the primary isotope for fission. Plutonium-239 is preferred due to its high fissionability and ease of obtaining through processing in nuclear reactors. Small amounts of other plutonium isotopes, such as plutonium-240, may also be present due to the manufacturing process, but the majority would be plutonium-239.
Neptune is a gas giant composed mainly of hydrogen, helium, and methane. Since it has no solid surface, it doesn't have a taste or flavor.
Plutonium doesn't occur in nature as far as we know, but if Pluto were made of solid Plutonium, nothing would happen. Pluto is not near anything that might be affected.
Oxidizing of plutonium to oxides PuO and PuO2.
The Chernobyl fallout primarily consisted of radioactive isotopes like iodine-131, cesium-137, and strontium-90, rather than plutonium. Plutonium was not a significant component of the released radiation.
Fortunately any person tasted this type of water ! Plutonium is radioactive and toxic.
Plutonium is a radioactive metal, and as such it does not have a distinctive smell because it is odorless. It is important to note that plutonium is extremely hazardous and should only be handled by trained professionals in controlled environments.
I would like to know where do taste grape tannins
I would assume that they taste like brains.
It would taste like my mom's pork chops. Man, that stuff is nasty...
Garbage would taste like whatever you put inside of the garbage
it is like a bitter taste, more of an instiguated taste. I would recomend it if you like meat, but i prefer normal chicken
The fresh surface of plutonium has a silvery metallic appearance.
No reasonable person would like to lose their sense of taste. They would no longer be able to taste the smoked salmon they long for or the escargot they never dared to try.
A fresh surface of plutonium is silvery, metallic.
The fresh surface of plutonium is metallic, silvery.
Well you would have to taste it to know what it taste like. It's impossible to describe. Mostly positive feedback.