If cancer is classified as 'extra arms', then the second one.
Yes
Most radioactive waste is sealed in special containers, and buried underground. Medical waste that may be radioactive is taken to landfills.
Yes, biomedical waste that is mixed with radioactive waste is typically managed and disposed of as radioactive waste. This is due to the potential hazards associated with radioactive materials, which require specialized handling, treatment, and disposal procedures to ensure safety. Regulations often mandate that such mixed waste is treated according to the more stringent standards applicable to radioactive waste to mitigate health risks and environmental contamination.
Yes, the process of fission produces radioactive waste.
Robert E. Berlin has written: 'Radioactive waste management' -- subject(s): Radioactive waste disposal, Radioactive waste sites
radioactive waste go somewhere probally in a labratory
toxic waste ☼ ♫
Nuclear Energy produces radioactive waste because if there isnt any sign of nuclear waste/energy in the sullotion/object then it wouldnt be counted as 'Radioactive'.
the methods of disposing radioactive waste depend on:the waste physical form (solid, liquid. gaseous) andthe radioactivity level (low, intermediate, high).Primarily; three methods are applied:delay and decay: to maintain waste in tanks for some periods of time to allow decay of radioactivity and then to be disposed of to environment.dilute and disperse: to dispose to environment (through dilution and dispersion) as ocean, sea, atmosphere, etc.contain and concentrate: This is used mainly for high level radioactive waste as spent fuel or the spent fuel reprocessing products; either in wet storage, dry storage, or incineration&containment in barrels, or vitrified waste.
Radioactive waste is nearly always a mixture but it is possible to be a pure substance.
Yes, fusion does not create long-lived radioactive waste like fission does.