deuterium

listen to the pronunciation of deuterium
الإنجليزية - التركية
(Kimya) deuteryum
ağır hidrojen
döteryum
(Nükleer Bilimler) (d) döteryum
(isim) döteryum
deuterium nucleus
döteryum çekirdeği
deuterium oxide
döteryum oksit
deuterium oxide
ağır su
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
An atom of this isotope

There were about 80 deuteriums for every million protiums, and virtually no tritium.

An isotope of hydrogen formed of one proton and one neutron in each atom - 21H

Heavy water is “heavy” because it contains deuterium.

Also called 'heavy hydrogen' A non radioactive isotope of hydrogen having one proton and one neutron in the nucleus It occurs in nature in the proportion 1 atom to 6500 atoms of normal hydrogen Hydrogen atoms contain one proton and no neutrons
Deuterium is the isotope of hydrogen with one proton and one neutron, D = 2H On average, one out of every 6700 hydrogen atoms found in nature is deuterium Processes are well developed for separating water molecules containing deuterium atoms, or "heavy water," so that the deuterium fuel for fusion reactions is essentially free For more information on hydrogen and its isotopes see the Los Alamos periodic table
"Heavy Hydrogen", an isotope having one proton and one neutron in the nucleus It occurs in nature as 1 atom to 6,500 atoms of normal hydrogen, (Hydrogen atoms contain one proton and no neutrons)
Heavy hydrogen The nucleus of heavy hydrogen is a deuteron It is called heavy hydrogen because it weighs twice as much as ordinary hydrogen
A hydrogen isotope containing 1 proton, 1 electron, and 1 neutron
an isotope of hydrogen which has one neutron (as opposed to zero neutrons in hydrogen)
A heavy isotope of hydrogen having one proton and one neutron in the nucleus
A stable, naturally occurring hydrogen isotope It is used as a moderator in the form of deuterium oxide or heavy water
An isotope of hydrogen that contains one neutron and one proton in its nucleus
An isotope of hydrogen of mass 2 units; it is sometimes referred to as heavy hydrogen It can be used in thermonuclear fusion reactions for the release of energy Deuterium is extracted from water which always contains 1 atom of deuterium to about 6,500 atoms of ordinary (light) hydrogen See Fusion, Isostopes, Thermonuclear
an isotope of hydrogen with one proton and one neutron in the nucleus
Isotope of hydrogen, with a nucleus containing one proton and one neutron, and an atomic mass number of 2
An isotope of hydrogen used in the fusion reaction of a nuclear weapon
Heavy hydrogen, an atom whose nucleus consists of one proton and one neutron Ordinary hydrogen has only one proton
Heavy hydrogen, the hydrogen isotope of atomic mass It is used in nuclear bombs (see also Tritium)
An isotope of hydrogen whose atoms are twice as massive as ordinary hydrogen;deuterion atoms contain both a proton and a neutron in the nucleus
an isotope of hydrogen that contains one proton and one neutron in its atomic nucleus
An isotope of hydrogen having one proton and one neutron in its nucleus; its atomic mass is 2 It behaves like hydrogen in chemical reactions but behaves significantly differently in fusion reactions with tritium since deuterium and tritium fuse more easily than hydrogen Deuterium occurs as one part in 8000 of all hydrogen (mostly in water) on the planet
Isotope of hydrogen whose nucleus contains one proton and one neutron
"Heavy hydrogen", a stable isotope having one proton and one neutron in the nucleus It occurs in nature as 1 atom to 6500 atoms of normal hydrogen, (Hydrogen atoms contain one proton and no neutrons)
A form of hydrogen which contains one proton and one neutron Deuterium is used in fusion, sometimes in conjunction with tritium It differs from the other forms of hydrogen, protium and tritium, by the number of neutrons it contains
An isotope of hydrogen formed of one proton and one neutron in each atom -
{i} heavy hydrogen (Chemistry)
An isotope of hydrogen which has one neutron (in addition to the single proton in a hydrogen nucleus) Can be found in small quantities in sea-water, and believed to occur in greater quantities on Mars
or heavy hydrogen Isotope of hydrogen, chemical symbol ^2H or D, atomic number 1 (but atomic weight approximately 2). Harold C. Urey won a Nobel Prize for its discovery and isolation. Its nucleus contains one proton and one neutron. A stable substance found in naturally occurring hydrogen compounds to the extent of about 0.015%, deuterium can be purified by distillation of hydrogen or by electrolysis of water. It enters into all the same chemical reactions as ordinary hydrogen; it forms D2 and HD, analogous to molecular hydrogen (H2), and D2O (heavy water), analogous to ordinary water (H2O). Nuclear fusion of deuterium atoms or of deuterium and tritium at high temperatures releases enormous amounts of energy. Such reactions have been used in nuclear weapons and experimental power reactors. Deuterium is useful as a tracer in research into reaction mechanisms and biochemical pathways
deuterium oxide
An isotopic form of water with composition DO, isolated for use as a moderator in certain nuclear reactors
التركية - الإنجليزية

تعريف deuterium في التركية الإنجليزية القاموس.

n phys. deuterium -on n phys. deuteron
n PHYS. Deuterium-on n phys. deuteron
deuterium

    الواصلة

    deu·te·ri·um

    التركية النطق

    dutiriım

    المترادفات

    heavy hydrogen, d

    النطق

    /do͞oˈtērēəm/ /duːˈtiːriːəm/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    () Coined by Harold Urey, an American chemist, from Ancient Greek δεύτερος ‘second’ + -ium.
المفضلات