plutonium

listen to the pronunciation of plutonium
English - Turkish
plütonyum

Plütonyum-239'un yarı ömrü 24.100 yıldır. - Plutonium-239 has a half-life of 24,100 years.

Plütonyum-244 80 milyon yıllık bir yarılanma ömrüne sahiptir. - Plutonium-244 has a half-life of 80 million years.

(Nükleer Bilimler) (pu) plutonyum
(Tıp) Pu sembolü ile bilinen, atom no: 94 v atom ağırlığı: 242 olan kimyasal element, plütonyum
(isim) plutonyum
{i} plutonyum
i., kim. plutonyum
(Kimya) plütonyum (simgesi pu)
plutonium reactor
plutonyum reaktörü
plutonium credit
(Nükleer Bilimler) plutonium değeri
plutonium isotope
plütonyum izotop
plutonium pit
(Çevre) plutonyum kuyusu
plutonium reactor
(Nükleer Bilimler) plütonyum reaktörü
plutonium recovery
(Nükleer Bilimler) plutonyumun geri kazanılması
plutonium recycling
(Nükleer Bilimler) plutonyumun yeniden kullanımı
symbol of plutonium
(Kimya) pu
English - English
The transuranic chemical element with atomic number 94 and symbol Pu
A heavy, radioactive, man-made metallic element with atomic number 94 and whose most important isotopes (fissile PU-239 and PU-241) are both produced by neutron irradiation of the uranium isotope U-238 Used for reactor fuel and in nuclear weapons
a heavy, radioactive, man-made, metallic element (atomic number 94) used in the production of nuclear energy and the explosion of nuclear weapons; its most important isotope is fissile plutonium-239, produced by neutron irradiation of uranium-238
{i} radioactive chemical element
An artificially produced element that is fissile and radioactive It is created when an atom of uranium-238 captures a slow neutron in its nucleus
A radioactive metallic element chemically similar to uranium
a solid silvery gray radioactive transuranic element whose atoms can be split when bombarded with neutrons; found in minute quantities in uranium ores but is usually synthesized in nuclear reactors; 13 isotopes are known with the most important being plutonium 239
A manmade fissile element Pure plutonium is a silvery metal that is heavier than lead Material rich in the Plutonium 239 isotope is preferred for manufacturing nuclear weapons, although any plutonium can be used Plutonium 239 has a half-life of 24,000 years
A transuranic element, formed in a nuclear reactor by neutron capture It has several isotopes, some of which are fissile and some of which undergo spontaneous fission, releasing neutrons Weapons-grade plutonium is produced in special reactors to give >90% Pu-239, reactor-grade plutonium contains about 30% non-fissile isotopes About one third of the energy in a light water reactor comes from the fission of Pu-239, and this is the main isotope of value recovered from reprocessing spent fuel
Plutonium is a radioactive element used especially in nuclear weapons and as a fuel in nuclear power stations. a radioactive metal that is used in the production of nuclear power, and in nuclear weapons. It is a chemical element : symbol Pu (Pluto). Radioactive (see radioactivity) metallic chemical element, chemical symbol Pu, atomic number
a radioactive metallic element produced from uranium during the operations of nuclear reactors; capable of fission
an element that is produced by bombarding uranium with neutrons The term plutonium is often used to mean the fissionable isotope, plutonium-239, which is produced in reactors and can be used as fuel for generating electricity It can also be used in weapons
A radioactive metallic element similar chemically to uranium that is formed as several isotopes (239-242) by decay of neptunium
A transuranic element produced when uranium is irradiated in a reactor It is used primarily in nuclear weapons and, along with uranium, in mixed-oxide (MOX) fuel Plutonium-239 is the most suitable isotope for use in nuclear weapons
An artificially produced radioactive element It is used in nuclear bombs
A man-made, heavy element which undergoes fission under the impact of neutrons It is a useful fuel in nuclear reactors Plutonium does not occur in nature, but can be produced and "burned" in reactors
A radioactive element with the atomic number 94 and an average atomic weight of 244 plutonium-239 - A fissile isotope occuring naturally in only minute quantities, which is manufactured artificially when uranium-238, through irradiation, captures an extra neutron It is one of the two materials that have been used for the core of nuclear weapons, the other being highly enriched uranium plutonium-240 - A fissile isotope produced in reactors when a plutonium-239 atom absorbs a neutron instead of fissioning Its presence complicates the construction of nuclear explosives because of its high rate of spontaneous fission
A heavy, radioactive, man-made metallic element Its most important isotope is fisionable Plutonium-239, produced by neutron irradiation of uranium-238 Plutonium-239 is used as fuel for power reactors or explosive for nuclear weapons
A member of the actinide series of transition elements, it is the most important transuranium element because of its use in certain types of nuclear reactors (see nuclear power) and in nuclear weapons. It is found in nature only in traces produced by natural neutron irradiation in uranium ores. It is produced artificially by neutron irradiation of uranium-238. Plutonium is a silvery metal that tarnishes in air; it is warm because of energy released in alpha decay. Its isotopes, all radioactive, are highly toxic radiological poisons (see radiation injury) because they give off alpha particles and are specifically absorbed by bone marrow
A heavy, fissionable, radioactive, metallic element (atomic number 94) Plutonium occurs in nature in trace amounts It can also be produced as a byproduct of the fission reaction in a uranium-fueled nuclear reactor and can be recovered for future use
A radioactive metallic element chemically similar to uranium PM-10/PM-2 5: PM 10 is measure of particles in the atmosphere with a diameter of less than ten or equal to a nominal 10 micrometers PM-2 5 is a measure of smaller particles in the air PM-10 has been the pollutant particulate level standard against which EPA has been measuring Clean Air Act compliance On the basis of newer sceientific findings, the Agency is considering regulations that will make PM-2 5 the new "standard"
plutonium dioxide
The yellow-brown solid, PuO2, formed by the spontaneous oxidation of plutonium metal; it is used in mixed oxide fuel for nuclear reactors
plutonium 239
a highly fissionable isotope of plutonium that is used in atomic weapons and as a reactor fuel; produced by irradiating uranium 238 with slow electrons
plutonium smuggling
secretly taking plutonium from one country to another for the purpose of making nuclear bombs
plutonium trigger
a steel or beryllium sphere containing plutonium 239 that triggers nuclear fission when compressed by explosives
enriched plutonium
radioactive material used to produce nuclear weapons
weapons plutonium
plutonium 239 that is recovered when nuclear weapons are disassembled; it is stored in plutonium pits
plutonium

    Hyphenation

    plu·to·ni·um

    Turkish pronunciation

    plutōniım

    Pronunciation

    /plo͞oˈtōnēəm/ /pluːˈtoʊniːəm/

    Videos

    ... is required than a simple DeLorean with plutonium.  But then the question is, if you go backwards ...
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