nuclear fission - translation to greek
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nuclear fission - translation to greek

A NUCLEAR REACTION SPLITTING AN ATOM INTO MULTIPLE PARTS
Thermonuclear fission; Nuclear Fission; Nuclearfission; Fission reaction; Splitting the atom; Nuclear fision; Splitting of the atom; Fission explosions; Split the atom; Atomic fission; Electromagnetic induced fission; Electromagnetic Induced fission; Induced fission
  • The "curve of binding energy": A graph of binding energy per nucleon of common isotopes.
  • Animation of a [[Coulomb explosion]] in the case of a cluster of positively charged nuclei, akin to a cluster of fission fragments. [[Hue]] level of  color
is proportional to (larger) nuclei charge. Electrons (smaller) on this time-scale are seen only stroboscopically and the hue level is their kinetic energy
  • A schematic nuclear fission chain reaction. 1. A [[uranium-235]] atom absorbs a [[neutron]] and fissions into two new atoms (fission fragments), releasing three new neutrons and some binding energy. 2. One of those neutrons is absorbed by an atom of [[uranium-238]] and does not continue the reaction. Another neutron is simply lost and does not collide with anything, also not continuing the reaction. However, the one neutron does collide with an atom of uranium-235, which then fissions and releases two neutrons and some binding energy. 3. Both of those neutrons collide with uranium-235 atoms, each of which fissions and releases between one and three neutrons, which can then continue the reaction.
  • [[Otto Hahn]] and [[Lise Meitner]] in 1912
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  •  website=[[YouTube]] }}</ref> but would not have been together in the same room.
  • forces that bind the neutron]]. The uranium-236, in turn, splits into fast-moving lighter elements (fission products) and releases several free neutrons, one or more "prompt [[gamma ray]]s" (not shown) and a (proportionally) large amount of energy.
  • The [[cooling tower]]s of the [[Philippsburg Nuclear Power Plant]], in [[Germany]].
  • Drawing of the first artificial reactor, [[Chicago Pile-1]].
  • The stages of binary fission in a liquid drop model. Energy input deforms the nucleus into a fat "cigar" shape, then a "peanut" shape, followed by binary fission as the two lobes exceed the short-range [[nuclear force]] attraction distance, then are pushed apart and away by their electrical charge. In the liquid drop model, the two fission fragments are predicted to be the same size. The nuclear shell model allows for them to differ in size, as usually experimentally observed.
  • Fission product yields by mass for [[thermal neutron]] fission of [[uranium-235]], [[plutonium-239]], a combination of the two typical of current nuclear power reactors, and [[uranium-233]] used in the [[thorium cycle]].
  • A visual representation of an induced nuclear fission event where a slow-moving neutron is absorbed by the nucleus of a uranium-235 atom, which fissions into two fast-moving lighter elements (fission products) and additional neutrons. Most of the energy released is in the form of the kinetic velocities of the fission products and the neutrons.

nuclear fission         
πυρηνική διάσπαση
atomic bomb         
  • Anti-nuclear weapons]] protest march in Oxford, 1980
  • commercial launch]] of the Russian [[Strategic Rocket Forces]] R-36 [[ICBM]]; also known by the NATO reporting name: [[SS-18 Satan]]. Upon its first fielding in the late 1960s, the SS-18 remains the single highest [[throw weight]] missile delivery system ever built.
  • [[Edward Teller]], often referred to as the "father of the hydrogen bomb"
  • Demonstration against nuclear testing in [[Lyon]], France, in the 1980s.
  • Nagasaki]], Japan. They were large and could only be delivered by [[heavy bomber]] aircraft
  • fission]] weapon designs
  • The [[International Atomic Energy Agency]] was created in 1957 to encourage peaceful development of nuclear technology while providing international safeguards against nuclear proliferation.
  • [[Robert Oppenheimer]], principal leader of the [[Manhattan Project]], often referred to as the "father of the atomic bomb".
  • Protest in Bonn against the [[nuclear arms race]] between the U.S./NATO and the Warsaw Pact, 1981
  • This view of downtown [[Las Vegas]] shows a [[mushroom cloud]] in the background. Scenes such as this were typical during the 1950s. From 1951 to 1962 the government conducted 100 atmospheric tests at the nearby [[Nevada Test Site]].
  • Over 2,000 nuclear tests have been conducted in over a dozen different sites around the world. Red Russia/Soviet Union, blue France, light blue United States, violet Britain, yellow China, orange India, brown Pakistan, green North Korea and light green (territories exposed to nuclear bombs). The Black dot indicates the location of the [[Vela incident]].
  • Ukrainian]] workers use equipment provided by the U.S. [[Defense Threat Reduction Agency]] to dismantle a Soviet-era missile silo. After the end of the Cold War, Ukraine and the other non-Russian, post-Soviet republics relinquished Soviet nuclear stockpiles to Russia.
  • A photograph of [[Sumiteru Taniguchi]]'s back injuries taken in January 1946 by a U.S. Marine photographer
  • The basics of the [[Teller–Ulam design]] for a hydrogen bomb: a fission bomb uses radiation to compress and heat a separate section of fusion fuel.
  • Did not vote}}
  • terminal]], or re-entry phase, of the [[multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle]]s
  • p=201}}
  • The [[USSR]] and United States nuclear weapon stockpiles throughout the [[Cold War]] until 2015, with a precipitous drop in total numbers following the end of the Cold War in 1991.
  • heavier lift]] Russian [[SS-18 Satan]], could contain up to ten nuclear warheads (shown in red), each of which could be aimed at a different target. A factor in the development of [[MIRV]]s was to make complete [[missile defense]] difficult for an enemy country.
  • Large stockpile with global range (dark blue), smaller stockpile with global range (medium blue), small stockpile with regional range (light blue).
EXPLOSIVE DEVICE THAT GETS ITS DESTRUCTIVE FORCE FROM NUCLEAR REACTIONS
Atomic bomb; Atom Bomb; Nuclear Weapon; Nuclear weapons; A-bomb; Fission bomb; Fusion bomb; Atom bomb; Atomic weapon; Atom bombs; Nucular weapon; Effects of a nuclear weapon; Nuclear warhead; Nuclear arms; A-Bomb; Nuclear bomb; Nuclear power weapon; Nuclear warheads; Nuclear bombs; Nuclear bombing; Atomic weapons; Atomic Bomb; Nuclear Weapons; A-bombs; First nuclear fission bomb; A bomb; Atomic bombs; Atomic bombing; Nuclear device; Nuclear Weaponry; Nuclear Bomb; Nuclear weaponry; Nuclear Missle; Nuclear Arms; Fusion Bomb; Abomb; Nucular bombs; A-Bombs; Super nuke; Nukuler bomb; Atombomb; The Atomic Bomb; Super Bomb; N-Bomb; N Bomb; NBomb; Nuclear-weapon; Nuclear-warhead; Atomic warhead; Neuclear bomb; Nuclear devices; Nuclear-tipped missile; Superbomb; Nuclear war weapon; Nuclear ordnance; Nuclear fission weapon; Plutonium bomb; Atom bombe; Nuclear arms control; Unclear weapon; Nuclear weapons delivery systems maintenance; Nuclear weapons maintenance; Nuclear weapons delivery system maintenance; Nuclear weapon maintenance; Nuclear weapon delivery system maintenance
ατομική βόμβα
nuclear power         
  • The [[Leibstadt Nuclear Power Plant]] in Switzerland
  • LCOE]] is a measure of the average net present cost of electricity generation for a generating plant over its lifetime. As a metric, it remains controversial as the lifespan of units are not independent but manufacturer projections, not a demonstrated longevity.</small>
  • Most waste packaging, small-scale experimental fuel recycling chemistry and [[radiopharmaceutical]] refinement is conducted within remote-handled [[hot cell]]s.
  • Life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of electricity supply technologies, median values calculated by [[IPCC]]<ref name="IPCC 2014 Annex III" />
  • Death rates from air pollution and accidents related to energy production, measured in deaths in the past per terawatt hours (TWh)
  • Reactor [[decay heat]] as a fraction of full power after the reactor shutdown, using two different correlations. To remove the decay heat, reactors need cooling after the shutdown of the fission reactions. A loss of the ability to remove decay heat caused the [[Fukushima accident]].
  • access-date=24 March 2021}}</ref>
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  • nuclear waste disposal centre]] at [[Gorleben]] in northern Germany
  • The [[Calder Hall nuclear power station]] in the United Kingdom, the world's first commercial nuclear power station.
  • The [[Ikata Nuclear Power Plant]], a [[pressurized water reactor]] that cools by utilizing a secondary coolant [[heat exchanger]] with a large body of water, an alternative cooling approach to large [[cooling towers]]
  • ''Curiosity'' Mars rover]]
  • publisher=US Naval History and Heritage Command (US Navy)}}</ref>
  • [[Nuclear fuel]] assemblies being inspected before entering a [[pressurized water reactor]] in the United States
  • access-date=20 April 2023}}</ref>
  • The nuclear fuel cycle begins when uranium is mined, enriched, and manufactured into nuclear fuel (1), which is delivered to a [[nuclear power plant]]. After use, the spent fuel is delivered to a reprocessing plant (2) or to a final repository (3). In [[nuclear reprocessing]] 95% of spent fuel can potentially be recycled to be returned to use in a power plant (4).
  • [[Dry cask storage]] vessels storing spent nuclear fuel assemblies
  •  archive-date=2012-04-12 }}</ref>
  • Growth of worldwide nuclear power generation
  • The status of nuclear power globally (click for legend)
  • EPR]], a modernized PWR design, to start construction.
  • An animation of a [[pressurized water reactor]] in operation
  • title = A fast reactor system to shorten the lifetime of long-lived fission products}}</ref><ref name="jaif"/>
  • Schematic of the [[ITER]] [[tokamak]] under construction in France
  • The guided-missile cruiser USS Monterey (CG 61) receives fuel at sea (FAS) from the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS George Washington (CVN 73).
  • archive-date=2013-06-21 }}</ref>
  • Proportions of the isotopes [[uranium-238]] (blue) and uranium-235 (red) found in natural uranium and in [[enriched uranium]] for different applications. Light water reactors use 3{{ndash}}5% enriched uranium, while [[CANDU]] reactors work with natural uranium.
  • Nuclear waste flasks]] generated by the United States during the Cold War are stored underground at the [[Waste Isolation Pilot Plant]] (WIPP) in [[New Mexico]]. The facility is seen as a potential demonstration for storing spent fuel from civilian reactors.
  • Pripyat]] abandoned since 1986, with the Chernobyl plant and the [[Chernobyl New Safe Confinement]] arch in the distance
POWER GENERATED FROM NUCLEAR REACTIONS
Nuclear Power; Atomic Power; Nuclear-powered; Nuclear powered; Nuklear power; Nuclear-power; Atomic power; Fission power; Nuclear energies; Nuclear industry; Nucelar power; Nuclear worker; Nuclear unit; Nuclear energy industry; User:Craziemon; Nuclear power industry; Nuclear power industries; Nuclear power organizations; Nuclear power generation; Climate change and nuclear power; Nuclear power and renewable energy; Renewable energy and nuclear power; Advanced nuclear; Nuke power
πυρηνική δύναμη

Definition

Fissiparous
·adj Reproducing by spontaneous fission. ·see Fission.

Wikipedia

Nuclear fission

Nuclear fission is a reaction in which the nucleus of an atom splits into two or more smaller nuclei. The fission process often produces gamma photons, and releases a very large amount of energy even by the energetic standards of radioactive decay.

Nuclear fission of heavy elements was discovered on Monday 19 December 1938 in Berlin, by German chemist Otto Hahn and his assistant Fritz Strassmann in cooperation with Austrian-Swedish physicist Lise Meitner. Hahn understood that a "burst" of the atomic nuclei had occurred. Meitner explained it theoretically in January 1939 along with her nephew Otto Robert Frisch. Frisch named the process by analogy with biological fission of living cells. In their second publication on nuclear fission in February of 1939, Hahn and Strassmann predicted the existence and liberation of additional neutrons during the fission process, opening up the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction.

For heavy nuclides, it is an exothermic reaction which can release large amounts of energy both as electromagnetic radiation and as kinetic energy of the fragments (heating the bulk material where fission takes place). Like nuclear fusion, for fission to produce energy, the total binding energy of the resulting elements must be greater than that of the starting element.

Fission is a form of nuclear transmutation because the resulting fragments (or daughter atoms) are not the same element as the original parent atom. The two (or more) nuclei produced are most often of comparable but slightly different sizes, typically with a mass ratio of products of about 3 to 2, for common fissile isotopes. Most fissions are binary fissions (producing two charged fragments), but occasionally (2 to 4 times per 1000 events), three positively charged fragments are produced, in a ternary fission. The smallest of these fragments in ternary processes ranges in size from a proton to an argon nucleus.

Apart from fission induced by a neutron, harnessed and exploited by humans, a natural form of spontaneous radioactive decay (not requiring a neutron) is also referred to as fission, and occurs especially in very high-mass-number isotopes. Spontaneous fission was discovered in 1940 by Flyorov, Petrzhak, and Kurchatov in Moscow, in an experiment intended to confirm that, without bombardment by neutrons, the fission rate of uranium was negligible, as predicted by Niels Bohr; it was not negligible.

The unpredictable composition of the products (which vary in a broad probabilistic and somewhat chaotic manner) distinguishes fission from purely quantum tunneling processes such as proton emission, alpha decay, and cluster decay, which give the same products each time. Nuclear fission produces energy for nuclear power and drives the explosion of nuclear weapons. Both uses are possible because certain substances called nuclear fuels undergo fission when struck by fission neutrons, and in turn emit neutrons when they break apart. This makes a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction possible, releasing energy at a controlled rate in a nuclear reactor or at a very rapid, uncontrolled rate in a nuclear weapon.

The amount of free energy contained in nuclear fuel is millions of times the amount of free energy contained in a similar mass of chemical fuel such as gasoline, making nuclear fission a very dense source of energy. The products of nuclear fission, however, are on average far more radioactive than the heavy elements which are normally fissioned as fuel, and remain so for significant amounts of time, giving rise to a nuclear waste problem. However, the seven long-lived fission products make up only a small fraction of fission products. Neutron absorption which does not lead to fission produces Plutonium (from 238
U
) and minor actinides (from both 235
U
and 238
U
) whose radiotoxicity is far higher than that of the long lived fission products. Concerns over nuclear waste accumulation and the destructive potential of nuclear weapons are a counterbalance to the peaceful desire to use fission as an energy source. The thorium fuel cycle produces virtually no plutonium and much less minor actinides, but 232
U
- or rather its decay products - are a major gamma ray emitter. All actinides are fertile or fissile and fast breeder reactors can fission them all albeit only in certain configurations. Nuclear reprocessing aims to recover usable material from spent nuclear fuel to both enable uranium (and thorium) supplies to last longer and to reduce the amount of "waste". The industry term for a process that fissions all or nearly all actinides is a "closed fuel cycle".

Examples of use of nuclear fission
1. A replacement generation of nuclear fission power stations would add only 10% to our existing stocks.
2. Article continues We need emission–free energy sources immediately, and there is no serious contender to nuclear fission.
3. I believe it‘s a good idea to hedge our resources on the other viable resources: nuclear fission, wind and solar.
4. In the long–term, they could develop hydrogen nanotechnologies, next–generation nuclear fission and fusion energy, it said.
5. Areas for mid– to long–term collaboration include hydrogen, nanotechnologies, advanced biotechnologies, next–generation nuclear fission and fusion energy.