Usa "fission" in una frase
fission frasi di esempio
fission
1. We have followed that knowledge with nuclear fission and that is likely to be followed by nuclear fusion, which would be a great environmental improvement
2. ” The environmental directive for life is simple: to reproduce its species, through spores, bulbs, seeds, rhizomes, binary fission, mitosis, division, fragmentation, budding, eggs, or live birth
3. The next historical example could be the passage from nuclear fission to
4. through atomic fusion instead of atomic fission, which is what happens in
5. Ultimately, your race discovered the power of fission and
6. Fission and fusion fire, much more powerful than the ones
7. energy, it is called nuclear fission
8. Naturally, this clash of interests would have induced fission in the system that could have lead to the eventual rupture of the mechanism itself
9. Rachel surmised that had the small ships been powered by fission reactors instead of chemicals, the battle would not have been so one sided
10. As the ship’s crew watched horrified, the debris from the head-on collision between the satellite and what J T estimated to be a rock a thousand meters across and the subsequent detonation of the satellite’s fission reactor cascaded through the comet
11. Whether the reactor uses fission or fusion, the piezoelectric crystals generate the electricity
12. The old fission reactors were to be replaced with three fusion reactors each of which was mounted on a passenger and freight transport module
13. This version carried a small fission reactor
14. As was typical of all fission reactors, it needed a huge heat sink
15. Their fission reactors had been carefully tended and their perishable supplies replaced when they went stale so that their fusion reactors could be quickly restarted and the ships sent out
16. of the earth will cause an atomic nuclear reaction (fusion and fission); this reaction will cause the core to soften the mantle and the crust will begin to move, causing tectonic plate movement
17. � That letter requested your president�s support for a project to study the feasibility of producing a new type of bomb based on nuclear fission
18. Thanks to the information on nuclear weapons stolen from the computer that had belonged to Nancy Laplante, Great Britain now was way ahead of the American atomic bomb program, PROJECT MANHATTAN and could produce both fission and fusion weapons
19. ‘’First, about fission weapons
20. Gun type fission devices use highly enriched uranium, containing over ninety percent of uranium 235 isotope
21. Plutonium 239, which is easier to produce than highly enriched uranium, is better used in implosion devices, where a sub-critical ball of plutonium is compressed from all sides by the simultaneous explosions of carefully shaped high explosive charges, causing a fission reaction and detonation
22. In thermonuclear weapons, a fission bomb is used to trigger a fusion reaction in a mix of deuterium, lithium and tritium isotopes, with the whole often contained inside a thick jacket of uranium 238 that serves to both contain the explosion for the first crucial microseconds and to add to the explosive power of the weapon
23. Nuclear fission in fuel consumes uranium and creates heat, which is used to raise steam for electricity generation
24. What do you see as the future prospect for nuclear power, for electricity and heat generation in the United States and Europe? What kind of reactors, fission or fusion
25. We propose a new type of nuclear fission reactor optimised for the generation of heat-on-demand
26. The graphite slows down the neutrons as they speed out from the uranium to react with nuclei and cause fission, the creation of new nuclei
27. Through a dynamically balanced process of: fusion and fission
28. Why does the process of fission within simple stars end just short of Iron?
29. This in-between factor is the invisible balance point: it is why the process of Fission within Stars ends at 26, and not at 24
30. This initial plasma of subatomic particles of energy has over millions of years through complex atom-energy interactions and nuclear fusion and fission, formed into the atom-energy of the structures with functions we identify with in the universe today