plutonium-239
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atomic weapons
- In atomic bomb: The properties and effects of atomic bombs
of the isotopes uranium-235 or plutonium-239, it causes that nucleus to split into two fragments, each of which is a nucleus with about half the protons and neutrons of the original nucleus. In the process of splitting, a great amount of thermal energy, as well as gamma rays and two…
Read More - In nuclear weapon: The fission process
…of the fissile isotopes uranium-235, plutonium-239, or some combination of these; however, some explosive devices using high concentrations of uranium-233 also have been constructed and tested.
Read More - In Manhattan Project: Manhattan Project expansion under Groves and Oppenheimer
…production of the fissionable material plutonium-239. It was developed at the metallurgical laboratory of the University of Chicago under the direction of Arthur Holly Compton and involved the transmutation in a reactor pile of uranium-238. In December 1942 Fermi finally succeeded in producing and controlling a fission chain reaction in…
Read More - In nuclear weapon: Selecting a weapon design
…subcritical piece of uranium-235 (or plutonium-239), would be placed in a gun barrel and fired into the target, another subcritical piece. After the mass was joined (and now supercritical), a neutron source would be used to start the chain reaction. A problem developed with applying the gun method to plutonium,…
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fissile material
- In fissile material
…percent of naturally occurring uranium), plutonium-239, and uranium-233, the last two being artificially produced from the fertile materials uranium-238 and thorium-232, respectively. A fertile material, not itself capable of undergoing fission with low-energy neutrons, is one that decays into fissile material after neutron absorption within a reactor. Thorium-232 and uranium-238…
Read More - In uranium processing
…latter isotope eventually decays into plutonium-239—a fissile material of great importance in nuclear power and nuclear weapons. Another fissile isotope, uranium-233, can be formed by neutron irradiation of thorium-232.
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production
- In transuranium element: Synthesis of transuranium elements
Plutonium, as the isotope plutonium-239, is produced in ton quantities in nuclear reactors by the sequence
Read More - In nuclear reactor: Fissile and fertile materials
…used to create quantities of plutonium-239 from uranium-238, the principal constituent of naturally occurring uranium. Absorption of a neutron in the uranium-238 nucleus yields uranium-239, which decays after 23.47 minutes through electron emission into neptunium-239 and ultimately, after 2.356 days, into plutonium-239.
Read More - In uranium processing: Conversion to plutonium
… can be converted to fissile plutonium-239 by the following nuclear reactions:
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production reactors
- In nuclear reactor: Production reactors
…for sophisticated nuclear weapons is plutonium-239. If plutonium-239 is left in a reactor for a long time after production, plutonium-240 builds up as an undesirable contaminant. Accordingly, a significant feature of a production reactor is its capability for quick throughput of fuel at a low energy-production level. Any reactor that…
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properties
- In plutonium
The most important is plutonium-239 because it is fissionable, has a relatively long half-life (24,110 years), and can be readily produced in large quantities in breeder reactors by neutron irradiation of plentiful but nonfissile uranium-238. Critical mass (the amount that will spontaneously explode when brought together) must be considered…
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work of Segrè
- In Emilio Segrè
…group, he discovered the isotope plutonium-239, which he found to be fissionable, much like uranium-235. Plutonium-239 was used in the first atomic bomb and in the bomb dropped on Nagasaki.
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