Wednesday, April 29, 2009


Here is my post on Uranium and what it is:

Uranium is a rare atom, not just on Earth but also in space and on other planets. There is not very much uranium anywhere. That's because, like lead or gold, uranium only forms inside exploding supernovas, and because it has so many protons and neutrons in it, it doesn't form very easily. Uranium is the heaviest atom that occurs in nature.
Uranium (yer-AIN-ee-um) has 92
protons and 92 electrons. The electrons line up in seven rings like this: 2 electrons on the first ring, 8 electrons on the second ring, 18 electrons on the third ring, 32 electrons on the fourth ring, 21 electrons on the fifth ring, 9 electrons on the sixth ring, and 2 electrons on the seventh ring. Six of these electrons are valence electrons, meaning it's easy for them to jump to other atoms, and so it's easy for uranium atoms to form molecules, both with each other and with other kinds of atoms like carbon. When uranium comes in contact with oxygen in the air, it rusts, just like iron does, but uranium rust is black and not red.
Like other heavy atoms such as
iron, uranium atoms have more neutrons than they do protons. Not all uranium atoms have the same number of neutrons. They have between 141 and 146 neutrons, usually 143 or 146 neutrons. Uranium atoms are so heavy that they are unstable - even the strong nuclear force has trouble holding together all their protons and neutrons, and they often lose a few protons and neutrons that go shooting off. We call this radioactivity.
A piece of uranium ore
Because they have so many neutrons, uranium atoms can also easily break apart into two lighter atoms, especially if it is hit with other neutrons coming at it. They can break apart into various different atoms, but usually you get other rare atoms like krypton, barium, strontium, or xenon. Not very many kinds of atoms can do this. When a uranium atom breaks apart, it needs less energy to hold the two new smaller atoms together, and this energy shoots out in the form of heat. We call this
fission. Each time a fission reaction takes place in a lump of uranium - each time a uranium atom breaks apart - it shoots out energy that bumps into other uranium atoms and breaks them apart, and this sets off a chain reaction that can result in a big explosion - that's a nuclear bomb.
(The man who discovered uranium named it after the planet
Uranus, but it has nothing in particular to do with Uranus actually.)

I got this awesome information from this website:



Lilrocsta :)

2 comments:

  1. very interesting - your own words?
    Well done for stating your source :-)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow you have heaps of info I learnt heaps!!! :)

    ReplyDelete