RobusEtCeleritas
RobusEtCeleritas t1_jczw9ka wrote
Reply to comment by amypinecone in What the hell is the actual difference between an isotope and a nuclide?? by amypinecone
Yes, that's right.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_jczr6i3 wrote
They're often used interchangeably, but that's not technically correct.
A nuclide is a collection of nucleons defined by its number of protons (Z) and number of neutrons (N).
Isotopes are nuclides that have the same Z. So they are the same element, but they can have different numbers of neutrons.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_jcd2xwg wrote
Reply to comment by subjectivity_one in How many photons are released during emission? by subjectivity_one
The single photon is emitted in a superposition of all directions, with the angular distribution defined by the angular momentum it carries. However when you detect the photon, you entangle the state of your detector with the state of the photon such that the state of the photon decoheres to a single direction. So it looks like the photon traveled in a single, random direction, as opposed to a superposition of all directions.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_jc9okqm wrote
Reply to comment by subjectivity_one in How many photons are released during emission? by subjectivity_one
If the atom is not initially polarized before it emits the photon, then the angular distribution of the emitted photon is isotropic in space.
If the atom is initially polarized, then there will be some non-uniform angular distribution based on the angular momentum change of the transition.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_jc64itk wrote
>A single photon strikes an atom, raising its energy level. How many photons are then re-emitted, isotropically?
There's not enough information to determine that; it depends on the level scheme of the atom. If the atom is excited to its first excited state, there can only be one photon emitted. But if it's in a higher excited state, it's possible that multiple photons will be emitted in a cascade.
>To me, wave energy propagation in all directions would no longer have a discrete direction, so how can I conceptualize the "number" of photons re-emitted?
I'm not sure what you mean here, or why you're relating the angular distribution of emitted radiation to the number of photons.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j8124kb wrote
Reply to what is quantum tunneling out simply? by Piggy468
Tunneling is when the wavefunction of a quantum system is nonzero in a region of space that would be classically forbidden.
In other words, it's when there's a possibility to find a particle in a region of space that would be impossible in classical mechanics.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j5awcof wrote
Reply to If neutrons have a half-life of 15 minutes, how isn't everything just falling apart all the time? by PanikLIji
Free neutrons decay with a half-life of about 15 minutes. But that doesn't apply to neutrons bound inside of nuclei.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j4rzcq9 wrote
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j4rzat5 wrote
Reply to comment by NaomiNekomimi in If nuclear fission in U-235 causes the atom to be split into 2 smaller atoms (such as Kr-92 and Ba-141) then how is it that U-236 is produced as waste since the U-235 was just split into smaller peices? by Ian98766
It depends on the nuclide, and the energy regime. Here are some examples.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j4pffai wrote
Reply to If nuclear fission in U-235 causes the atom to be split into 2 smaller atoms (such as Kr-92 and Ba-141) then how is it that U-236 is produced as waste since the U-235 was just split into smaller peices? by Ian98766
When uranium-235 interacts with a neutron, sometimes you get fission, and sometimes you get other processes, like radiative capture. When uranium-235 captures the neutron and de-excites via gamma emission, what's left over is uranium-236.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j4l2on6 wrote
Time is not discrete, as far as we know.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j1ctdta wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How do fusion scientists expect to produce enough Tritium to sustain D-T fusion (see text)? by DanTheTerrible
I don't know what you think those statements have to do with my comment. The question was whether the tritium-breeding reactions can cause a chain reaction, and the answer to that is no.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j1bejog wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How do fusion scientists expect to produce enough Tritium to sustain D-T fusion (see text)? by DanTheTerrible
RBMK fission reactors are completely different things than what we're talking about here. There's plenty of information available on what caused the Chernobyl accident, none of which is relevant to this conversation.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j1ah5rr wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How do fusion scientists expect to produce enough Tritium to sustain D-T fusion (see text)? by DanTheTerrible
There will be activation of reactor components, of course. But that will not result in nearly the amount of radioactivity per unit mass as the fission products in spent fission fuel.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j1agwgi wrote
Reply to comment by atomfullerene in How do fusion scientists expect to produce enough Tritium to sustain D-T fusion (see text)? by DanTheTerrible
If you can breed fuel for a reactor, you can inherently breed fuel for a weapon too. Any spent fission fuel can in theory be reprocessed, and have material diverted for weapons purposes.
But that's why organizations like the IAEA closely monitor fuel cycles for proliferation concerns.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j1agk2b wrote
Reply to comment by graebot in How do fusion scientists expect to produce enough Tritium to sustain D-T fusion (see text)? by DanTheTerrible
No, these are not like the fission chain reactions used in fission reactors. There's no way for that kind of thing to happen in this situation.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j1agel2 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How do fusion scientists expect to produce enough Tritium to sustain D-T fusion (see text)? by DanTheTerrible
They're not all endothermic, for example ^(6)Li + n -> a + t has a positive Q-value.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_j15vg1s wrote
The buoyancy of an object in a fluid depends on the average density of the object and the density of the fluid.
In the situations you're describing, the mass is constant and the volume is changing. So the average density is decreasing as the volume increases, and indeed, if the average density falls below the density of the surrounding fluid, the object will become buoyant.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_izt7f8t wrote
Reply to comment by nassau4 in Why do sonic booms happen at the speed of sound specifically? What does the speed of wave propagation have to do with the compression of air in front of a moving object? by SS7Hamzeh
The speed of sound is when shock waves start to form, so that's when sonic booms start.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_izt7by2 wrote
Reply to comment by financial2k in Why not use hydrogen and deuterium in fusion reaction rather than tritium and deuterium? by Curious_user4445
>How much lower is this temperature?
Here is the reactivity as a function of temperature for a few candidate reactions.
>Is the main motivation of using Tritium the lower temperature or actually the breeding reaction?
The main motivation is the temperature. Obtaining fuel for DD is not an issue, because there's plentiful deuterium in nature (seawater, for example). It's a nice benefit, and quite important for tritium, which is not found naturally in large amounts. We have to produce tritium somehow, and having the reactor breed its own fuel is a nice way to do that.
>How far apart is the fusion temperature from the fusion ignition temperature and how is each one defined?
Not sure what you mean here.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_izsbk7v wrote
Reply to Why do sonic booms happen at the speed of sound specifically? What does the speed of wave propagation have to do with the compression of air in front of a moving object? by SS7Hamzeh
The speed of sound is the speed at which infinitesimal oscillations in the density and pressure propagate through the fluid.
If an object moving through the fluid at or above the speed of sound, there's no way for any of the fluid upstream of the object to "know" that the supersonic object is coming.
And as a result, in order for conservation of mass, momentum, and energy to be upheld, you find that there must be discontinuities in the density, pressure, etc. at some point between the fluid upstream of the object and the fluid downstream of the object. These discontinuities are called shocks, and they first start to form specifically as the object reaches the local speed of sound.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_izsaxax wrote
Yes. Degeneracy pressure is common to all fermions.
RobusEtCeleritas t1_jd4j0yn wrote
Reply to comment by IllustriousArtist109 in What the hell is the actual difference between an isotope and a nuclide?? by amypinecone
>Carbon-14 and carbon-12 are different isotopes of carbon ... right?
Yes.