• Pirky
      link
      712 hours ago

      I do wonder what it would look like if only one singular helium atom underwent fission. Would we even notice it? Or would it still cause enough of an explosion to injure?

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        7
        edit-2
        10 hours ago

        Splitting a Helium atom would require energy, not release it. Up until iron, fusion releases energy. For larger atoms, it’s fission that releases energy.

        • stebo
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          fedilink
          37 hours ago

          And this is the very reason that iron (Fe) is the heaviest element that is created at the core of stars. Any heavier elements can only be created by highly energetic events like supernovas. Yay for physics!

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        611 hours ago

        Helium typically doesn’t undergo fission, but you wouldn’t notice of it did. Millions of atoms in your body are undergoing fission at any given time. People only notice when a LOT of atoms undergo fission at the same time.

    • @DragonsInARoom
      link
      512 hours ago

      France if they ever had the balls to use their nukes