Nuclear reactions are more "explosive", i.e. energetic, because they depend on the release of binding energy, which is also called the strong force, or the strong interaction. (The four fundamental forces in nature are the strong force, the electromagnetic force, the weak force, and gravity.) Contrast this with chemical reactions, such as the detonation of TNT, and you have many, many more orders of magnitude per unit of source mass with nuclear.
Nuclear power plants use controlled nuclear reactions to generate electricity and are not explosive in the same way as nuclear weapons or chemical explosives. While accidents at nuclear power plants can release harmful radiation, the likelihood of a nuclear explosion is extremely low due to safety measures in place.
If by "bomb" you mean a conventional explosive weapon, then the nuclear weapon is more powerful.
The nuclear reactions are all over the sun but between core and surface the central part observes more.
Nuclear reactions in a nuclear reactor are controlled reactions. The reactions in the atomic bomb are not controlled reactions
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Well first start of nuclear bombs has more common in physics that chemistry. Sense Chemistry is really assosiated with elemnts while the atom and it spliting is more assosiated with physics. The answer is easy in order to produce an atomic bomb you need uranium or plutonium which is part of chemestry. The fission process is more physic related
A nuclear bomb and an atomic bomb are actually the same thing. Both terms refer to a type of explosive device that releases energy by nuclear reactions. The power of the explosion depends on the type of nuclear reactions involved and the amount of fissile material present in the bomb.
"Nukes" is a colloquial term for nuclear weapons, which are explosive devices that derive their destructive power from nuclear reactions. These weapons can cause devastating damage and are considered weapons of mass destruction.
Yes, plutonium is used as a key component in nuclear bombs. It is highly fissile and undergoes nuclear chain reactions to release a large amount of energy when triggered, leading to the explosive power of the bomb.
Polonium is more radioactive than uranium, as it emits alpha particles that are highly energetic. However, uranium is more explosive due to its ability to undergo fission reactions, which release a large amount of energy quickly.
Both nuclear reactors and nuclear bombs utilize nuclear fission reactions, in which atomic nuclei are split, releasing a large amount of energy. However, the purpose and control of these reactions differ greatly: reactors are designed to produce electricity or heat through controlled fission, while bombs are intended to release explosive energy in an uncontrolled chain reaction.
Nuclear reactions release more energy than chemical reactions because they involve changes in the nucleus of an atom, where much larger amounts of energy are stored compared to the energy stored in the electron shells involved in chemical reactions.