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  2. Discovery of nuclear fission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discovery_of_nuclear_fission

    Meitner and Frisch had correctly interpreted Hahn's results to mean that the nucleus of uranium had split roughly in half. The first two reactions that the Berlin group had observed were light elements created by the breakup of uranium nuclei; the third, the 23-minute one, was a decay into the real element 93. [103]

  3. Nuclear fission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fission

    Fission is a form of nuclear transmutation because the resulting fragments (or daughter atoms) are not the same element as the original parent atom. The two (or more) nuclei produced are most often of comparable but slightly different sizes, typically with a mass ratio of products of about 3 to 2, for common fissile isotopes .

  4. History of atomic theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_atomic_theory

    For instance, the fact that two liters of hydrogen will react with just one liter of oxygen to produce two liters of water vapor (at constant pressure and temperature) suggested that a single oxygen molecule splits in two in order to form two molecules of water. The formula of water is H 2 O, not HO. Avogadro measured oxygen's atomic weight to ...

  5. For the First Time Ever, Scientists Have Witnessed the Birth ...

    www.aol.com/first-time-ever-scientists-witnessed...

    Helium, oxygen, neon, iron—they all come from the fusion that takes place in dying stars. But we have a lot of elements that are more massive than iron ; it’s only element 26 of 118, after all.

  6. Geological history of oxygen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geological_history_of_oxygen

    Photosynthetic prokaryotic organisms that produced O 2 as a byproduct lived long before the first build-up of free oxygen in the atmosphere, [5] perhaps as early as 3.5 billion years ago. The oxygen cyanobacteria produced would have been rapidly removed from the oceans by weathering of reducing minerals, [citation needed] most notably ferrous ...

  7. Splitting the atom: Why saying who was first is complex - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/splitting-atom-why-saying-first...

    Regardless of who was first to split the atom, the work of Rutherford, Walton, Cockcroft, Oppenheimer, Fermi, Geiger, Marsden and a host of other scientific pioneers paved the way for the nuclear ...

  8. History of nuclear power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_nuclear_power

    The first organization to develop nuclear power was the U.S. Navy, with the S1W reactor for the purpose of propelling submarines and aircraft carriers. The first nuclear-powered submarine, USS Nautilus, was put to sea in January 1954. [22] [23] The S1W reactor was a Pressurized Water Reactor. This design was chosen because it was simpler, more ...

  9. Trump wrongly claims Manchester's atom split feat - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/trump-wrongly-claims-manchester...

    Atoms split naturally, but in 1919, Rutherford oversaw the first artificially-induced nuclear reaction in human history at the Victoria University of Manchester's laboratories.