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Originally posted by TechUnique
Am i not right in saying that atoms are part of the building blocks of life?
Am i right in saying that whoever or whatever is behind life would be pretty p'd off with scientists destroying the building blocks of life instead of creating new with whatever is already there?
What happens when you split at atom?
Doesn't it seem like the act of splitting an atom enrages nature and makes it unleash deadly force?
Discuss.
Originally posted by airspoon
Nature itself splits atoms. This is not an unnatural event. Where is the evidence of nature splitting atoms, you may ask? You can view this evidence in either daytime or night, by just peering into the sky. During the day, you can watch the sun doing this very operation and at night you can look at all of the beautiful stars twinkling in the heavens, doing the same exact thing.
--airspoon
[edit on 24-8-2010 by airspoon]
Originally posted by airspoon
During the day, you can watch the sun doing this very operation and at night you can look at all of the beautiful stars twinkling in the heavens, doing the same exact thing.
A nuclear explosion, the process is called nuclear fission.
What happens when you split at atom?
Yes, that "deadly force" is the binding energy.
Doesn't it seem like the act of splitting an atom enrages nature and makes it unleash deadly force?
Originally posted by TechUnique
Am i not right in saying that atoms are part of the building blocks of life?
Am i right in saying that whoever or whatever is behind life would be pretty p'd off with scientists destroying the building blocks of life instead of creating new with whatever is already there?
Originally posted by buddhasystem
"Splitting atom" is nothing but a process of ionization, which happens routinely all around us. If you meant "splitting nuclei", well, even that is happening naturally on a grand scale everywhere.
Originally posted by EnlightenUp
Originally posted by buddhasystem
"Splitting atom" is nothing but a process of ionization, which happens routinely all around us. If you meant "splitting nuclei", well, even that is happening naturally on a grand scale everywhere.
I conversationally understand "splitting the atom" as meaning "splitting nuclei", not merely stripping electrons off or adding them, by say, rubbing a balloon on a cat.
Originally posted by abecedarian
Radioactive isotopes which decay through beta radiaton may be losing electron(s). This process may 'split' the nuclei: Potassium-40 typically decays through beta radiation to either Calcium-40 or Argon-40.