Wiki User
∙ 12y agoburnable fuels are unexpensive and abundant
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoWe only have two examples of atomic bombs used in conflict to base this all on. However, the survivor statements from Hiroshima and Nagasaki are quite clear.Survivors from both mentioned often the smell of burning, in some cases burning flesh. Days after the attacks, they discussed the smell of rotting flesh and decay.
decay
This is due to decay.
No, it was not.
They don't decay.
A useful form of decay is compost were it breaks down leafs and old used fruit and peelings .
Nothing
From burning fossil fuels. Decay and respiration too.
A polymer coating may be useful.
Carbon-14 undergoes beta decay, becoming nitrogen-14 which is stable.
radioactive decay
The decay of dead organisms in the soil makes the biochemical constituents of that organism more readily available for use by plant life; in other words, it turns dead things into fertilizer, and is a form of recycling. Therefore, it is useful.
An isotopic system with a larger decay constant would be more useful for dating younger rocks. This is because rocks with younger ages have lower amounts of parent isotopes left to decay, so a system with a larger decay constant would provide more precise dating for these samples.
Obama won again
Nuclear fusion and nuclear fission are processes that involve nuclear reactions but are not examples of radioactive decay. Chemical reactions, such as burning wood, do not involve nuclear processes and are also not examples of radioactive decay.
It is radioactive decay.
the process of decay is important because it brinks back the useful nutrients to the environment