Nuclear spallation: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
Added some links.
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 Nuclear spallation is a process that occurs naturally in Earth's atmosphere.  
Nuclear spallation is a process that occurs naturally in Earth's atmosphere.


<br>
It can also occur under man-made conditions in a process&nbsp;by which a [[particle accelerator|particle accelerator]] may be used to produce a beam of [[Neutron|neutrons]]. A [[mercury|mercury]], [[tantalum|tantalum]], [[lead|lead]] or other [[heavy metal|heavy metal]] target is used, and 20 to 30 neutrons are expelled after each impact. Although more costly that traditional methods (chain reaction of [[nuclear fission|nuclear fission]] in a [[nuclear reactor|nuclear reactor]]), one advantage is that the beam can be pulsed with relative ease.
 
It can also occur under man-made conditions in a process&nbsp;by which a particle accelerator may be used to produce a beam of neutrons. A mercury, tantalum, lead or other heavy metal target is used, and 20 to 30 neutrons are expelled after each impact. Although more costly that traditional methods (chain reaction of nuclear fission in a nuclear reactor), one advantage is that the beam can be pulsed with relative ease.

Latest revision as of 20:51, 20 October 2016

Nuclear spallation is a process that occurs naturally in Earth's atmosphere.

It can also occur under man-made conditions in a process by which a particle accelerator may be used to produce a beam of neutrons. A mercury, tantalum, lead or other heavy metal target is used, and 20 to 30 neutrons are expelled after each impact. Although more costly that traditional methods (chain reaction of nuclear fission in a nuclear reactor), one advantage is that the beam can be pulsed with relative ease.