Examples of using Heavy elements in English and their translations into Romanian
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their assistant Fritz Strassmann in heavy elements.
because stars produce the heavy elements in the universe.
which distinguishes heavy elements, which scatter electrons well,
An Earth-like exoplanet… not only needs heavy elements in its composition… and to be in a star's habitable zone… it also needs to be the right size to sustain life.
Nuclear fission of heavy elements produces energy because the specific binding energy( binding energy per mass)
As it consumes the heavier elements, it begins to expand.
It's a heavy element produced in thermonuclear explosions of supernovae.
And the heaviest elements discovered have all been incredibly unstable.
That technique for creating a new heavy element is inspired.
The hydrogen atoms meld together to form helium, a heavier element.
Supernovae are the dominant mechanism for distributing these heavier elements, which are formed in a star during its period of nuclear fusion.
Heavier elements were made in red giants and in supernovas and then blown off to space where they were available for subsequent generations of stars and planets.
The stars that have heavier elements in them… the iron and the nickel and the silicon… have heavier elements for a good reason.
Even on Urantia the known heavier elements manifest a tendency to fly to pieces, as is illustrated by radium behavior.
So it makes sense that stars that formed… with lots of heavy elements… will form planets that also have lots of heavier elements.
the rest mostly helium with traces of heavier elements.
In that case we introduced an unstable super heavy element into their sun's nuclear reaction.
The remaining 2% of the mass consisted of heavier elements that were created by nucleosynthesis in earlier generations of stars.
more complex elements… all the way up to the heaviest elements in the universe, to uranium and beyond.
providing the extra boost of energy needed to fuse heavier elements.