vue - Nuclear Chemistry: Crash Course Chemistry #38
You can directly support Crash Course at http://www.subbable.com/crashcourse Subscribe for as little as $0 to keep up with everything we're doing. Also, if you can afford to pay a little every month, it really helps us to continue producing great content. In this episode, Hank welcomes you to the new age, to the new age, welcome to the new age. Here he'll talk about transmutation among elements, isotopes, calculating half-life, radioactive decay, and spontaneous fission. SUBBABLE MESSAGE: "To Crash Course From Shawn, Mike, Sophia, and Jake" "Thank you for using humor while educating and inspiring." -- Table of Contents Radioactivity Transmutation Among Elements and Isotopes Calculating Half-Life Radioactive Decay Spontaneous Fission -- Want to find Crash Course elsewhere on the internet? Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse Tumblr - http://thecrashcourse.tumblr.com Support CrashCourse on Subbable: http://subbable.com/crashcourse
Commentaires
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Why does Protactinium seem to gain a proton and lose a neutron when it is "created" from Thorium-234?
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BEAUTIFUL OUTFIT JUST WANTED TO PUT THAT OUT THERE. SO CLASSY
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Helpful but too Fast!
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HANK mentioned Imagine dragons!!! my life is complete.
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Hank, are you really sure that Xenon has an atomic number of 91?
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If the amount is always halving in the same amount of time does that mean a radioactive substance never stops decaying, (which is why we use logarithms to calculate the amount left) ?
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I understand crash course but the bad editing was worse than tolerance could allow. I will not be posting my ideas here.
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Hank, 11 called and he would like his jacket back
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dude you're incredibly helpful but talk so so so fast I can't process what you're saying.
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You mean protactinium
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When you discuss gamma radiation, you talk about electrons being in an excited state. I know that's how much visible and near-visible light is emitted, but for nuclear gamma radiation isn't it that the nuclear arrangement of protons and neutrons is in a higher-energy excited state?
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So I'm doing a project studying the effect of radiation in chemical reactions. I conducted a lab using water that I put in the microwaves for different amount of times, and did the reaction, CuSo4 (aq) + Fe --> FeSo4 (aq) + Cu (s), and calculated the percent yields. Theoretically, as there is more radiation introduced to the water that I dissolve the CuSo4 in, should this yield change? There is nothing on the internet I can find that answers this question and I am in desperate need of help.
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This dude reminds me of my teacher, sounds smart but makes no sense
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No mass? E= MC^2
IF there is energy, there should be mass... -
Speed to 0.5 - you high bro?
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GREAT INFO!!! BUT pleaseeeeeee slow down a bit, especially for us slow learners. Im just fully understanding your couple of first words when i realize your already onto the next subject ;(
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Xenon 91?! - Do you really mean Protactinium 91?
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what happened to positron decay.....
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I totally love this channel!!!!!!!
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