

Fission and Fusion
Flashcard
•
Science
•
9th - 12th Grade
•
Practice Problem
•
Hard
Barbara White
FREE Resource
Student preview

20 questions
Show all answers
1.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Nucleon Noun
[noo-klee-on]
Back
Nucleon
A particle that makes up an atomic nucleus, referring specifically to either a proton or a neutron.
Example: This diagram shows that nucleons are the particles inside an atom's nucleus. It identifies both protons and neutrons as types of nucleons.
2.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Strong Nuclear Force Noun
[strong noo-klee-er fors]
Back
Strong Nuclear Force
The fundamental attractive force that holds nucleons together in an atomic nucleus, overcoming the repulsion between protons.
Example: This diagram shows the strong nuclear force (inward arrows) holding protons and neutrons together, overcoming the electrostatic repulsion (outward arrows) between positively charged protons.
3.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Mass Defect Noun
[mas dee-fekt]
Back
Mass Defect
The difference between the mass of an atom and the sum of the masses of its individual protons, neutrons, and electrons.
Example: This diagram uses a balance scale to show that a complete atom's nucleus has less mass than the total mass of its individual, separated protons and neutrons.
4.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Nuclear Binding Energy Noun
[noo-klee-er byn-ding en-er-jee]
Back
Nuclear Binding Energy
The minimum energy required to disassemble an atomic nucleus into its separate component nucleons against the strong nuclear force.
Example: This diagram shows that a complete nucleus has a smaller mass than its individual protons and neutrons (nucleons) when they are separated, illustrating mass defect.
5.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Nuclear Fission Noun
[noo-klee-er fish-un]
Back
Nuclear Fission
A nuclear reaction in which the nucleus of an atom splits into smaller parts, releasing a large amount of energy.
Example: A neutron hits a large, unstable nucleus (Uranium), causing it to split into two smaller nuclei, release a large amount of energy, and emit more neutrons.
6.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Fissile Adjective
[fis-ahyl]
Back
Fissile
Describing a material that is capable of sustaining a nuclear fission chain reaction upon capturing a neutron.
Example: A neutron hits a large fissile nucleus, causing it to split into smaller parts, release energy, and create more neutrons that continue the reaction.
7.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Chain Reaction Noun
[cheyn ree-ak-shun]
Back
Chain Reaction
A self-sustaining sequence of reactions where one reaction initiates the next, such as neutrons from fission causing further fission.
Example: This diagram shows a nuclear chain reaction where a particle hits a uranium-235 atom, causing it to split and release more particles that trigger further splits.
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