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    1. Is mercury an appropriate target for AGI? Why or why not? Please clearly cite examples for your reasons. (10 points) There are many reasons that mercury is an appropriate target for AGI. • Both companies are in the same industry of footwear products. • First off the two companies have differentiating strategies and markets that they sell to. AGI will be adding a new market to their company goals and increasing their revenue streams. • AGI strives in the casual footwear segment with a…

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    Alpha (α) Radiation The alpha radiations particles have 2 protons and 2 neutrons which are in a helium nucleus. As the alpha particles emit the helium nucleus the nucleus gives away the two protons and two neutrons. As a result of this the mass number will reduce by 4 and the atomic number will result in reducing by 2. This is known as alpha decay. One source of alpha radiation could be plutonium 239. The alpha particles have many characteristics. First of all the alpha radiation has a helium…

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    At the end of the nineteenth century, scientists believed that all matter was composed of atoms. However, an English physicist named J.J. Thomson (1856-1940) discovered an even smaller particle that he called corpuscles, although we know them as electrons today. Thomson discovered that electrons are negatively charged, that they are much smaller and have less mass than atoms, and that they are uniformly present in many different types of substances. With this new discovery, the question of a…

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    work, it detected bubble paths , and it took pictures to gather evidence of charges. The chamber worked by using neutrons, particles, charged plates, cameras, and liquid hydrogen. The chamber was first filled with hydrogen gas. The hydrogen gas was then heated and pressurized causing it to turn into liquid hydrogen. Then neutrons would be shot into the liquid hydrogen. When the neutrons ran into a particle the liquid hydrogen would boil shooting bits of the particle out forming trails of…

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    Chapter Six: Completing the Table…with a Bang 1. What is the difference between a “dirty” bomb and a conventional nuclear bomb? (1 mark) The difference between a “dirty” bomb and a conventional nuclear bomb is that a nuclear bomb is designed to destroy organisms using heat and impact, while a dirty bomb is designed to kill with gamma radiation. Radiation from dirty bombs, besides burning through skin, also alters the DNA in bone marrows, which significantly weakens the body’s immune system, and…

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    Germanium Research Paper

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    a chart known as the periodic table, one such element is Germanium. In fact, Germanium has a symbol known as Ge. A symbol is a shorter way to represent the element. All elements have a symbol, atomic mass, atomic number, and a number of protons, neutrons, and electrons. Germanium’s atomic mass is 72.64, this is the amount of mass in each atom that’s in Germanium. The atomic number for Germanium is 32, which represents where the element is placed on the periodic table and the amount of…

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    Research Paper On Neon

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    The Periodic table is a table that organizes the different known elements, and Neon is one of those elements. Neon is an element that is a non-metal and also a noble gas. The start of the element, Neon, was when a Scottish chemist named William Ramsay discovered Neon, Krypton, and Argon, which are all noble gasses ("Periodic Table of Elements: Los Alamos National Laboratory." Periodic Table of Elements: Los Alamos National Laboratory). For this achievement, William Ramsay won the Nobel Prize in…

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    Nuclear Fission

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    A nuclear power plant uses Nuclear Fission to create energy. Nuclear fission occurs when a neutron passes by a heavy nucleus such as Uranium-235, the nucleus may capture the neutron which may or may not cause nuclear fission. If the reactor used is U-235 when a neutron is captured the energy is spread out through the 236 nucleons (both protons and neutrons) that are currently present in the nucleus. This nucleus is likely to break up into two fragments due to its instability. These fragments are…

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    Isotopes Pre Lab

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    SLS43-14/7-8 Pre-Lab Questions: 1) An isotope is an atom with a different atomic weight due to changes in the number of neutrons in the nucleus. Some examples of isotopes are Protium, Deuterium, and Tritium, which are all Hydrogen atoms. Instead of the zero neutrons Hydrogen has in its Protium form, Deuterium and Tritium have two and three neutrons respectively. This change in neutron number and therefore atomic weight classify these atoms as isotopes of the element Hydrogen. An ion is an atom…

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    Carbon-12 represents an ion and an isotope. Carbon-12 has six protons and six neutrons in its nucleus, as shown on the diagram. Outside of the nucleus, this atom has five electrons. The protons are shown in the color orange, neutrons are in the color blue, and electrons in the color teal. The scientific principle subatomic particles says they are smaller than the atom itself, meaning protons with a positive charge, neutrons with a neutral charge, and electrons with a negative charge are all…

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