Neutron

Nucleogenic

A nucleogenic isotope, or nuclide, is one that is produced by a natural terrestrial nuclear reaction, other than a reaction beginning with cosmic rays (the latter nuclides by convention are called by the different term cosmogenic). The nuclear reaction that produces nucleogenic nuclides is usually interaction with an alpha particle or the capture of fission or thermal neutrons. Some nucleogenic isotopes are stable and others are radioactive. (Wikipedia).

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Nucleophiles and Electrophiles

This organic chemistry video tutorial provides a basic introduction into nucleophiles and electrophiles. Nucleophiles are lewis bases and electrophiles are lewis acids. Organic Chemistry 1 Review - 100 Practice Problems: https://bit.ly/2WCJ8GP New Organic Chemistry Playlist https://www

From playlist New Organic Chemistry Playlist

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Nucleation rates

Calculating nucleation rates involves considering the number of critical nuclei, the attachment frequency, and diffusion rates. We can combine these to determine a nucleation rate which sees a maximum at some temperature below the thermodynamically expected transition temperature.

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

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Erik Santiso (20/21/22): The role of solvent in crystal nucleation from solution

The study of crystal nucleation from solution is important for a wide variety of applications. However, nucleation is challenging to study both from the experimental and the theoretical/simulation perspective. In the past, we have developed simulation methods to study crystal nucleation ba

From playlist AATRN/STMS

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nucleophile/electrophile and The Schwartz Rules

More free lessons at: http://www.khanacademy.org/video?v=O33b6B12YxI

From playlist Substitution and elimination reactions | Organic Chemistry | Khan Academy

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Nucleic Acids HL

IB Chemistry lesson on nucleic acids as part of the Biochemistry topic

From playlist IB Chemistry

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Homogeneous nucleation

Phase transformations can come in different flavors (diffusion vs no diffusion) (change in composition or not) (metastable states etc). However, they all include nucleation from a parent phase and growth. Nucleation can occur along edges or impurities and this would be heterogeneous or wit

From playlist Materials Sciences 101 - Introduction to Materials Science & Engineering 2020

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Extreme Single Particle Model

An extension of the single particle model considering the consequence of pairing of nuclei and whether the nuclear characteristics are dependent on the lone unpaired nucleon.

From playlist Nuclear Physics

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How are neutrinos produced?

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From playlist Science Unplugged: Neutrinos

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Everything Matters | Arsenic | Ron Hipschman | Exploratorium

Known as the "poison of kings" for its role in palace coups and the "king of poisons" for its effectiveness, arsenic is one of the world's most notorious poisons—yet it surrounds us in the natural world and has appeared in medical and cosmetic contexts for thousands of years. Investigate o

From playlist Tales from the Periodic Table

Related pages

S-process | Spontaneous fission | Neutron emission | Nuclear fission | Neutron capture | Radioactive decay | R-process | Neutron | Nuclear reactor