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Transmutation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Transmutation may refer to: In pre-scientific experimentation : •Alchemy; some alchemists sought a way to turn inexpensive metals such as lead into gold. In radiochemistry and nuclear physics :...
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Nuclear transmutation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nuclear transmutation is the conversion of one chemical element or isotope into another, which occurs through nuclear reactions. Natural transmutation occurs when radioactive elements spontaneously d...
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Program of the NEA Data Bank of the OECD. ... Since 1989, there has been renewed interest in some OECD Member countries in the concept of separation and transmutation of actinides.
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Advanced transmutation processes ... These include persistent effects of chemical states and physical environment and the natural, low-energy transmutation phenomena associated with the vegetation processes of plants. The theory of neutral currents is proposed by Nobelist O.
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Fullmetal Alchemist - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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TRANSMUTATION OF THE ELEMENT ... Transmutation is different than transformation. ... This is called transmutation. According to modern physics, transmutation can only occur in conditions of very high temperature, very high pressure and intensive energy, such as the conditions created artificially in a cyclotron or atomic reactor.
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he word transmutation originates from the never-realized goal of ancient alchemists to transform, or transmute, the base metals into gold. Today scientists seek ways to transmute radioactive waste into nonradioactive elements, thereby eliminating the radiological hazards and waste disposal problems.
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"90 megabytes online of information on alchemy in all its facets." Though alchemy is neither chemistry nor a science, it is a historical precursor to scientific chemistry as studied in schools today. ... Divided into over 2400 sections and providing tens of thousands of pages of text, ... This site is organised by Adam McLean,
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The study of biological transmutation can be said to have begun in the 17th century with the famous experiment by von Helmont, who grew a willow tree in a clay vase with 200 pounds of soil.
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