Microsoft Store
 

Plutonium


 

Applications

The isotope Plutonium-239 is a key fissile component in modern nuclear weapons, due to its ease of fissioning and availability. The critical mass for an unreflected sphere of plutonium is 16 kg, but through the use of a neutron reflecting tamper the pit of plutonium in a fission bomb is reduced to 10 kg, which is a sphere with a diameter of 10 cm. Complete detonation of plutonium will produce an explosion of 20 kilotons per kilogram. (See also Nuclear Weapon Design.)

Related Topics:
Fissile - Nuclear weapon - Critical mass - Kiloton - Nuclear Weapon Design

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Plutonium could also be used to manufacture radiological weapons or as a (not particularly deadly) poison.

Related Topics:
Radiological weapon - Poison

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

The plutonium isotope 238Pu is an alpha emitter with a half-life of 87 years. These characteristics make it well suited for electrical power generation for devices which must function without direct maintenance for timescales approximating a human lifetime. It is therefore used in RTGs such as those powering the Galileo and Cassini space probes; earlier versions of the same technology powered seismic experiments on the Apollo Moon missions.

Related Topics:
RTG - Galileo - Cassini - Seismic - Apollo - Moon

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

238Pu has been used successfully to power artificial heart pacemakers, to reduce the risk of repeated surgery. It has been largely replaced by lithium-based batteries recharged by induction, but as of 2003 there were somewhere between 50 and 100 plutonium-powered pacemakers still implanted and functioning in living patients.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~