Here's a reference which should give you a good but brief outline of Uranium and it associated properties and uses. http://pearl1.lanl.gov/periodic/elements/92.html Incendentally this reference is taken from the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics a great reference manual. I still have my old copy in storage - great paper weight ;) Now one thing I've forgotten is that uranium is also pyrophoric when finely divided. I wonder if that property can be capitalized on to cause harm. Not only could one use Uranium (235, 238 whatever) as an incendiary device but both types of U will leave a radioactive hazard. Of course it's more logical to use U-238 for that. regards joe On Sat, 17 Nov 2001 baptista@pccf.net wrote:
On Fri, 16 Nov 2001, Tim May wrote:
Gold is malleable AND is denser than steel.
Uranium is NOT malleable AND is denser than steel.
Incorrect. Uranium is an actinide series element. It is a hard silver almost white substance which is both malleable and ductile. Of course this does not imply you should use it as a replacement for duck tape. Also like gold it has a luster when polished.
The main reason for using DU in armor-piercing shells is the sheer density.
correct
The bomb instructions Joe provided are as accurate as most recipes in "The Anarchist Cookbook."
(A book my local Sheriff's Department banned in 1970.)
not surprised.
regards joe
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