Home
Class 12
PHYSICS
ENERGY CONSERVATION IN NUCLEAR REACTION...

ENERGY CONSERVATION IN NUCLEAR REACTION

A

mass only

B

energy only

C

momentum only

D

mass, energy and momentum

Text Solution

Verified by Experts

The correct Answer is:
D

In any nuclear reaction mass , energy and momentum all are conserved.
Promotional Banner

Topper's Solved these Questions

  • NUCLEI

    NCERT FINGERTIPS|Exercise Higher Order Thinking Skills|8 Videos
  • NUCLEI

    NCERT FINGERTIPS|Exercise NCERT Exemplar|7 Videos
  • NUCLEI

    NCERT FINGERTIPS|Exercise Radioactivity|42 Videos
  • MOVING CHARGES AND MAGNETISM

    NCERT FINGERTIPS|Exercise Assertion And Reason|15 Videos
  • PRACTICE PAPPER

    NCERT FINGERTIPS|Exercise Practice Paper 3|50 Videos

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

CONSERVATION OF ENERGY & MOMENTUM

STATEMENT-I: Consider the following nuclear reaction of an ustable ._(6)^(14)C rarr ._(7)^(14)N + _(-1)^(0)e+ overset(-)v . In a nuclear reaction total energy and momentum is conserved experiments show that the electrons are emitted with a continous range of kinetic energies upto some maximum value. STATEMENT-II: Remaining energy is released as thermal energy.

Energy From Ocean || Nuclear Energy

Energy: Kinetic Energy | Conservative and Non Conservative forces | Potential Energy (Gravitational and Spring) | Work energy theorem | Law of conservation of energy

Energy: Kinetic Energy | Conservative and Non Conservative forces | Potential Energy (Gravitational and Spring) | Work energy theorem | Law of conservation of energy

Nuclear Energy

Nuclear Energy

Introduction OF Nuclear Chemistry || Representation OF Atom || Find no. OF Electrons,Protons and Neutrons || IsoSeries (Isotopes ,Isotones, Isobars, Isodiaphers || Nuclear Isomers(Isoelectronic,Isosteres) || Chemical and Nuclear Reaction || Nuclear Reaction || Balancing OF Nuclear Reaction

Answer the following questions: Are the equations of nuclear reactions (such as those given in Section 13.7) ‘balanced’ in the sense a chemical equation (e.g., 2H2 + O2→ 2 H2O) is? If not, in what sense are they balanced on both sides? If both the number of protons and the number of neutrons are conserved in each nuclear reaction, in what way is mass converted into energy (or vice-versa) in a nuclear reaction? A general impression exists that mass-energy interconversion takes place only in nuclear reaction and never in chemical reaction. This is strictly speaking, incorrect. Explain.