Last year, scientists announced they'd found a rare type of plutonium at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. This plutonium is believed to have come from an exploding star. NPR's Nell Greenfieldboyce ...
A team of scientists has discovered a new, stable form of plutonium – and done so by accident. The famously unstable element is tricky to transport, store and dispose of, but the find could lead to ...
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
US aims to extract rare plutonium from Cold War nuclear waste
The United States is preparing to mine a rare nuclear resource from some of its most dangerous Cold War legacies, turning ...
Supernovae can generate a lot of heavier atoms, but not plutonium, as far as anyone knows. A lot of energy, generating a lot of neutrons, would be required. Hubble Space Telescope-Image of Supernova. ...
Common chemical elements are created in stars like our sun. But heavy elements, like iron, are thought to form in massive stars that explode and spew material — though it might be more complicated.
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