posted by GreatTech
Can we separate heavy elements, say uranium or plutonium, into lighter elements, say hydrogen and helium? [Edited by Don W]
Others have already responded. May I add? Uranium is #92 on the Periodic Chart. The last of the naturally occurring elements. Or so we thought. As the
early work on nuclear bombs progressed - the Manhattan Project - it was discovered there is some plutonium (element #94), as well as its precursor,
neptunium, #93, found in nature. That is, naturally occurring. One poster pointed out the normal life of an average star produces all the elements up
to and including iron. #26 on the chart. Elements above iron on the chart are made only in super-novas. That is, exploding stars as opposed to dying
stars. Because our bodies contain many elements above iron, some evolutionists say we are products of exploding stars.
The rarest element is astatine, # 85, symbol, “At,” estimated to be not more than 25 gm (.9 oz.) on the planet. The most abundant element in the
Earth’s crust, by weight, is oxygen. Element #8. The element hydrogen, OTOH, is Number 10 of the most abundant, by weight, but element #1. We’re
talking about the earth’s crust, not necessarily the whole planet. The interior of the earth may contain a sphere about 1,500 miles across, made up
of molten nickel and iron. From hence cometh our magnetic field. Without which there would be no life on this planet. Element #14, silicon - sand - is
number two in abundance, and element # 13 aluminum - but aluminium in England - is the 3rd most abundant element. Iron is the 4th most abundant
element.
Alchemy was the medieval effort to transmute elements. Usually they were trying to make gold out of lead or some other so-called base metal. Copper,
tin, etc. I suppose it is theocratically possible to do that, but it would cost much more than either gold or lead. I also suspect you could start
with a ton of lead and end with an ounce of gold, too.
That is the current problem with the popular hydrogen gas solution to fossil fuel prices and contamination. Someone will say that you can break down
water into oxygen and hydrogen with a 9 v. battery. Which is true. The problem is scale. The 9 v. battery will produce enough hydrogen to make a small
“puff” when lighted with a match. The amount of hydrogen gas needed to run a motor car is so many orders of magnitude greater that it would take
100os of 9 v. batteries to get enough to run just a few minutes. Possible, but impractical. There is no cheap way to replace gasoline, and no way at
all that will ever be cheaper.