Concepts

Nuclear Fission and Fusion

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

Two nuclear reactions that release energy: fission splits a heavy nucleus into lighter ones, while fusion joins light nuclei into a heavier one; both convert a small loss of mass into energy.

Key points

  • Fission: a heavy nucleus such as uranium-235 or plutonium-239 splits when struck by a neutron, releasing energy and more neutrons that sustain a chain reaction.
  • Fission powers nuclear reactors (controlled chain reaction) and atom bombs (uncontrolled); reactors use control rods and moderators to manage the reaction.
  • Fusion: light nuclei such as hydrogen isotopes (deuterium and tritium) fuse to form helium, releasing far more energy; this powers the Sun and stars.
  • Fusion needs extremely high temperature and pressure and is not yet commercially viable; the international ITER project is researching controlled fusion.
  • India's three-stage nuclear power programme, built around its thorium reserves, was conceived by Homi Bhabha; the Department of Atomic Energy oversees the civilian programme.

Why it matters for CAPF

Fission versus fusion, the fuels involved, reactors versus bombs, and India's nuclear programme are recurring physics and science-technology facts with a strategic dimension.

Common confusion

Fission splits heavy nuclei (used in current reactors and bombs); fusion joins light nuclei (powers the Sun, not yet commercial). Fusion releases more energy per unit mass and produces less long-lived waste.

One-line recall

Fission splits heavy atoms (reactors, bombs); fusion joins light atoms (the Sun); both release energy from lost mass.

concept newtons laws

Parent note

physics everyday

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