Physics, asked by riddhi897, 1 month ago

define binding energy curve??​

Answers

Answered by varshaganesh4
2

Answer:

The curve of binding energy suggests a second way in which energy could be released in nuclear reactions. The lightest elements (like hydrogen and helium) have nuclei that are less stable than heavier elements up to A~60. Thus, sticking two light nuclei together to form a heavier nucleus can release energy.

Explanation:

Hope this answer helps you.

Answered by itsvirajThete
4

Answer:

\huge\boxed{\fcolorbox{green}{pink}{answer }}

Explanation:

The curve of binding energy is a graph that plots the binding energy per nucleon against atomic mass. This curve has its main peak at iron and nickel and then slowly decreases again, and also a narrow isolated peak at helium, which as noted is very stable

Answered by itsvirajThete
2

Answer:

\huge\boxed{\fcolorbox{green}{pink}{answer }}

Explanation:

The curve of binding energy is a graph that plots the binding energy per nucleon against atomic mass. This curve has its main peak at iron and nickel and then slowly decreases again, and also a narrow isolated peak at helium, which as noted is very stable

Similar questions