Science, asked by 2sofiavazquez2, 4 months ago

When nuclear fission occurs, some mass is lost. Where does the mass go?

Answers

Answered by prahladbais18
11

Answer:

The loss of matter is called the mass defect. The missing matter is converted into energy. You can actually calculate the amount of energy produced during a nuclear reaction with fairly simple equation developed by Albert Einstein; E = mc^2. In this equation, E is the amount of energy produced, m is the missing mass, or the mass defect, and c is the speed of light, which is a rather large number. The speed of light is squared, making that part of the equation a very large number that, even when multiplied by a small amount of mass, yields a large amount of energy.

Answered by audryanalyncol
12

Answer:

Some of the mass is converted to energy. The relative amounts of matter and energy stay the same.

Explanation:

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