So in the reactions that take place in the H-bomb, hydrogen isotopes are combined to produce helium(?) and evolve proportionally huge amounts of energy.
So my question is, theoretically, if you were to fission a helium atom into hydrogen isotopes would a proportionally large amount of energy be absorbed into the system?
Before someone says it, not for my homework, I fucking wish we went over nuclear reactions in school.
We did go over Nuclear recations in my chem class but that was two semesters ago so I forgot...
but the googles says no
[url]http://lmgtfy.com/?q=helium+to+hydrogen+fission[/url]
Thanks for searching it for me (tried googling had to go through a billion shit links) but the first link says that it would absorb energy from the surroundings which is what I was asking. I know that it's not a naturally occurring reaction hence "theoretically."
Anyway, thanks for finding a link for me.
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