Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Atomic_battery> ?p ?o }
- Atomic_battery abstract "The terms atomic battery, nuclear battery, tritium battery and radioisotope generator are used to describe a device which uses energy from the decay of a radioactive isotope to generate electricity. Like nuclear reactors they generate electricity from atomic energy, but differ in that they do not use a chain reaction. Compared to other batteries they are very costly, but have extremely long life and high energy density, and so they are mainly used as power sources for equipment that must operate unattended for long periods of time, such as spacecraft, pacemakers, underwater systems and automated scientific stations in remote parts of the world.Nuclear battery technology began in 1913, when Henry Moseley first demonstrated the beta cell. The field received considerable in-depth research attention for applications requiring long-life power sources for space needs during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1954 RCA researched a small atomic battery for small radio receivers and hearing aids. Since RCA's initial research and development in the early 1950s, many types and methods have been designed to extract electrical energy from nuclear sources. The scientific principles are well known, but modern nano-scale technology and new wide bandgap semiconductors have created new devices and interesting material properties not previously available.Batteries using the energy of radioisotope decay to provide long-lived power (10–20 years) are being developed internationally. Conversion techniques can be grouped into two types: thermal and non-thermal. The thermal converters (whose output power is a function of a temperature differential) include thermoelectric and thermionic generators. The non-thermal converters (whose output power is not a function of a temperature difference) extract a fraction of the incident energy as it is being degraded into heat rather than using thermal energy to run electrons in a cycle. Atomic batteries usually have an efficiency of 0.1–5%. High efficiency betavoltaics have 6–8%.".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageExternalLink BlanchardKorea.pdf.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageExternalLink 8297934.stm.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageExternalLink cantilever.ws.html.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageExternalLink 64.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageExternalLink 0,9171,2050039,00.html.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageID "1634352".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageLength "13360".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageOutDegree "86".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageRevisionID "706134106".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Advanced_Stirling_radioisotope_generator.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Alkali-metal_thermal_to_electric_converter.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Alpha_particle.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Argon.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Artificial_cardiac_pacemaker.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink BBC.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Battery_(electricity).
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Beta_particle.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Betavoltaic_device.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Bremsstrahlung.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Caesium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Capacitor.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Category:Battery_types.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Category:Electrical_generators.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nuclear_power_in_space.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nuclear_technology.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Ceramic.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Concentration_cell.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Crystallite.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Curium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Dielectric.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Electricity.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Electrochemistry.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Electrolyte.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Excimer.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Moseley.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Induced_gamma_emission.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Infrared.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Isotope.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Jae_Wan_Kwon.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Kurchatov_Institute.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Molten_salt_battery.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Moscow.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink NASA.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Nickel.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Nuclear_binding_energy.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Nuclear_chain_reaction.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Nuclear_fission_product.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Nuclear_reactor.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Piezoelectricity.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Plutonium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Positron.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Promethium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink P–n_junction.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink RCA.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Radioactive_decay.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Radioisotope_thermoelectric_generator.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Radionuclide.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Radium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Research_station.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Semiconductor.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Silver.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Sodium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Solar_cell.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Space_charge.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Spacecraft.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Stirling_engine.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Stirling_radioisotope_generator.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Strontium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Technetium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Thermal_ionization.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Thermionic_converter.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Thermionic_emission.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Thermocouple.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Thermoelectric_effect.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Thermophotovoltaic.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Tritium.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Ultrasound.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Underwater.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Houston.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Missouri.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Visible_spectrum.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Wide-bandgap_semiconductor.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Work_function.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLink Xenon.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "Atomic battery".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nuclear batteries".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "atomic batteries".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "atomic battery".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "atomic powered batteries".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "direct charging generators".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "isotope-powered".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "nuclear batteries".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "nuclear power cells".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "nuclear".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageWikiLinkText "radioisotope generators".
- Atomic_battery wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Atomic_battery wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.