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its ratio is 10 > 20 > 5 (ten parts uranium, twenty parts thorium, and five parts reactor lining)
its extremely dangerous when it is fresh, but as the radioactive materials decay into other materials on the periodic table, it becomes safer and safer, until eventually its litterally just a bunch of random materials mixed with the reactor lining
this material is also known as chernobylite, so far it has been the most radioactive material not found on the periodic table. and EVER.
this is also why they are trying to make chernobyl liveable again, because the radioactive fallout has almost completely decayed
also despite the fact that it is not on the periodic table, it decays into other alloys when it's radioactive components decay, other alloys that have the reactor lining, and thorium or uranium, or just the reactor lining itself
but none of them are named, because it takes years for uranium and thorium to decay into another substance, espescially if its a high compound type of uranium, which comes in three types: 247 , 248 , and 249.
one of these compounds, when decayed turns into another compound of uranium (249 > 247) and one of them decays into another radioactive material on the periodic table, which then decays into another, and so on,
we can name it if it just decays into another radioactive material, but we dont name alloys that have the same materials, but different compound numbers, because its still technically the same, just an extra proton or two.
Chernobylite, if it does exist, would be a compount, not an element on the periodic table, you just said it was made of thorium, uranium and other stuff, so how can it be an element?
make a note to yourself, before making a comment questioning knowledge, read it more carefully, just to make sure,
this will stop the conundrum you have done here, in this case, you missed the "NOT FOUND" part in my sentence.