Well pup dont you think you should explain the difference between exposure to low levels of radiation and inhaling a radioactive particle that ends up lodged in the lungs.
Is this why the aircraft from the American 7th fleet are being washed?
Yep, I partially agree with Pup there. The need to stick to the multi levelled defense strategy which means you keep the zirkalloy tubes as much intact as you can. If that fails you try to conain a partial melt doen in the pressure vessel. Only if both defense layers fail you rely on the outer catch pool in the containment. The damage cost going from one level to the next is rather excessive why you do not want to deviate.Pup wrote:I think cleanup cost is the main reason. Though, you'd wouldn't want to risk having the containment fail, however unlikely. Also, prior to damage of the core, they'd want to save it was well. And not necessarily because of the replacement expense - Japan needs these power plants back on line as soon as possible. Though this plant and it's neighbor are likely to be out of commission for some time.marekk wrote:Still wondering, why take the risk of explosion, why not just let the core melt and catch it in this secondary concrete containment ?
Don't know for cesium, but living 900km from Chernobyl and young at this time, i know something about iodine. The problem is, if you get it in your thyroid, you have it for months/years, and even small amounts of radiation over long time do the damage. I don't think radiation level in vicinity will be a problem, until there is sort of explosion, blasting long living (radiating) particles in the air, and wind turns to Tokyo for example.Pup wrote:Also, since some people are describing the release of radioactive cesium and iodine as 'significant' -
I suppose one could call any release significant, but again to put things in perspective, I just checked the TEPCO website and they say that the radiation level just outside the reactor buildings is 20µSv/hour. With that in mind, I provide the following advice for anyone in the area who'd like to get a free chest x-ray:
1) Lie down on top of some x-ray film next to one of the reactor buildings.
2) Remain motionless for 50 hours - hold your breath!
3) All done! Now go get your film developed.
Yeah. Once flooded, they'll have no more choice, just add some boron/water and pray.WhiteBlue wrote: The current procedure is actually irregular as boron acid or dirty (Sea) water is not supposed to be used outside the catch pool. Due to the loss of all internal pumping arrangements they had to flood the containment with seas water and boric acid which automatically includes the reactor vessel and the catch pool.
Absolutely, which is why I say that you could call any release significant. Exposure risk is a matter of statistical chance rather than degree. My point is that the way it's described, it could sound like there are giant mutated animals all over the place. Whereas we know those are all outside Tokyo.marekk wrote:Don't know for cesium, but living 900km from Chernobyl and young at this time, i know something about iodine. The problem is, if you get it in your thyroid, you have it for months/years, and even small amounts of radiation over long time do the damage. I don't think radiation level in vicinity will be a problem, until there is sort of explosion, blasting long living (radiating) particles in the air, and wind turns to Tokyo for example.
You cavalier attitude isn't very helpful to the discussion Pup. Naturally the radiation situation changes very dynamically depending of the actions taken. When they were venting the reactors people could be exposed to lethal doses of radiation by caesium fallout which wasn't diluted yet. Caesium - 137 has a half life time of 30 years and 0.3 g is considered a lethal dose when incorporated. Naturally the direct danger is much reduced as soon as the radioactivity is is diluted and falls out. The fall out that hits the land btw will have a good chance to get into the food chain as much of the land is used for agriculture. Similarly the sea is used for fishing. As long as we do not know the amount of fission products that have escaped I would be careful to joke about it.Pup wrote:Also, since some people are describing the release of radioactive cesium and iodine as 'significant' -
I suppose one could call any release significant, but again to put things in perspective, I just checked the TEPCO website and they say that the radiation level just outside the reactor buildings is 20µSv/hour. With that in mind, I provide the following advice for anyone in the area who'd like to get a free chest x-ray:
1) Lie down on top of some x-ray film next to one of the reactor buildings.
2) Remain motionless for 50 hours - hold your breath!
3) All done! Now go get your film developed.
Well, flippant then. I bow to your superior language skills.Pup wrote:The word you are looking for is "flippant". If I were cavalier, I'd be getting that chest x-ray myself.
I'm not - in fact much to my wife's chagrin I'm known for refusing x-rays and ct scans that I feel are unnecessary.
I also wear sunscreen.
+1autogyro wrote:As always with nuclear disasters ..........
The inclusion of a nuclear reactor, or in this case, several could arguably be considered as an "un-natural" or rather man made disaster. Granted the trigger for this disaster was man-made, but what is now unfolding is as a result of the placement of a nuclear reactor (which didn't arrive there by natural processes) in both an Earthquake and Tsunami danger zone.Pup wrote:So far, everything that has happened at these plants reads like a checklist of what could happen in a natural disaster and the appropriate response.
But at what cost to humanity?Pup wrote:We will no doubt learn of mistakes that have been made, and of design flaws that have been uncovered - we are testing these facilities and people beyond any expected limits. But these will merely serve to educate for the future.
We, as a planet have HUGE reserves of natural gas. It's extraction is arguably the safest of all fossil fuels, and it's characteristics are well understood, and an accident involving it would have only local ramifications.Pup wrote:I would love to be able to power the world with wind, water or sunlight. But right now - right now - that's simply impossible. In the meantime we work with what we've got - coal and nuclear. Of the two, coal is so much worse on any measurable scale that it just defies belief that we haven't long ago switched to nuclear power. And the only reason we haven't done so is ignorant fear. Each and every incident, illness, and death from nuclear power is held up and magnified as proof positive that the technology is inherently unsafe. Yet for every death or illness caused by nuclear power, we ignore thousands (tens of thousands?) caused by coal - the mining deaths, the emphysema, the cancer, the arsenic, the mercury, the *gasp* radiation - the numbers just don't lie.
I wonder how much of this has already gone "to atmosphere" as a result of boil-off?WhiteBlue wrote:The consequence of this will be massive corrosion to all installations and 10,000 tons of radioactive water with activated salts and boron. That is not going to be a small job to remove and clean up.
autogyro wrote:As always with nuclear disasters there are people prepared to risk their lives to remain close to the reactor and do all these things that we casualy mention as steps to be taken to save the day.
I cannot imagine just what it takes to be on site directing sea water into a nuclear reactor.
I hope they all survive, we cannot praise their efforts enough IMO.