this has probably been pointed out ... but boiling water reactors like the one in Japan have been are not widely used in the US. we prefer pressurized water ]
3/16/2011 5:37:18 PM
^Don't let something like that get in the way of smc attempting to troll everybody in here.BTW latest is that TEPCO has apparently just about completed a new power line that will provide grid power to the plant so they can get the regular cooling systems back up and running. Wonder how much of them are still active though after seeing the destruction to the containment buildings?
3/16/2011 5:47:13 PM
^^ *sigh* that's just plain not the caseNeither is the concept of "negligence". For all the history the Japanese nuclear industry has of this, how did it cause this accident? You can't answer that. The fact of the matter is that the earthquake probability distribution isn't a matter of nuclear engineering, and this unit failed because it wasn't designed for the disaster it faced. It is near impossible to argue otherwise.This is a question of "how" safe the public wants to require the fleet to be. This is a civil question. It would, in fact, be nice to blame this all on the incompetence of the Japanese nuclear industry but that doesn't fit the facts.Even top industry leaders have publicly spoken that the measures TEPCO and the Japanese government agencies took are more or less what we would have done. The technology is old (which forms a valid point) and we operate the same generation of plants here and may operate them much much longer.
3/16/2011 5:56:30 PM
3/16/2011 7:57:25 PM
The Hindenburg crash was a natural disaster...of static electricity.But you're right, I don't blame the engineers. I blame the bureaucrats and public that allowed/demanded airships filled with hydrogen to fly in the first place.
3/16/2011 7:58:44 PM
Hydrogen remains a viable lifting gas. With proper engineering we could still ride in Hydrogen blimps.
3/16/2011 8:19:37 PM
^thisGo away troll
3/16/2011 8:38:52 PM
can't wait for the fusion days when we look back and say "haha, remember the days we had old fashioned nuclear energy and had to worry about radiation and radioactive waste?, haha, we were so backwards"
3/16/2011 8:55:22 PM
umm, fusion will still have radioactive waste
3/16/2011 9:17:42 PM
The earthquake didnt do shit to the plant even though the plant was only designed to withstand a magnitude 7. In other words, it ate an earthquake that was 100 times worse than what it was designed to handle and without issue. On the other hand, the plant was designed to withstand a 27ft tsunami...this one was 30ft. Its a pretty robust system, but this natural disaster was pretty fucked. Quit whining. Since when did a little radiation hurt anyone?
3/16/2011 11:55:57 PM
3/17/2011 2:03:48 AM
This is all a lot of aggrivation just to boil water
3/17/2011 9:34:57 AM
Maybe even aggravation?
3/17/2011 10:06:00 AM
Damn it. I suck without spellcheck.
3/17/2011 11:27:35 AM
3/17/2011 11:40:09 AM
3/17/2011 2:19:01 PM
Indeed, why is this concept of a "near-miss" so concerning? What is it that they nearly missed?To me, I think it's clear that there's something more to the nuclear regulations and the nuclear panic than the simple existence of the possibility of a catastrophic event. I think the problem is that (in perception at least) the distribution of events from a nuclear plant do not follow a comfortable hierarchy.Earthquakes themselves are a good example of something that science has shown follows a distribution of many low-severity and few high-severity occurrences, with a perfectly solid continuum in-between. It is my suspicion that this is a reason that the people won't get validly and publicly fearful about the possibility of a mega-explosion at Yellowstone.If nuclear plants severely damaged their fuel on a regular basis, it seems to me like a near-miss would not be strongly concerning. The fear is related to the fact that fuel damage is historically such a good predictor of major radiation releases to the surrounding area. So much effort is expended on offering fail-safe operation that hints of problems imply a greater danger (in the public's mind) than if nuclear wasn't such a ominously safe industry.
3/17/2011 3:39:32 PM
[Edited on March 17, 2011 at 3:56 PM. Reason : .]
3/17/2011 3:43:06 PM
^^ I think it's fair to perceive "hints of problems" as a "greater danger" that could possibly occur. I don't think people should be hysterical about it, but I think it's fair for them to show concern.did you read some of the things that were pointed out?
3/17/2011 4:39:09 PM
Let's be clear - you have NO reason to be concerned about a "hit".Fukushima I wasn't just a "hit", it was a "hit and smash through the wall". Although we may have had 14 near misses (the NRC event report gives you a constant stream of things to worry about), we didn't have any hits. But this logic of worrying about a near miss flatly doesn't match the nuclear plant design principles.Nuclear plants are built so that if something goes wrong with A (the reactor) then B (containment and other systems) still continue to work. But every near miss isn't a near miss of systematically A&B, but either A or B.So what is it? Are the principles of the engineering not working? Was it a good idea in theory but not in practice? Or is there really no reason to be worried about near-misses?
3/17/2011 4:52:45 PM
You guys need to stop trolling this thread by posting all these scary news articles.
3/17/2011 4:57:46 PM
Just look at how many deaths per year are related to coal power.
3/17/2011 5:17:03 PM
3/17/2011 5:26:06 PM
3/17/2011 9:54:49 PM
those near misses are stupid. just because you have an accident and it happens to happen at a nuclear power plant and you call it a nuclear accident does not mean its horrible."electrical fire that caused an unplanned shutdown"i have seen this happen on MANY occasions....shutdown is pretty damn safe, your only concern is DHR, which i do not know how civilian plants handle that....probably the same way we do.how they got to "3 mile island", im not really sure. "when in doubt, scram it out""when you dont know, make it into a casualty you do know"
3/17/2011 10:40:22 PM
3/17/2011 11:20:27 PM
3/19/2011 5:16:01 PM
^ he could be more wrong. Some people could even be more wrong without even trying very hard. Some of us are absolutely fantastic at being wrong.Nuclear reactors start with slightly radioactive stuff, but that needs a lot of qualifiers. Ordinary 5% enriched fuel is clean enough and quiet enough that you can eat off it. It's very harmless, BUT, if you compared it to purified normal Uranium oxide, or to most normal things (probably even bananas) it has elevated radiation levels.Contrary to intuition, the fuel going into the reactor has lower radioactivity than much of the Uranium ore. The reason is because Uranium decays, and has a long radioactive chain that follows that built up over billions of years possibly. Natural U-235 fraction used to be 6% and now it's 0.75%, that's just a matter of half-lives. Natural Uranium ore rock is actually something you should avoid and it presents one of the greatest risks through the entire fuel cycle because it doesn't have engineered barriers and stuff like that.MOX fuel is much more radioactive.
3/20/2011 10:38:47 AM
man, I'd love to get into the MOX plant out here, lol. sux that I got laid off so soon into my masters. grrr.
3/20/2011 9:04:33 PM
Interesting article...
3/23/2011 1:56:55 PM
I wish that I could say that radiation hormesis made intuitive sense to me. But it doesn't.It is a little puzzle of nature that the amount of radiation around us is apparently orders of magnitude less than what it would need to be to cause harm. Does evolution over-engineer, or does it push every single thing to the limit in the name of competition? I tend to believe the latter.So why? Why can background increase 100x without anything apparently going wrong? That seems a mystery to me.But there's a difference between an elevated background, and a sudden shower of radiation. I've heard a man 90 years old give a talk and mention that one time he opened a box at the wrong place and wrong time and got 50 REM, and then he used that as evidence that our radiation phobia is baloney. I get that.But why??? Did nature already solve the cancer problem to its own satisfaction? Maybe evolution designed through eras when background was so much higher.I'm just rambling. But these are interesting questions. Either way we're still using the precautionary principle right now.
3/23/2011 2:12:55 PM
yea my guess would be a combination of higher levels of radiation in the past + general hardiness against other negative outside forces. our bodies regenerate damaged or dead cells which helps protect against more than just radiation damage.
3/23/2011 2:27:41 PM
I'm not sure how much that jives with existing physical and medical models. Your immune system doesn't build antibodies to deal with radiation damage. It's not like it's a virus. I'm sure one of our resident nuke specialists will chime in though.
3/23/2011 3:42:20 PM
3/23/2011 3:55:35 PM
i dont really mean in terms of immune system i mean we've evolved cells that get old and die as a regular part of their normal existance. If some cells are damaged by radiation they're going to get replaced over time anyways so its not a big deal.
3/23/2011 3:56:46 PM
"Replacement" occurs via replication of cells. If a cell has damaged DNA and replicates, it will carry that damaged DNA (unless it's so damaged that it can't replicate, or not so damaged that it can't be repaired) to the copies.This is why cancer is an asshole.[Edited on March 23, 2011 at 4:15 PM. Reason : .]
3/23/2011 4:14:43 PM
3/23/2011 4:14:55 PM
Here's PZ Myers commenting on Radiation Hormesishttp://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2011/03/will_radiation_hormesis_protec.php
3/23/2011 4:20:20 PM
btw, i did not previously know that we now get about as much radiation from medical procedures as from background.Combine that with space travel, and our great grandchildren may be living high radiation lives.
3/23/2011 7:46:14 PM
we just had a guy fly in from japan and had 700 mrem on his shoes.he also got internally monitored and had Cs-138 internally...sucks for him...[Edited on March 24, 2011 at 1:09 AM. Reason : yea]
3/24/2011 1:09:05 AM
Here on the west coast my colleagues and I have measured 131-I in rainwater from fallout using a Germanium detector. 131-I is a fission product with a half life of about 9 days so any identification of it means it only comes from a fissioning system. Very cool.
3/24/2011 2:00:41 AM
You guys got a HPGe detector? Impressive.
3/24/2011 8:13:05 AM
^^Awesome! I can't wait until my rainwater has fallout in it. So exciting!
3/24/2011 11:13:06 AM
I'm not sure if this has already been said but the main reason this is a problem was because the diesel generators were placed in an underground facility. Had they been stored above ground, which is pretty much the standard, there would be almost no problems. Because these generators were placed underground the tsunami flooded them and were made useless. If they had been placed above ground, this wouldn't have been a problem.
3/24/2011 11:26:04 AM
u sure it wasn't because the fuel tanks for those generators were above ground in a place the fuel could be washed away or made useless by the flood?
3/24/2011 11:38:01 AM
^^^I hope you don't live in a brick house. All that radiation would probably make you piss yourself in fear.
3/24/2011 12:23:29 PM
Last night I saw a documentary which showed a 30 foot high tsunami wall built to protect a small Japanese town. Would it have been so hard to put the nuclear reactor and all its little bits behind that or one like it?
3/24/2011 1:36:27 PM
^ not only did they think of EXACTLY that, they did better. 30 feet is about 9 meters. So they only expected to ever, in their life, to get hit by one half that size. But they still over-engineered it (i'm sure laughing all the way "gawd this is stupid to overbuild so much") to a value very close to what this one was. That town and its puny wall was laughable to the nuclear plants. But no one is laughing now.
3/24/2011 1:47:11 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbrjRKB586s
3/25/2011 1:18:58 PM
3/25/2011 1:44:49 PM