jonblaze420
Well-Known Member
Spent fuel rod storage pools are scary to look at even when they're functioning at capacity.
THe rods in question are unspent fuel that was ready to go into the reactor, from what I understand...Spent fuel rod storage pools are scary to look at even when they're functioning at capacity.
One of the things I'm going on is how hard it is to distribute doses in real life. The toxicity of the fuel rods is based on the old rule of thumb that a microgram of plutonium is the deadly dose. So to kill 2.9 billion people, you'd have to start with 2.9 kilos of plutonium (a reasonable estimate of what's in a fuel rod or two) and then divide it into 2.9 billion aerosol inhalation doses. With a medical-style program like vaccinations in developing countries, it could be done. But a fuel rod catching fire or blowing up will distribute its load of toxics in a confined plume, and almost all of the poisons won't make it to a person. Since people have a natural tendency to go away from a disaster site, I doubt the death toll (including delayed cancers) would exceed a hundred from one rod being turned to dust. I'm not trying to cheapen such deaths, but there is a big difference between such a mishap and something global.Denial is not just a river in egypt. Are you really going to compare a massive pile of nuclear fuel in an unstable building directly adjacent to the ocean on a fault line to a lake of H20? Try reframing this a little bit in your head. A regional disaster is a global disaster if it affects the oceans. And if it is an explosion that causes the complications, well. That is a LOT of fuel, and it is well documented that the air currents in the area are ALREADY depositing massive amounts of radiation on the western U.S. states.
I understand that you are trying to make a point about how potentiality is not finality. However, I think that using that as an excuse to ignore the potential for a global disaster in this situation is pretty foolish. Do whatever you want, though. Honestly, the "region" is going to be the entire northern hemisphere. I'll probably be moving far south before the end of the year. Call it a tin foil hat situation if you want. I've always wanted to see South America anyway.
Unused fuel rods are only weakly radioactive. You could case each one in a fairly thin lead tube, then just stack'em. If you're using plutonium fuel, there will be a problem with waste heat from alpha decay (it's why a plutonium bomb "pit" is warm to the touch) that can easily be handled with active cooling of the fuel storage area. (primitive cooling, like ordinary AC) cnI have questions that I can't find the answers to on the internet, possibly you know altar nation.
1.) Where can unspent fuel rods be stored?
2.) Can unspent fuel rods be stored in a boric acid and salt water pool, like the spent ones?
3.) Is the problem relocating these fuel rods to another facility in Japan?
Thanks.
Thanks, and that was interesting too.Unused fuel rods are only weakly radioactive. You could case each one in a fairly thin lead tube, then just stack'em. If you're using plutonium fuel, there will be a problem with waste heat from alpha decay (it's why a plutonium bomb "pit" is warm to the touch) that can easily be handled with active cooling of the fuel storage area. (primitive cooling, like ordinary AC) cn
I wish I knew what you said pre-edit. cnThanks, and that was interesting too.
An error in my comprehension skills made me refer to the show The X-Files.I wish I knew what you said pre-edit. cn
Since I didn't watch the show, I'd'a been left without a useful answer anyway. cnAn error in my comprehension skills made me refer to the show The X-Files.
<edit> Not a specific episode, just that I was always left with more questions...
You know it's impossible to prove a negative, right?until some science guy can prove to me that there is no link between fukushima and all the unexplained dead sea things washing up on shores i'm going to keep my foil hat on standby.
hundreds of dead dolphins in peru, dozens of dead dolphins right here in massachusetts, along with some dead seals last fall that supposedly died from some kind of weird mysterious flu. i would have chalked it up to the oil spill but peru is a long way from the spill.
You know it's impossible to prove a negative, right?
That said, unexplained dead sea things, singly and in droves, are as old as history ... cn