On 04/04/2011 01:51 AM, Arnold Krille wrote:
On Sunday 03 April 2011 10:56:38 Patrick Shirkey
wrote:
On 04/02/2011 09:46 PM, Hartmut Noack wrote:
Am 02.04.2011 05:27, schrieb Patrick Shirkey:
more time to enjoy your remaining days on this
planet until the nuclear
cloud of death from the impending atomic explosion at Fukushima of 1760
metric tonnes of radioactive fuel blankets the earth and kills us all.
Could you elaborate on that?
What makes you think, radioactive fuel could blow up in a "atomic
explosion"?
What makes you think it couldn't?
The fact that there is not enough material there to form a critical mass.
How say you? Has anyone modelled how much non compressed Plutonium is
required for it to go to critical. Considering that it is melting
through the earths crust at more than 5000 deg C and it only takes a few
kilos of fuel to create Kilo Tons of explosive force it is a fairly high
risk of a worst case scenario whereby the much denser plutonium
seperates out and goes boom. Given how bad it is already I would not be
surprised if it did go to critical and consume the whole facility.
Although I have it on good authority that it is more likely to just
explode with the force of a conventional weapon instead. Even if it only
makes it to that point it would make a very big mess. I'm hoping for it
to burn it's way deep enough into the crust so that it will effectively
be an underground nuclear test if it takes off. I shudder to think of
the results if it is close enough to the surface to escape into the
atmosphere or ignite the whole facility.
The stuff in an atomic reactor is not as clean and
dangerous as the stuff needed
for an atomic bomb.
There is more than enough Pu-239 in the melted cores each containing 160
- 180 metric tonnes of fuel to create a serious problem. In addition
reactor 3 had 5% enriched MOX to start with. That still leaves 890
metric tonnes of "spent" fuel rods which essentially means lots of Pu-239...
The problem with the reactor material is when
something else blows up and
spreads the radioactive material like a dirty bomb (this is also what happened
25 years ago).
You mean like on Saturday 12 March or Sunday 13 March? Why do you think
the Ronald Regan decided to haul arse out of the vicinity and then
immediately swab the decks? It's not cause they were worried about a
little Cesium or Iodine that's for sure!
Another problem is that even the non-radioactive
plutonium and
uran are chemically bad stuff and poisonous for biological things.
Yep. Injesting Pu-239 will poison you first before you get cancer. Just
see Litvenenko for the results of that problem. However walking into a
cloud of Cesium or Iodine which is currently blanketing The US and
Europe will also cause you significant issues. Remember that just cos
the total amount of it is dispersed that doesn't mean it was dispersed
evenly. If I was in the Northern Hemisphere I would be staying away from
diary, meat and foods grown outside for the next few months and keep in
mind that Cesium has a half life of 30 years but the full life is more
like 300 years...
Carpe diem,
At least time is relative :-)
My heart goes out to the Japanese in this tragedy. They are the ones
suffering the greatest pain right now. It's absolutely categorically
heart breaking. I don't know how the elite can be so cruel to require
Fukushima as clandestine weapons program when there are already enough
nukes to kill us all anyway.
It just defies all logic and rationale.
Something needs to change! This failed system we call the global
military industrial complex and their puppet governments is a complete
disaster!
--
Patrick Shirkey
Boost Hardware Ltd.