Chernobyl1. Helicopt03_... ... 18. image003 19. image1 20. fruin10m 21. constr_works 22. chernowreck2 23. UK_CH_104 24. sar |
![]() Add CommentRecent comments(view all 43 comments)bsimic@fesb.hr| show full
UPDATE: The pressure required to lift up the upper biological shield is 3,1 bar. (actual pressure is held between 0,7 and 0,9 bar during normal operation). I don't know whether these pressures are ABSOLUTE or GAUGED, sorry. Posted by Guest on Fri 01 Jan 2010 18:14:45 PST Scott| show full
I wouldn't lay the blame for this disaster entirely on the communist party. There are plenty of examples of capitalist entities that have been lack in safety standards, construction designs and training. Posted by Guest on Thu 01 Oct 2009 15:26:47 PDT bsimic@fesb.hr| show fullTo timi: I don't believe in that! If the Russians were conducting such experiments, these were on much smaller scale and had nothing to do with the Chernobyl disaster! The reactor containment building wasn't built simply because of high costs and the... Posted by Guest on Sun 08 Feb 2009 16:08:53 PST timi
well there have been reports from workers that the russian government let out radiation into the atmoshpere to see how they would cope if there ever was a nuclear war. Posted by Guest on Wed 14 May 2008 16:25:26 PDT bsimic@fesb.hr| show fullTo Snyder: don't be too impressed by the weight of the upper biological shield. The gas pressure which is only one atmosphere higher on the bottom side than on the top side is enough to lift it up if it was set loose! The fuel channels simply ruptured... Posted by Guest on Sun 27 Jan 2008 18:28:01 PST bsimic@fesb.hrIt is believed among scientists and engineers that the containment building made by the western standards at the time of the construction of the reactor would sustain the explosion at the reactor 4 and contain the radiation inside. Posted by Guest on Sun 27 Jan 2008 18:18:13 PST bsimic@fesb.hrTo wildespace: is the amount of reaction controlled by the depth the control rods are inserted to the core? Could the tips of the rods be made of graphite to make the reactor control more extensible? Posted by Guest on Sun 27 Jan 2008 18:14:55 PST nuke workernuclear power is still the safest energy and most efficiant source of energy around Posted by Guest on Fri 21 Sep 2007 08:21:13 PDT wildespace| show fullWhen are people going to stop saying "graphite control rods"? The control rods in Chernobyl reactor were made of boron. Their role was to ABSORB neutrons to hamper the reaction, NOT to moderate it like graphite does. Graphite was actually on the ends of... Posted by Guest on Sun 16 Sep 2007 14:38:19 PDT Christian| show full
Chernobyl is a fantastic insight into the workings of the old soviet communist party. Posted by Guest on Mon 14 May 2007 08:16:56 PDT Aled| show fullSome amazing photos in this gallery, certainly interesting and show only a small insight into the true horror of what happened. Seeing as there are some people here who know what they are talking about, are there any people actually involved in the... Posted by Guest on Wed 25 Apr 2007 10:46:43 PDT jdd| show fullIt is impossible for a nuclear reactor to detonate in a nuclear reaction not only because the uranuim is at a level of insufficient enrichment, but also there would be no way to compress the core into a Critical Mass. (unless of course a black hole... Posted by Guest on Tue 03 Apr 2007 13:28:45 PDT Geat| show fullThe problem with Three Mile Island was that the instrument panels only showed what instructions had been executed, not if they had been run successfully. The operators invoked the closing of a safety valve, and that's what the panel showed them had... Posted by Guest on Thu 29 Mar 2007 14:00:00 PDT Steve Savage| show full
The Three Mile Island core did not suffer a "partial meltdown". In fact the entire core melted and pooled at the bottom of the containment vessel. Posted by Guest on Tue 30 Jan 2007 07:33:29 PST JakgOh my god, ive been to another reactor, and seen the UBS, it was huge - to think that that could be moved by an explosion is scarcely imaginable Posted by Guest on Tue 09 Jan 2007 12:03:21 PST $H@KTI| show fullI have a question.On pictures you only see a gap in the roof and wall,butt what aboud other parts of the building such as the spent fuel pool and the foundation??how heavy is this damaged?And if you pour concrete arround the core can this help inother 2... Posted by Guest on Wed 03 Jan 2007 14:28:29 PST zether| show fullRBMK reactors are based on a channel design with each fuel element residing in its own reactor channel that can be isolated from the rest of the reactor for refueling and such, a slightly more complicated design that heavy water reactors and having... Posted by Guest on Tue 26 Sep 2006 23:11:33 PDT zether| show fulli do remember reading an extensive article based on the TMI-2 operators eyewitness accounts that they were fearfull of a large explosion in the reactor due to a large amount of hydrogen in the reactor core. they were saying that the explosion would... Posted by Guest on Tue 26 Sep 2006 23:06:58 PDT sarahthanks, but what is the diffrence with the reactors why are some types better than others? if they are? Posted by Guest on Mon 17 Jul 2006 08:09:54 PDT us| show full
There is no TMI reactor, but Three Mile Island Unit 2 (TMI-2) was as pressurized water reactor, that experienced partial core damage after losing coolant. Posted by Guest on Tue 04 Jul 2006 12:40:17 PDT sarahcan some one please explain what a TIM reactor is, and how is it better than the one at chernobyl. i dont no anything bout reactors so please keep it kinda simple, thanks Posted by Guest on Wed 14 Jun 2006 19:23:24 PDT gt04| show fullIk, can we remind Juan, it may be my poor old mind going a bit haywire, but was it not a TMI reactor that went cactus at Three Mile Island?? I pretty certain it was. But even still, nuclear generated power, and all its benefits and drawbacks, one would ... Posted by Guest on Sun 11 Jun 2006 08:10:25 PDT lk| show full
@Tim In RBMK reactor design "Upper biological shield" is reactor lid (this massive 1000 tons heavy circle shaped thing: http://www.pavrda.cz/cernobyl/img/centralni_sal.jpg ) below it is the core itself. Posted by Guest on Sun 21 May 2006 12:19:58 PDT TimThis may seem a dumb question but what is a Upper biological shild and what does it do. I know nothing about reactors so I'm clueless. Posted by Guest on Wed 17 May 2006 13:55:07 PDT duralinuxAny reactor design with a positive void coefficient is a poor design as there is virtually no way to stop the reaction if you loose either moderator. It's like playing Russian Rollette... no pun intended. Posted by Guest on Thu 04 May 2006 15:59:41 PDT lk| show full
@juan Posted by Guest on Wed 03 May 2006 13:52:45 PDT Juanlol thats funny.... but seriously that is a really crappy design.... they should learn from us Americans... jk Posted by Guest on Wed 03 May 2006 11:15:52 PDT CaseLogic| show full
I stand corrected in regard to the crane. I read about them in an old norwegian article from 1988 or thereabouts, when the authors probably had to guess because the Soviet government wouldn't tell. :) Posted by Guest on Wed 19 Apr 2006 12:17:17 PDT lk| show full
Yes, another explosion occured minutes after the first (steam explosion). Posted by Guest on Tue 04 Apr 2006 03:51:46 PDT RadratThe Chernobyl explosion was a steam explosion, followed by a chemical explosion. Posted by Guest on Mon 03 Apr 2006 13:31:39 PDT Add Comment |
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