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    Making mountains out of meltdowns (in Japan)

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    • pilouP Offline
      pilou
      last edited by

      Facts that we can see here in Europe from Japan for Fukushima Plant
      1000 millisieverts by hours today reactor Nยฐ2
      No more possibility to access!
      (1000 millisieverts by year is admissible in extrem emergency)

      Go to the worst - all the rest is futility!

      Here the balises (signpost)over the France actualised each four hours
      Normal for the moment 100 - 200 NanoSieverts by Hour
      so for a year
      200 * 24 * 365 = 1 752 000 NanoSieverts = 1.7 millisieverts
      1 millisievert = 1 000 000 NanoSieverts

      you can study this image

      http://imgs.xkcd.com/blag/radiation.png

      Frenchy Pilou
      Is beautiful that please without concept!
      My Little site :)

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      • T Offline
        tfdesign
        last edited by

        Another very good BBC News report;

        @unknownuser said:

        More than 10,000 people have died in the Japanese tsunami and the survivors are cold and hungry. But the media concentrate on nuclear radiation from which no-one has died - and is unlikely to.
        Nuclear radiation at very high levels is dangerous, but the scale of concern that it evokes is misplaced. Nuclear technology cures countless cancer patients every day - and a radiation dose given for radiotherapy in hospital is no different in principle to a similar dose received in the environment.
        What of Three Mile Island? There were no known deaths there.
        And Chernobyl? The latest UN report (http://www.unscear.org/docs/reports/2008/Advance_copy_Annex_D_Chernobyl_Report.pdf) published on 28 February confirms the known death toll - 28 fatalities among emergency workers, plus 15 fatal cases of child thyroid cancer - which would have been avoided if iodine tablets had been taken (as they have now in Japan). And in each case the numbers are minute compared with the 3,800 at Bhopal in 1984, who died as a result of a leak of chemicals from the Union Carbide pesticide plant.

        โžก http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12860842

        edit... getting a meltdown in my mind already. this is of course what bob posted! ๐Ÿ˜’ ๐Ÿ˜†

        My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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        • T Offline
          tfdesign
          last edited by

          @dale said:

          The press manipulates, therefore can't be trusted. I would agree, and like to add that the information is manipulated by every source as it is disseminated.

          The emphasis has been taken off the massive human disaster because that is not what will increase readers or viewers, whereas perceived impending disaster will.

          I feel you lose credibility if you start to put forward the premise that exposure to radiation, particularly the radiation that could potentially leak from this, or any other nuclear based power plant, is safe and therefore of no concern.

          Dale, to try and answer number one, both yes and no. In the old days where there was definitely a difference between a "left wing" and a "right wing" paper, I don't think this exists any more- even if there is a tendency for those who read the Guardian to blame Daily mail readers (they used to blame The Sun), as the 'cancer' that is affecting the UK today. I'm not a fan of the Daily Mail, but equally I find it hard to swallow news reports in the Guardian too- especially when an article has been badly researched (for eg don't get me, an Atkins diet follower, on the subject of "healthy eating", as prescribed by The Guardian newspaper! I eat cream, fat, and meat, I am loosing weight, and I've never felt more healthy, more alert and more fit! ๐Ÿ˜† ). I think more research (and proper debate- which is what this is?) is the answer, and at the moment the Guardian mentions nothing but the Fukushima plant. There is virtually nothing in the paper, in the top stories section on the humanitarian crisis in the paper apart from the occasional photo essay. It's been like this ever since the earthquake.

          Nuclear power is a big subject at the moment. We are told that our planet is heating up and we are doomed. Brendan O'Neill writing in the Telegraph (also known in the UK as "The Torygraph"- although the last thing I would call O'Neill, is a Tory!);

          @unknownuser said:

          The response to the ongoing problems at the Fukushima nuclear reactor in Japan confirms that catastrophists have colonised the debate about nuclear power. Both those who oppose nuclear and those who support it are driven more by an irrational politics of panic than by anything resembling a cool, human-centred commitment to progress. On one side, anti-nuclear moaners argue that if we continue experimenting with plutonium and uranium then the world will be plunged into a radioactive End of Days that only cockroaches will survive. On the other side, many of those who support nuclear claim that if we donโ€™t build more reactors then man-made climate change โ€“ or the โ€œoutraged planetโ€ as one of them calls it โ€“ will finish us off and feast on our carcasses. It is time, surely, for a more reasoned debate about manโ€™s energy needs and the importance of nuclear.

          O'Neill then goes on to say;

          @unknownuser said:

          What we have here is not a serious debate about energy needs but a competition of catastrophes, a clash of apocalypse-mongers who canโ€™t quite agree on what will damn mankind to hell: our creation of nuclear power or our burning of fossil fuels. In many ways, the anti-nuke lobby is simply behind the times: its holocaust-hungry imagination, so fashionable in the 1980s, is old hat these days, having been replaced by the Revelations-style apocalyptic thinking of the eco-outlook. Those who support nuclear only as a desperate measure to make up for humanityโ€™s alleged crimes against the planet are doing no favours for the pro-nuclear outlook, with their promotion of fear and anti-humanism over a debate about how society might meet peopleโ€™s needs and satisfy their desires. They ought to be reminded that โ€œthe nuclear ageโ€ was never simply about technology โ€“ rather it spoke to a sense of faith in humanity, in our ability to use science and reason to master the unknown and to push forward the forces of progress. They have no such faith, and see nuclear simply as a life raft for foolish and greedy human beings.

          โžก http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/brendanoneill2/100080939/the-debate-over-nuclear-power-is-being-driven-by-holocaust-hungry-doom-mongers/

          So we are left with a very marxist and humanitarian outlook from a newspaper that once was a strong supporter and advocate of the years of Thatcherism. My point is, that in order to sort the wheat from the chaff, it's vitally important to reach conclusions from whatever source (Mail, Telegraph, Guardian or BBC etc), and listen carefully to the 'experts'. The W.H.O. made a statement the other day, here on the Today programme on the levels of radioactivity, stating very clearly that there was very little to worry about, concerning eating contaminated food or water. Even the BBC, in the link that Bob provided are saying very much the same thing. And the link that Pete gave us, emotionally who is more appealing? the weather man or the hysterical news reader. I think to those who don't understand all that stuff that Pilou keeps posting, following hysteria has been known to get answers in return, and quickly. It may though, just create more hysteria?

          Two, yes. Well put. (phew- nice and short! ๐Ÿ˜‰ )

          This doesn't help though;

          @unknownuser said:

          The operators of a stricken Japanese nuclear plant have apologised for a "mistake" in reporting a radiation spike 10 million times above normal.

          โžก http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12875327

          Three, well yes and no again. this brings me back to question 1. Is the BBc about to loose credibility over its failure to keep up the hysterical momentum? I doubt it. It's actually quite refreshing to read that, after so many days of international doomongering.

          @unknownuser said:

          **On the 16th anniversary of Chernobyl, the Swedish radiation authorities, writing in the Stockholm daily Dagens Nyheter, admitted over-reacting by setting the safety level too low and condemning 78% of all reindeer meat unnecessarily, and at great cost.

          Unfortunately, the Japanese seem to be repeating the mistake. On 23 March they advised that children should not drink tap water in Tokyo, where an activity of 200 Bq per litre had been measured the day before. Let's put this in perspective. The natural radioactivity in every human body is 50 Bq per litre - 200 Bq per litre is really not going to do much harm.**

          In the Cold War era most people were led to believe that nuclear radiation presents a quite exceptional danger understood only by "eggheads" working in secret military establishments.

          To cope with the friendly fire of such nuclear propaganda on the home front, ever tighter radiation regulations were enacted in order to keep all contact with radiation As Low As Reasonably Achievable (ALARA), as the principle became known.

          This attempt at reassurance is the basis of international radiation safety regulations today, which suggest an upper limit for the general public of 1 mSv per year above natural levels.

          This very low figure is not a danger level, rather it's a small addition to the levels found in nature - a British person is exposed to 2.7 mSv per year, on average. My book Radiation and Reason argues that a responsible danger level based on current science would be 100 mSv per month, with a lifelong limit of 5,000 mSv, not 1 mSv per year.

          Which brings me to that great big chart posted by Pilou, our resident chief nuclear physicist. Come on Pilou, you can post all this mSv stuff until the colours in your face change to the opposite end of the colour spectrum to what they are right now! I love your SketchUp art, it's beautiful, but you also seem to know an awful lot about about this radioactive stuff. Would you please explain this in further detail? For example, the Fukushima reactor was designed 50 years ago. In this time the technology has improved drastically (it's improved everywhere- the Intel 4040 microprocessor is younger than that!). It is understood that spent fuel rods, that were adding to the current problem had been moved, or were in the process of being moved from one reactor to another, and then the quake struck. If this spent fuel is one of the contributing factors, what would the amount of radioactivity being produced be from them both before they had been placed in the reactor, and afterwards? It's uranium right? What are we talking about here? I only have a humble engineering degree. ๐Ÿ˜•

          Here's another to leave you on;

          Two-day diary of an aid worker in Japan;

          โžก http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12815474

          My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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          • honoluludesktopH Offline
            honoluludesktop
            last edited by

            Tom, You are a "humble" engineer!-)

            Are you attempting to change the terms of your offer?-)
            @tfdesign said:

            .... And yes, pay for me to fly to Japan, and I'll happily swim around the reactor! ...

            How do I know that you won't spent all your time, and my money in the Roppongi Bars? Sorry, you will have to go first.

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            • Rich O BrienR Offline
              Rich O Brien Moderator
              last edited by

              Some facts...

              Earth's axis has shifted as a result of the earthquake

              This has impacted on the length of the day (it's now shorter)

              Japan's east coast is 4m closer to the Americas and one meter lower

              The resultant tsunami was amplified by this drop in height

              10,000+ deceased, 20,000+ missing, 500,000 displaced

              Japan's lack of oil and gas resources resulted in the construction in 17 nuclear power plants to satisfy it's power needs

              These reactors were built on the coast to help with the cooling

              The quake disabled the troublesome reactor's cooling system, its backup batteries were only able to provide power for 8hrs

              The power plants walls were 6m in height, 1.5m below the tsunami, which destroyed the generators

              These were from Dr Iain Stewarts Horizon Documentary which aired earlier tonight on BBC2. If you missed it and can access BBC iPlayer it's worth watching. It was very informative and showed to scale of this natural disaster and how it impacted on the power plant.

              Download the free D'oh Book for SketchUp ๐Ÿ“–

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              • T Offline
                tfdesign
                last edited by

                @honoluludesktop said:

                Tom, You are a "humble" engineer!-)

                Thank you. However I'd much rather have the title of humble radical-humanist thanks ๐Ÿ˜„

                @honoluludesktop said:

                Are you attempting to change the terms of your offer?-)

                No, not at all.

                @honoluludesktop said:

                @tfdesign said:

                .... And yes, pay for me to fly to Japan, and I'll happily swim around the reactor! ...

                How do I know that you won't spent all your time, and my money in the Roppongi Bars? Sorry, you will have to go first.

                On the contrary, how will I know that you will pay me on my return? And what's to stop me from spending all my money in Roppongi bars (after all I've never been to Japan, it's one of the countries of the world I've always wanted to visit, and me and my team (you'll have to pay for their expenses too), are gonna have one heck of a party), and then charging this to you as overheads?

                I want a contract from you, signed by at least two reputable (and probably BBC/ British Embassy endorsed) solicitors (seeing that I am British one at least will be British) stating that you will emburse me all expenses and overheads on my return. Along side my expenses, I will also provide sufficient video evidence witnessed by two independent witnesses (probably even the BBC? Working with the Independent and the Guardian amonst others, has given me some very good contacts- ie producers for Channel 4. Jez Clarkson would certainly get up a lot of liberal noses! Jez would be a fun person to do this with).

                I've already put my cards on the table, are you are still playing head games with me? Because this is not a bluff, I'm deadly serious.

                regards

                Tom

                PS On a more depressing note, this image was shown in yesterday's Guardian. No, it's not nuclear fallout. Like I said, it's bloody freezing in northern Japan right now.

                โžก Snow and hyperthermia kills more people each year than nuclear fallout ever has. โ—

                http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2011/3/27/1301237088101/Woman-collects-items-in-t-020.jpg

                My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                • honoluludesktopH Offline
                  honoluludesktop
                  last edited by

                  Tom, How you spend your own money is your own business. I have already accepted your original proposal, that is to "pay for me (that is you) to fly to Japan". It seems to me that you are attempting to back down by renegotiating these terms. We don't need a contract, an escrow account will do. Just stick to your original proposal and the deal is done.

                  In fact, there should be risk on your part to perform. That you should deposit in escrow the same amount payable to me if you fail to follow through.

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                  • W Offline
                    watkins
                    last edited by

                    Wow, dueling pistols at dawn:

                    I think everyone has made their point. Time to go back to nice, lazy sketching and code writing.

                    Best wishes,

                    Bob

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                    • TIGT Offline
                      TIG Moderator
                      last edited by

                      The BBC has at last published some useful stuff about radiation levels, what a 'millisievert' is and how many we get or should be concerned about getting etc http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-12722435
                      Even then though they don't keep it simple, and talk about exposure to 'Grays' [which I had mistakenly thought flew UFOs ๐Ÿ˜• ] and then go back to 'mSv' per year, hour, lifetime, single-dose etc which make comparisons awkward...

                      This other site tries to explain Grays and mSv and introduces rads and rems to confuse us http://www.jplabs.com/html/units_of_radiation.HTM little wonder the Fukushima techniciams reported levels 1,000,000 times higher that allowed but retracted it saying it was an error [never heard what they actual decided it was ๐Ÿ˜• ] - all those bloody calculations and units [1 rem = 1000 mrem = 10 mSv = 0.01 Sv & 0.1 rad = 100 mrad = 1 mGy = 0.001 Gy & a Gray ~= sV, said the BBC ?]... and of course, 'Radioactivity is measured in Becquerels (Bq) per second. 1 Bq means one disintegration per second. It is also measured in Curie (Ci), named for Madam Curie, who shared Nobel Prize with her husband. 1 Curie = 3.7 x 1010 Bq or disintegrations per second'... these are then completely ignore on favor of the latest fashion 'Sieverts' et al, with no clue about their relationships [if any].... place your bets please... ๐Ÿ˜’
                      This is a another related table http://www.jplabs.com/html/natural___typical_exposures.html

                      TIG

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                      • T Offline
                        tfdesign
                        last edited by

                        Pistols? No, no, no.

                        No duelling pistols quite yet (or duelling 'handbags' as we once put it ๐Ÿ˜‰ ๐Ÿ˜† )

                        It has been made clear that I'm not going to get a penny out of Honolulu, and I probably never will.

                        However, this could be a fantastic oppotunity to change a lot of opinions (although I'd far prefer to change the world through debate and eating radioactive spinach). So what have I got to loose?

                        I've written to my friend in Tokyo and meanwhile, I am writing to the Japanese Embassy in London. I may get laughed at, and not taken seriously- far too dangerous they'll probably say, and I'd argue that it would avert attention away from all these fools and all that, but that would be missing the point wouldn't it?

                        I haven't the money to pull off an event like this, so If anyone wants to sponsor me, lets go for it. ๐Ÿ˜„

                        My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                        • pilouP Offline
                          pilou
                          last edited by

                          TEPCO finally asks for help international companies who sold the plant!
                          But it's not too late when Plutonium is now seeping through?
                          There were 17 days losted!
                          I am absolutly desolated to be right from the beginning!
                          Good luck to them, good luck to us, because the worst is now following!

                          Frenchy Pilou
                          Is beautiful that please without concept!
                          My Little site :)

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                          • T Offline
                            tfdesign
                            last edited by

                            Doomed I tell you! We're all DOOOMED! ๐Ÿ˜ฒ

                            [flash=425,344:27menrtp]http://www.youtube.com/v/FgsPzydgzxE?fs=1&hl=en_GB&fs=1&&[/flash:27menrtp]

                            My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                            • pilouP Offline
                              pilou
                              last edited by

                              Today that we can hear on the radio at midday in Europe
                              "Japan gouvernment says : reactors 1,2,3 out of control"
                              Does this reassuring?

                              Frenchy Pilou
                              Is beautiful that please without concept!
                              My Little site :)

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                              • T Offline
                                tfdesign
                                last edited by

                                http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2011/3/28/1301324482407/Members-of-the-Japanese-S-033.jpg

                                http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2011/3/27/1301240554995/Yukiko-Kometa-stands-in-f-030.jpg

                                http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2011/3/27/1301240556026/A-boy-celebrates-his-birt-031.jpg

                                http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2011/3/27/1301240554019/Family-members-of-an-eart-029.jpg

                                http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2011/3/28/1301324481161/A-women-cries-during-cere-032.jpg

                                Dead because of a giant tsunami caused by a magnitude 8.9 earthquake. Despite a few 'problems' (mainly exaggerated by the western press), not one fatality caused by nuclear 'fallout' or radioactivity from Fukushima. Pilou, Do these images not speak to you (I don't see anyone in 'radiation suits' either!)? ๐Ÿ˜ฒ

                                My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                                • pilouP Offline
                                  pilou
                                  last edited by

                                  Grief and desolations.

                                  My japan friends will appreciate "a few 'problems'" at the end of the chain
                                  Seism-->Tsunami-->reactors melting

                                  Frenchy Pilou
                                  Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                  My Little site :)

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                                  • T Offline
                                    tfdesign
                                    last edited by

                                    @unknownuser said:

                                    Today that we can hear on the radio at midday in Europe
                                    "Japan gouvernment says : reactors 1,2,3 out of control"
                                    Does this reassuring?

                                    Pilou, I think you hear, what you want to hear!

                                    This is what the latest BBC report says (@ 16:33 29-03-11);

                                    @unknownuser said:

                                    Water levels in underground tunnels adjoining reactors 1, 2 and 3 had been stable, the agency said.

                                    Reactor 1: Damage to the core from cooling problems. Building holed by gas explosion. Highly radioactive water detected in reactor

                                    Reactor 2: Damage to the core from cooling problems. Building holed by gas blast; containment damage suspected. Highly radioactive water detected in reactor and adjoining tunnel

                                    Reactor 3: Damage to the core from cooling problems. Building holed by gas blast; containment damage possible. Spent fuel pond partly refilled with water after running low. Highly radioactive water detected in reactor

                                    Plutonium: Found at five locations in soil - levels said to represent no danger to human health

                                    The above statement is completely open to interpretation. Highly radioactive water detected in reactor? Well that's hardly surprising is it? I see nothing about all three reactors being 'out of control'. It says nothing new at all.

                                    Emphasis again on this more important news item (although that really should be at the top of the page);

                                    @unknownuser said:

                                    The massive 9.0-magnitude quake and the tsunami on 11 March are now known to have killed more than 11,000 people, with at least 16,700 people still missing across north-eastern Japan.

                                    โžก http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12892171

                                    My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                                    • T Offline
                                      tfdesign
                                      last edited by

                                      @unknownuser said:

                                      Grief and desolations.

                                      My japan friends will appreciate "a few 'problems'" at the end of the chain
                                      Seism-->Tsunami-->reactors melting

                                      "a few problems"?

                                      11,000+++ dead? Are you mad?? ๐Ÿ˜ฒ ๐Ÿ˜•

                                      My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                                      • pilouP Offline
                                        pilou
                                        last edited by

                                        I speak of this!

                                        @unknownuser said:

                                        Despite a few 'problems' (mainly exaggerated by the western press),

                                        Frenchy Pilou
                                        Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                        My Little site :)

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                                        • T Offline
                                          tfdesign
                                          last edited by

                                          You do? ๐Ÿ˜ฒ It doesn't read like that to me! ๐Ÿ˜•

                                          It reads as if you have totally lost your reasoning! ๐Ÿ˜ฒ

                                          Perhaps it's the translation that I am getting confused by? ๐Ÿ˜•

                                          My book "Let's SketchUp!" Download from here

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                                          • pilouP Offline
                                            pilou
                                            last edited by

                                            @unknownuser said:

                                            Perhaps it's the translation that I am getting confused

                                            I have understood that you consider Fukushima as "a few problems"
                                            Sorry if that was not the case.

                                            Frenchy Pilou
                                            Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                            My Little site :)

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