Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta nuclear. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta nuclear. Mostrar todas as mensagens

20090426

The Zone

On 26 April 1986 01:23:45 a.m. reactor number four at the Chernobyl plant, near Pripyat in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, exploded. Further explosions and the resulting fire sent a plume of highly radioactive fallout into the atmosphere and over an extensive geographical area. Four hundred times more fallout was released than had been by the atomic bombing of Hiroshima

20081004

atomic age


"We must abandon the unworkable notion that it is morally reprehensible for some countries to pursue weapons of mass destruction, yet morally acceptable for others to rely on them for security - and indeed to continue to refine their capacities and postulate plans for their use."
Mohamed ElBaradei - Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency

20080114

european monster

JET, the Joint European Torus, is the largest nuclear fusion experimental reactor yet built.

The reactor is situated on an old Navy airfield near Culham, Oxfordshire, in the UK: the construction of the buildings which house the project was undertaken by Tarmac Construction, starting in 1978 with the first experiments beginning in 1983.

JET is equipped with remote handling facilities to cope with the radioactivity produced by Deuterium-Tritium (D-T) fuel, which is the fuel proposed for the first generation of fusion power plants. Pending construction of ITER, JET remains the only large fusion reactor with facilities dedicated to handling the radioactivity released from D-T fusion. The power production record breaking runs from JET and TFTR used 50-50 D-T fuel mixes.

During a full D-T experimental campaign in 1997 JET achieved a world record peak fusion power of 16 MW which equates to a measured Q of approximately 0.7. Q is the ratio of fusion alpha heating power to input heating power, a self-sustaining nuclear fusion reaction would have an infinite Q value (requiring no external heating). In order to achieve a burning plasma, a Q value greater than 1 is required. This figure does not include other power requirements for operation, most notably confinement. A commercial fusion reactor would probably need a QJT-60 tokamak, however this was not achieved under real D-T conditions but estimated from experiments performed with a pure Deuterium (D-D) plasma. Similar extrapolations have not been made for JET, however it is likely that increases in Q over the 1997 measurements could now be achieved if permission to run another full D-T campaign was granted.

In December 1999 JET's international contract ended and the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) then took over managing the safety and operation of the JET facilities on behalf of its European partners. From that time (2000), JET's experimental programme was then co-ordinated by the European Fusion Development Agreement (EFDA) Close Support Unit.

JET operated throughout 2003 culminating in experiments using small amounts of tritium. For most of 2004 it was shut down for a series of major upgrades increasing total available heating power to over 40 MW, enabling further studies relevant to the development of ITER to be undertaken. In the future it is possible that JET-EP (Enhanced Performance) will further increase the record for fusion power.

In late September 2006, experimental campaign C16 was started. Its objective is to study ITER-like operation scenarios.

Image: EFDA-JET (+)

20070806

remember hiroshima


Hiroshima 6-8-1945

And the question is, how can the only country in the world that used nuclear weapons against another country, killing about 140.000 people and exposing and killing hundreds between 1950 and 1990, critize other countries for using nuclear energy ?

i really think it's kind of ironic, isn't it?