Nuclear reactor expert? That's me. Do you like nuclear technology?
Nuclear Reactors: Are you a fan?
Does anyone here need an expert in nuclear reactor technology and operation?
I was thinking about writing a series on nuclear reactors. For some of it, I would need to do some research, as not all of them are the same. But since I am a trained reactor operator, and likely the only one active on Steem, I thought perhaps I might get some interest.
The major current events have to do with Japan and Fukushima Daiichi. I am not too familiar with TEPCO and their reactor plants. However, with some research into the specifics, I can definitely distill this information down to a level that most people can understand.
Please comment if you would like to cover a specific issue. Nuclear technology surprising covers a wide and varied scope. This is why it's difficult for journalism folks to write about.
Here's a few topics:
- Safety of commercial plants
- reactor design criteria
- nuclear accident causes and analysis
- the future of nuclear reactors
- naval use of nuclear reactors
- cost of nuclear reactors
- cradle to grave nuclear waste disposal
- nuclear reactors in space
- are nuclear reactors and the environment
I am qualified to write about these topics. But they are expensive in terms of expertise and research. At my present level of influence on STEEM, I would find it unprofitable to write at length on these topics. I will probably need to gather a following of STEEMIANS who are interested in this content and are willing to vote for it.
I am an expert on this subject. I have written about the topic before.
If communities in STEEM ever get started, I would like to be a founding member of the nuclear technology community. I would also like to be the leader of it.
I would like for you to comment about this idea, and if you would like to follow me, please be aware that I might have some other interests which take precedence over nuclear reactor technology. But I think you will be interested nonetheless.
Thanks, ya'll ... Keep steemin! @uruiamme out!
It's for sure a fascinating topic, radioactivity! And I would love to read more. I had a "neuclear reactor" class in university where we were using a scientific reactor (and it's radiation) to e.g. determine the material of a probe. I do somewhat understand the concerns for nuclear power, at the same time I believe that it is one of the cleaner energies on the planet. For sure there is more to it than just power generation, so - feel free to throw some stuff at us!
This fascinating topic is so complicated, I explain it to people like this.
You know how doctors and lawyers go to university, then go to special schools and study reams and reams of textbooks on their specialty?
Nuclear scientists and engineers have got that level of information to learn about their subject. There are so many specifics to it that general lessons just can't cover even the basics.
I'm interest to read about it. I find science very interesting in al of its wide departments (i am an ecology student) and would really like to read more about the Nucleur part of science.
Great! You like the science aspect of it, or the engineering? The safety? Environmental? The operational concerns? Or what?
upvoted and followed. Would like to learn more about this
What part strikes your fancy? I listed a whole host of subjects that relate to it.
Nothing in particular, I'm a complete noob on this subject and all your topics seem interesting but if I had to choose two I would say reactor design and the future of reactors.
It would be awesome know about different types of nuclear reactors. Following and upvote my friend.
It would be awesome know about different types of nuclear reactors.
Historical, present, or future ones?
Successful, notorious, or low-power research designs?
Military or civilian?
Peaceful or bomb-related designs?
I saw a documentary on Netflix I wile ago. Can't remember the name, maybe is ***"Pandora's Box".
They talk about reactors that use the waste of first generation reactors to deplete the fuel... But that in fact the new generation reactors are more safe and efficient.
That might be...
Interesting. Re-using old reactor waste could become a "hot" topic. (Oh, my sides are splitting from that joke!)
I think it might be a bit difficult to launch into newer designs without having a good understanding of earlier ones. By the time I got into reactors, a number of things had been tried, but basically the 1960s designs are essentially the worldwide de facto standard.
That's because of politics, a topic which confronts nuclear reactor principles like a cold, hard neutron ray.
What do you say about going over some of the basics? You interested in the nuts and bolts or the glossy brochures about reactor design? I shouldn't get super technical on some things, but I can probably knock your socks off in some areas.
Just so you know, I wrote a number of things at Wikipedia, and that is a cantankerous and difficult medium for my writings. Over there, it's hard or impossible to get into life experiences, anecdotes, and specifics. Steem is as lot more free in that sense for authors... it's the users who sort of "pay" for the privilege to read the content.
Sure sure... I'll be waiting your entries...
My ignorance is so thick on this subject that I suspect we must have been kept in the dark on this matter. (At least not shivering in the dark though, we do seem to have power everywhere I've been.)
Let's confront our misconceptions first. I remember reading some 20-25 years ago that if it weren't for all the monopolistic Rules & Regs we could have micro "pebble reactors" that would power large neighborhoods, communities, farm or industrial towns very safely, efficiently and cheaply. (Libertarian daydream?)
There is also an urban, anarcho-libertarian concept that nuclear weapons are bogus, a myth, a psyop, a fear tactic, false info, a paper tiger, a death threat, mental terrorism, a ghost story to put the children to bed. It does have a ring of truth to it... Search The Daily Bell before saying anything -- you have been subjected to severe brainwashing. Examine what you believe. (Here I'm not talking to @uruiamme)
I looked at a few Daily Bell articles to see what you're referring to.
It just so happens, I read their article on North Korea and their atomic weapons program.
And it just so happens that I know something about this situation that few outside the US government or part of an ally's spy agency apparatus would know.
Let me cut to the chase. The US government can verify what the N. Koreans are doing, independent of their press releases, and independent of any seismologic disturbance. The intelligence community of the US probably knows when Kim Jong Il blows his nose. The theory that nuclear weapons are in any way imaginary or paper tigers is not credible, whether in the hands of NK or the US.
I can present the evidence of inflated nuclear bomb damage assessments, but even those reassessments put them into the mass destruction category.
A simple google search of the Mike crater should serve as ample proof. I don't prefer my Bikinis with craters in the middle, but Castle Bravo made another one.
OK. The part I was reading was more historical, if not hysterical, regarding the firebombing of Japan, not only Tokyo but Nagasaki and even Hiroshima indicating that the real bomb wasn't yet ready and they faked it. And all the original movie footage looks very suspicious and there are lots of cheap video explanations. And you'll find a nasty brick wall around any serious investigation or even serious comment about the subject over long stretches of time. Look how much TNT and other explosives they constantly tinkered with. Blowing big holes in things was childsplay. So they took some pictures of that, where's the reporting. How many people saw the crater. What went on there before and after. What an information blackout! History's full of holes. Black holes it seems. there must be lots of information surrounding Big Mike and Castle Bravo those legendary hyper-terrorist firecrackers.
I think that jibes with what ... No, what do I know Korea? Casi nada.
As for the ubiquitous "reactor on every street corner," I am unaware that this was proposed. There has been a lot of "atoms for peace" proposals, but these were in vogue in the 1950s, not 1990s. The later designs were hyped up in certain circles, but I didn't know there was such ambitious predictions of their ubiquity.
As to the myth factor, I have studied a version of what you are saying. The myth that really has been researched and really is a thing is that the military exaggerated, sometimes to a large degree, the damage potential (short and long-term) of nuclear weapons. Somewhat mitigating this is the severe panic and you might want to cal it "psyops" that surround Fukushima Daiichi. The exclusion zone due to that relatively minor nuclear incident (compared to a bomb) is large and notorious. If such a little "explosion" can cause such widespread damage in a rural area, the surely the military of the 1940s to 1960s were correct in their assessment of how bomb would damage a city, make it uninhabitable, etc.
But not so fast. Was this a self-fulfilling prophecy of those 1950s experiments on bombs? Fukushima had so little fallout, yet a huge exclusion area. So does Chernobyl. What's the answer?
I still feel there's a myth involved here, and government misinformation. Hard to explain in a comment. :)
Hmm, I may have been reading Popular Science/Mechanics at the barbershop and it could have been post-millennium rather than pre-millennium. "Just the other day" often turns out to be a couple of decades ago (when even the remaining hair on the body has turned grey).
Still we are only heating water to create steam to turn a turbine. How complicated is that? The concern then is what if we don't need nuclear fuel at all, why not natural gas?
I am a little surprised to hear that Fukushima was relatively minor and the fear and panic was much ado about nothing. I thought the double or triple meltdown was downplayed and even blacked out and that huge levels or radiation came in by air and by sea without any safety warnings, while federal regulations were scrapped to just allow it. ¿No?
But, we are only here to learn and that is often best achieved by keeping quiet ... and listening. I'm willing to drop my preconceived notions and find out, why the devil do those rocks burn so hot and what makes them tick?
And yes, I'm still curious, would a free-market have chosen nuclear power? Do we or can we control it? Is it useful to mankind or just a dangerous boondoggle?
Good food. For. Thought. I think I will save some of my responses for a full article. I'm going to take some notes so I can get back to them.
The short version is that Fukushima is a catastrophe, but not just in the radiological sense. IF people want to live in an exclusion zone, there shouldn't be an exclusion zone. But because the governments of all nations are effectively driven by either high medical expenditures shared by taxpayers (centralized healthcare) or the industry is regulated by the long arm of the lawsuit (ad hoc class action lawsuits), the areas just have to be excluded. True enough, I wouldn't pick that place to live, but if my work took me there as a nuclear scientist, I wouldn't lose sleep over an elevated radioactive background, the occasional contaminated thing.
It's a bit over-the-top if you ask me. Now, Chernobyl is probably an order of magnitude worse, but even it's not the uninhabitable city that it's made out to be. If the same amount of work is done after a nuclear incident like it would be after a major earthquake or tsunami or hurricane... those places would be livable.
My point is that if this is such a global community, why not send all the displaced people to an uninhabited land and spend money on new infrastructure? But no, that's not what tax money is for... and we have international borders ... we can't just do that. So they don't clean it up, they don't allow anyone to live there, and they just want displaced people to live in some other crowded place. And since the government worked hand-in-hand with the reactor operators... You have articles like this: http://www.ien.com/safety/news/20855195/tepco-govt-liable-in-fukushima-lawsuit which would have happened sooner in the US. You see that both TEPCO and the government are being held responsible?
That's correct. It took two to tango.
Stupid people should not be in charge of nuclear safety. That has borne itself out numerous times.