Showing posts with label nuclear power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nuclear power. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

North Korean Radioactive Gases Cloud Japanese Skies





The Guardian posted this story yesterday.  It basically says that scientific studies prove that North Korea detonated nuclear bombs in a test, and the nuclear radiation spread with the wind to Japan.  The question is, is that considered a nuclear attack? Do you have to have an explosion to negatively impact the civilian population of another sovereign nation? Only time will tell and it will be difficult to determine if any cancer symptoms from nuclear radiation exposure are from the North Korean tests, or from Fukushima's nuclear reactor meltdown following the tsunami of 2011 that hit the northern coast of Japan.  Either way, ignorance is NOT bliss, right?

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A nuclear monitoring station in Japan has recorded what could be the first radioactive noble gases from February's nuclear test in North Korea.
The station in Takasaki, about 1,000km from North Korea's Punggye-ri nuclear test site, is operated by the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization, which made the announcement yesterday.
Radioactive isotopes of the noble gas xenon – xenon-131m and xenon-133 – were detected, something the organisation called "rather unusual."
The measurements, almost two months after Pyongyang said it had carried out the underground detonation, gave no indication of whether plutonium or highly enriched uranium was used, the organisation said.
The time that had passed before the so-called noble gases were picked up made it "very difficult" to distinguish between the two fissile materials, said spokeswoman Annika Thunborg.
Noble gases are one of four things the organisation looks out for in its nuclear monitoring process, because the gases can be released by either slowly seeping through rock and sediment from underground to the surface after a nuclear test or come from activity at a test site.
The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization said the ratio of the detected xenon isotopes is consistent with a nuclear fission event occurring more than 50 days before the detection, matching the timeframe for the North Korean nuclear test. Further, atmospheric modeling indicates the isotopes could be carried from Punggye-ri to Takasaki.
But the organisation isn't quite ready yet to say the detection is definitely linked to the February test in North Korea. "We are in the process of eliminating other possible sources that could explain the observations; the radionuclides could have come from a nuclear reactor or other nuclear activity under certain specific conditions, but so far we do not have information on such a release," Mika Nikkinen said in a statement.
The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organization's monitoring system was one of the first to indicat that North Korea had conducted its nuclear test. The organisation maintains almost 100 stations monitoring the tell-tale seismic activity that occurs with a nuclear test. On 12 February those stations recorded the event at 2:57:51 UTC (11:57:51 local time). The test was measured at magnitude 4.9 and located at latitude 41.313 degrees north and longitude 129.101 degrees east.

Friday, May 27, 2011

#GE only plan to produce #solar for 80000? USA has 100M households

This is one of the worlds largest companies and this is the best they can do. And the CEO gets a seat next to Obama?

Clipped from peakoil.com

Solar May Be Cheaper Than Fossil, Nuclear Power in Five Years, GE Says

The thin-film panels will be manufactured at a plant that GE intends to open in 2013. The company said in April that the factory will have about 400 employees and make enough panels each year to power about 80,000 homes.

Solar power may be cheaper than electricity generated by fossil fuels and nuclear reactors within three to five years because of innovations, said Mark M. Little, the global research director for General Electric Co. (GE)

Read more at peakoil.com