• The radiation effects from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster are the observed and predicted effects as a result of the release of radioactive isotopes from the Fukushima Daiichii Nuclear Power Plant following the 2011 Tōhoku 9.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami (Great East Japan Earthquake and the resultant tsunami). (wikipedia.org)
  • A June 2012 Stanford University study estimated, using a linear no-threshold model, that the radioactivity release from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant could cause 130 deaths from cancer globally (the lower bound for the estimate being 15 and the upper bound 1100) and 199 cancer cases in total (the lower bound being 24 and the upper bound 1800), most of which are estimated to occur in Japan. (wikipedia.org)
  • 3. At one plant, the 40-year old Fukushima Daiichi (unit #1 opened in 1971), the backup diesel generators supply power to the core cooling system failed (apparently due to damage from the tsunami). (blogspot.com)
  • Are the meltdowns at Fukushima Daiichi over? (candobetter.net)
  • Made all the more prevalent a year out from it's initial release by the recent robotic expeditions into Reactor #2 which gave us a clearer picture on just how deadly the radiation levels are, watch Chief Engineer and nuclear expert Arnie Gundersen inform viewers on what's going on at the Japanese nuclear meltdown site, Fukushima Daiichi. (candobetter.net)
  • As the Japanese government and utility owner Tokyo Electric Power Company push for the quick decommissioning and dismantling of this man-made disaster, the press and scientists need to ask, "Why is the Ukrainian government waiting at least 100 years to attempt to decommission Chernobyl, while the Japanese Government and TEPCO claim that Fukushima Daiichi will be decommissioned and dismantled during the next 30 years? (candobetter.net)
  • To understand Fukushima Daiichi, you need to follow the money. (candobetter.net)
  • BBC Radio interviewed nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen to discuss TEPCO's attempts to send a special robot into Fukushima Daiichi Reactor #2 in Japan to investigate the obstacles in the way of TEPCO's progress determining the location and condition of the atomic fuel. (candobetter.net)
  • It also describes what did Tokyo electrical and the government does in such a situation and how they will improve the safety in the company wich caused the disaster.Introduction:20110311-221224586176159.jpg04d7dff2a83265.jpgThis report tells an overview and a timeline for the earthquake, tsunami, and the nuclear accident at Tokyo Electric Power Company's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. (essaymonster.net)
  • It was a severe earthquake measuring 9.0 on the Richter scale occurred 112 miles off the coast of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. (essaymonster.net)
  • The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was constructed in 1971 under government authorization, in spite of fervent protests by local residents. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • At about 2:22 Eastern Daylight Time a journalist sent me a brief email to inform me that Dr. Jaczko had just told the House Energy and Commerce committee that the fuel pool at Fukushima Daiichi unit 4 was dry. (atomicinsights.com)
  • The release of radioactive isotopes from reactor containment vessels was a result of venting in order to reduce gaseous pressure, and the discharge of coolant water into the sea. (wikipedia.org)
  • In the north of Ukraine, then a Soviet republic, Chernobyl nuclear power plant was a thriving extensive enterprise served by the purpose-built town of Pripyat when on April 26th, 1986, reactor No 4 exploded, vaporising about five per cent of the core and spewing radioactive flames and gases high into the air. (drb.ie)
  • Note that the longer fuel is irradiated in the reactor core, the more radioactive it becomes due to the build-up of fission by-products which also contaminate the fuel limiting its usable life. (apjjf.org)
  • Radioactive fallout from a nuclear reactor can be considered in two groups: isotopes of the noble gases (xenon, krypton-133) are radioactive elements with a very low chemical reactivity, relatively short half-lives, are not retained by the body and they remain and become dispersed in the air without ground deposition. (apjjf.org)
  • TV footage showed smoke rising from Fukushima plant's reactor 3, a day after an explosion hit reactor 1. (blogspot.com)
  • INFORMATION released by environmental organisation Koeberg Alert Alliance (KAA), point to ongoing reactor design problems associated with normal operations at the plant. (medialternatives.com)
  • They become radioactive due to neutron bombardment as they circulate through the reactor with the primary circuit cooling water. (medialternatives.com)
  • Now, I'm as concerned as the next guy (maybe more so) over contamination from the Fukushima reactor accident . (sevendeadlysynapses.com)
  • Unfortunately, due to a combination of design flaws and human errors, Reactor No. 4 experienced a catastrophic failure during the safety test, resulting in a series of explosions, a graphite fire, and the release of a significant amount of radioactive materials into the atmosphere. (picturesinhistory.com)
  • As the pumps stopped, the reactors overheated due to the high radioactive weaken the heat that normally continues for hours or days after a nuclear reactor shuts down. (essaymonster.net)
  • The second and more dangerous radioactive fallout group is represented by mainly the radioactive isotopes of iodine, cesium, and tellurium. (apjjf.org)
  • Those that pose the greatest health threat are Cesium-137 (half-life 30 years) and Iodine-131 (half- life 8 days). (apjjf.org)
  • Cesium takes between 10 days and 100 days for half of it to be excreted from the body so there is significant hazard once it is absorbed. (apjjf.org)
  • 1996. Burning radionuclide question: What happens to iodine, cesium and chlorine in biomass fires? (cdc.gov)
  • The releases contained many dangerous radioactive chemicals, including cesium 137, cobalt 60, iodine 131 and strontium 90. (sanonofre.com)
  • Cesium 137 has a radioactive life of over 300 years, cobalt 60′s over 50 years, and strontium 90′s almost 300. (sanonofre.com)
  • Uranium is weakly radioactive because all its isotopes are unstable (with half-lives of the six naturally known isotopes, uranium-233 to uranium-238, varying between 69 years and 4.5 billion years). (ipfs.io)
  • The west coasts of the United States and Canada, Mexico, and Hawaii are being intentionally targeted by dangerous radiation from the March 11, 2011 tectonic warfare earthquake and nuclear meltdown events at Fukushima, Japan. (amfir.com)
  • Radiation from the Japan quake/nuclear meltdown events at Fukushima is intentionally being steered into these areas in order to dose the land and the food with radiation. (amfir.com)
  • Fairewinds' chief engineer Arnie Gundersen outlines major inconsistencies and double-speak by the IAEA, Japanese Government, and TEPCO claiming that the Fukushima accident is over. (sanonofre.com)
  • Such obstacles stymie the demand for proper wide-ranging studies into the actual consequences of massive lasting contamination of living beings. (drb.ie)
  • The spread of airborne contamination is unlikely to be evenly distributed due to many variables including the prevailing winds, the altitude the contamination reaches before dispersion and the time period of release. (apjjf.org)
  • In order to protect Japan from the radioactive contamination , Ministry of the Environment reinforced their radiation monitoring system. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • Pour protéger le Japon de toute contamination radioactive , Le ministère de l'Environnement a renforcé son système de surveillance de la radioactivité. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • The organisation has previously drawn attention to routine Tritium releases and the resulting contamination of borehole water and the water table surrounding Koeberg, in its submissions on the environmental impact of a previous project known as Nuclear 1 - is now concerned about further issues which have emerged from an informal forensic study of the discharge. (medialternatives.com)
  • Ils avaient été déplacés à la ferme de l'Université de Tokyo qui est à 130 km de la centrale nucléaire de Fukushima. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • 10 millions Bq de Cs-134/137 sont toujours relâchés par la centrale de Fukushima toutes les heures. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • Arnie Gundersen of Fairwinds Associates (a leading nuclear expert) and Warren Pollock ( http://www.wepollock.com ) redefine the Fukushima nuclear incidents (meltdowns and explosions) in terms of human and total cost. (sanonofre.com)
  • It is believed that the health effects of the radioactivity release are primarily psychological rather than physical effects. (wikipedia.org)
  • 2002. The accidental sinking of the nuclear submarine, the Kursk: monitoring of radioactivity and the preliminary assessment of the potential impact of radioactive releases. (cdc.gov)
  • Results has shown the loss of electric power at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant (FD-NPP) developed into a disaster causing huge release of radioactivity into the atmosphere. (essaymonster.net)
  • According to the plant's 2007 Radioactive Effluent Release Report to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, there were 202 liquid effluent "batch" releases that year. (sanonofre.com)
  • Third, I turn to Sen's impor-tant work on famines in authoritarian regimes to consider, by analogy, exposure to radiation in order to reflect on the ongoing nuclear disaster in Fukushima. (apjjf.org)
  • [ 1 ] The main challenge was adapting the existing models, whose primary focus was containing a hazardous material release, to one that reflected the chaos of a large-scale disaster involving a large number of affected individuals. (medscape.com)
  • This study identifies to us a lot of things about fukushima whether the disaster was neutrally or made by humans and it describes the industrial process and operation of fukushima. (essaymonster.net)
  • The Fukushima nuclear disaster has shown that nuclear reactors are fundamentally dangerous. (essaymonster.net)
  • Millions of people who live near nuclear reactors are at high risk.Identify whether the fukushima nuclear disaster was caused naturally or was manmade. (essaymonster.net)
  • Add to this fact that there has been a 600% increase in Meniere's cases in Fukushima following the disaster at the nuclear power plant in 2011, adrenal and metabolic issues have been linked to Meniere's and we see a pattern through the endocrine-thyroid-immune system with many cases of Meniere's. (menieres-help.com)
  • And while Japan's disaster-proof security systems are among the best in the world, as fate would have it, all safety mechanisms failed to work as powers cut off, exposing radioactive fuel rods into the open air and ultimately causing the full meltdown of three nuclear reactors. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • Immediately following the disaster last year, Japanese TV personality Otsuka Norikazu, in an act of courage to show that the situation was under control, ate vegetables produced from the affected region on live television. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • Kanesaki, a Fukushima resident, had worked as a tour guide for the nuclear power plant before the disaster. (brandeisinternational.com)
  • Radioactive particles from the incident, including iodine-131 and caesium-134/137, have since been detected at atomospheric radionuclide sampling stations around the world, including in California and the Pacific Ocean. (wikipedia.org)
  • Regarding releases to air and water leakage from Fukushima, the main radionuclide from among the many kinds of fission products in the fuel was volatile iodine-131, which has a half-life of 8 days. (world-nuclear.org)
  • The United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation is expected to release a final report on the effects of radiation exposure from the accident by the end of 2013. (wikipedia.org)
  • After the Chernobyl accident, only 0.1% of the 110,000 cleanup workers surveyed have so far developed leukemia, although not all cases resulted from the accident Estimated effective doses from the Fukushima accident outside Japan are considered to be below (or far below) the dose levels regarded as very small by the international radiological protection community. (wikipedia.org)
  • There is also often some leakage from fuel elements of fission products, including noble gases and iodine-131. (world-nuclear.org)
  • This allowed pressure to build up in at least one of the reactors cores to about 50% higher than normal (unit 1), and requires venting of very mildly radioactive steam (contains trace levels of tritium). (blogspot.com)
  • f.e. been hearing of exposed/non-exposed MOX/regular rods/cores in 1/2/3 reactors and anyway Fukushima 1 insides are not in a pretty shape after that explosion with 1tn reinforced concrete slabs flying for 100m. (blogspot.com)
  • Describe the industrial process and operation of the fukushima nuclear planetThe plant take in 6 separate boiling water reactors originally designed by General Electric which maintained by the Tokyo Electric Power Company. (essaymonster.net)
  • Radon and thoron (collectively called rfadon) are natural radioactive decay products of Uranium-238 and Thorium-232. (studyres.com)
  • Moreover, irradiation of boron dissolved in the coolant water creates hydrogen-3, i.e. tritium, the radioactive isotope of hydrogen. (medialternatives.com)
  • The explosion and fire released large amounts of radioactive material into the atmosphere, which spread across Europe. (picturesinhistory.com)
  • Considerable amounts of xenon-133 and iodine-131 were vented, but most of the caesium-137 (14 out of 15 PBq total) along with most of the Cs-134 apparently came from unit 2 on or after 15 March - the only one of the four units which did not suffer a hydrogen explosion demolishing its superstructure. (world-nuclear.org)
  • These elements form fine suspended particles in the air (aerosols), which due to their weight will gradually end up falling on the ground when released into the air, contaminating all vegetation, clothing and any other surfaces including water sources. (apjjf.org)
  • Preliminary dose-estimation reports by WHO and the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) indicate that, outside the geographical areas most affected by radiation, even in locations within Fukushima prefecture, the predicted risks remain low and no observable increases in cancer above natural variation in baseline rates are anticipated. (wikipedia.org)
  • It is the chief hazard for the plant workers, who wear film badges so that the dose can be monitored. (world-nuclear.org)
  • A short-term dose of 1000 mSv (1 Sv) is about the threshold of acute radiation syndrome (sickness). (world-nuclear.org)
  • On 17 March, NISA set 250 mSv as the maximum allowable dose for Fukushima recovery workers, under health physics controls. (world-nuclear.org)
  • En considérant que la dose annuelle moyenne est de 2,4 mSv, ce niveau de dose ne devrait pas être mortel. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • Dynamic versus static equilibrium, escalated dose exposures to the Japanese children and nuclear workers, and the blending of radioactive materials with non-contaminated material and spreading this contaminated ash throughout Japan are only a small part of this ongoing nuclear tragedy. (sanonofre.com)
  • There was no explosion, though fission products were progressively released inside the building. (world-nuclear.org)
  • However, 167 Fukushima plant workers received radiation doses that slightly elevate their risk of developing cancer. (wikipedia.org)
  • This is only a hazard for those on the plant site, and the level diminishes with distance from the radioactive source. (world-nuclear.org)
  • After the hydrogen explosion in unit 1 on 12 March, some radioactive caesium and iodine were detected in the vicinity of the plant, having been released via the venting. (world-nuclear.org)
  • France's Institute for Radiological Protection & Nuclear Safety (IRSN) estimated that maximum external doses to people living around the plant were unlikely to exceed 30 mSv/yr in the first year. (world-nuclear.org)
  • These were transferred to Tokyo University's farm, where is 130km from Fukushima nuclear plant. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • 10 million Bq of Cs-134/137 is still released from Fukushima plant every single hour. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • Ms. Moret states that the group behind the March 11, 2011 events at the Fukushima nuclear plant is the same war crimes racketeering organization behind the false flag operations of September 11, 2001, Hurricane Katrina (2005), the Haiti earthquake (2010) and other HAARP-triggered false flag operations. (amfir.com)
  • However, a December 2012 UNSCEAR statement to the Fukushima Ministerial Conference on Nuclear Safety advised that "because of the great uncertainties in risk estimates at very low doses, UNSCEAR does not recommend multiplying very low doses by large numbers of individuals to estimate numbers of radiation-induced health effects within a population exposed to incremental doses at levels equivalent to or lower than natural background levels. (wikipedia.org)
  • Iodine-131 decays to inert and stable xenon-131. (world-nuclear.org)
  • On 16 March, Japan's Nuclear Safety Commission recommended local authorities to instruct evacuees under 40 years of age leaving the 20 km zone to ingest stable iodine as a precaution against ingestion ( e.g. via milk) of radioactive iodine-131. (world-nuclear.org)
  • Is the Japanese government and the IAEA protecting the nuclear industry and not the people of Japan by claiming that Fukushima is stable when it is not? (sanonofre.com)
  • The intensified pressure caused a catastrophic explosion, propelling the reactor's roof into the air and unleashing plumes of radiation along with burning and radioactive debris. (picturesinhistory.com)
  • Nickel, since it has 30 neutrons, loses a proton and gains a neutron to become radioactive Cobalt-58, which itself experiences its own decay chain. (medialternatives.com)
  • Further I-131 and Cs-137 and Cs-134 were apparently released during the following few days, particularly following the hydrogen explosion at unit 3 on 14 March and at unit 4 on 15 March. (world-nuclear.org)
  • In assessing the significance of atmospheric releases, the Cs-137 figure is multiplied by 40 and added to the I-131 number to give an 'iodine-131 equivalent' figure. (world-nuclear.org)
  • equivalent to releases from four bombs like the one dropped on Hiroshima. (drb.ie)
  • The main goal of radon regulation is that no worker in Finland is excessively exposed to radioactive radon gas that may cause lung cancer. (stuk.fi)
  • The Hirakud Dam authorities had allegedly opened nine gates during the non-monsoon season which led to the tragic incident as no caution was sounded before the release of the water. (buildcoza.co.za)
  • In this Sunday's installment, we'll see how chemicals in our brain and even the bacteria that live in our gut drive this process. (sevendeadlysynapses.com)
  • Very strong words from team Brockovich who seems to be moving full steam ahead with the aim of seeing Stericycle come out like burnt toast…kind of like the dusty, ashy plumes that often billow from their short smoke stacks. (environews.tv)
  • So Cal Edison is now burying 136 Chernobyl's of radioactive waste 100 feet from the ocean in thin cans. (sanonofre.com)
  • Let's hope this radioactive dust will come with a label mentioning its origin. (fukushima-diary.com)
  • The major weaknesses in the bond markets of Europe and Japan are strengths for the U.S. bond market, as investment capital will rapidly navigate away from perceived risk towards perceived short/medium-term safety. (blogspot.com)
  • The weather warfare capabilities of HAARP and the GWEN towers systems are being used to create weather patterns (such as tornadoes) and rain that bring radiation as high as in the Fukushima area of Japan on the southeast, mid west, southwest and west coasts of the United States. (amfir.com)
  • 1. "Japan Nuclear Iodine Radiation" doesn't make much sense to me. (sevendeadlysynapses.com)
  • The World Health Organization (WHO) released a report that estimates an increase in risk for specific cancers for certain subsets of the population inside the Fukushima Prefecture. (wikipedia.org)
  • If there is a loss of water or a failure of replenishment, the spent fuel will overheat and catch fire, releasing its radiotoxic contents. (apjjf.org)
  • The measured levels can be caused by a reduced amount of shielding above the still radioactive used fuel. (atomicinsights.com)
  • The aftermaths of Hiroshima and Nagasaki offered a glimpse of the hazards, and a Nobel Prize-winning 1946 study connected x-ray radiation to human mutations. (theverge.com)
  • It would thus take 70 days to become half as radioactive, another 70 days to become a quarter and so on, and is thus radioactive for months. (medialternatives.com)
  • These releases lasted a total of 489 hours, or over 20 days. (sanonofre.com)
  • These ion pairs can then chemically react with other pathways within living cells and, if sufficient in number, will disrupt cellular function, including damage to DNA. (medscape.com)
  • Iodine-131 is a beta emitter and is absorbed into the blood stream through inhalation and ingestion and concentrated by the thyroid gland where it is highly carcinogenic, predominantly in young people under 18 years of age. (apjjf.org)
  • Living room : 1 sofa bed for 2 people, 1 single bed in the entrance. (buildcoza.co.za)
  • These levels are so radioactive that a human would be dead within a minute of exposure and specially designed robots can only survive for about 2 hours. (candobetter.net)
  • Also ten times more iodine is attributed to unit 2 than unit 1, while unit 3 produced half as much as unit 1. (world-nuclear.org)
  • So I think that is a very, very good summary of the purpose and the perpetrators and the applications for this horrific weapon system, and the Fukushima power politics expose who is behind it. (amfir.com)
  • The second group identified for priority action includes those whose lives have been directly and significantly affected but who are already in a position to support themselves. (wiseinternational.org)