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The 737MAX has a failsafe which has so far killed 346 people who would have completed their journeys safely without it. The shutdown sequence for the RBMK reactor has worked every time. Problem with Chernobyl is that the operators were experimenting with a "home-made" emergency procedure (using the residual momentum of the generators and pumps to close down the system without using the backups) that was strictly forbidden in the manual. Fukushima was correctly designed to withstand the "100 year" tsunami but not the 1000 year beast that killed it. To do so would have made the design uneconomic. Part of the problem is one of public perception: "reactors are dangerous so must be sited on the coast" or "humans cannot be trusted to fly airplanes".
Quote from: alancalverd on 03/04/2021 11:11:54The 737MAX has a failsafe which has so far killed 346 people who would have completed their journeys safely without it. The shutdown sequence for the RBMK reactor has worked every time. Problem with Chernobyl is that the operators were experimenting with a "home-made" emergency procedure (using the residual momentum of the generators and pumps to close down the system without using the backups) that was strictly forbidden in the manual. Fukushima was correctly designed to withstand the "100 year" tsunami but not the 1000 year beast that killed it. To do so would have made the design uneconomic. Part of the problem is one of public perception: "reactors are dangerous so must be sited on the coast" or "humans cannot be trusted to fly airplanes".There's always a long list of reasons why any particular thing fails. And with hindsight they're nearly always obvious. But that doesn't stop them happening. With a properly trained crew, the 737Max flights could have been saved; failure of the tail actuator- there's procedure for that which could have worked; it just wasn't in the 737 manual any more, it had been removed.Among other issues with your analysis, all conventional nuclear reactors need a large water source for cooling. Reactors are often placed on the coast because that's a good source of water.If you only design for a hundred year event, and there's several hundred reactors, then if your estimate is accurate (they're usually very conservative), that's more than one failure per year.
With a properly trained crew, the 737Max flights could have been saved;
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 05/04/2021 19:36:54With a properly trained crew, the 737Max flights could have been saved;The MCAS was introduced to remove the need for specific type training for 737-rated pilots. When I bought my first glider I was warned that, having a heavier rear fuselage and better forward visibility than the previous model, you needed a lot of nose-down trim and awareness of your angle of attack to prevent stalling at the top of the launch. No problem, standard type conversion briefing. Same could have been done for the 737MAX, rather than install one more thing that could go wrong.
You design each station for the 100 or 1000 year event at that site. AFAIK that does not include tsunamis on the UK or French coasts.
The design life of a nuclear power station is rarely more than 20 years. Most seem to last longer, but subject to major upgrade if not dismantling and demolition.Given that the halflife of some fission products exceeds 250,000 years, and the fact that no manmade structure has survived half as long, your preferred timescale is unrealistic.
On the contrary. There are currently around 440 operating nuclear power reactors, the oldest being 52 years old, with 3 major incidents of which only Chernobyl resulted in more than 10 attributable deaths. Compare this with an average of 50 deaths per year in coal mines in the USA alone over the last 50 years (and this in probably the most unionised and safety-conscious country of all) and you can see why nuclear power is regarded as safe. The most telling statistic is the 16,000 deaths caused by the tsunami that damaged Fukushima and almost completely ignored by the world's press. Water is dangerous.
Which is why you shouldn't deliberately ignore the operating manual. That's nearly two whole days' worth of COVID deaths in Brazil, a quarter of the number of people drowned by the Fukushima tsunami, or 30% more than were killed on 9/11. The difference being that none of these other events ever had an intended upside like actually supplying electricity.
Given that the halflife of some fission products exceeds 250,000 years, and the fact that no manmade structure has survived half as long, your preferred timescale is unrealistic.
Quote from: alancalverd on 06/04/2021 10:09:27Given that the halflife of some fission products exceeds 250,000 years, and the fact that no manmade structure has survived half as long, your preferred timescale is unrealistic. Those aren't the half lives that are the most problematic. The long half life species decay very slowly and so give off very little radiation over a very long period. And the very short half life species decay rapidly and are soon gone; just keep out of their way for a while. No, it's the intermediate ones, that have a half life roughly comparable to human life spans that are the main problem, they give off large amounts of radiation for annoying lengths of time.For example caesium 137 (30 year half life) and tritium (11 year half life). You don't want to get them inside you or be near them.
But does not poison even 1 percent as much land, for not 1 percent of the time, does not build radio nucleides in the environment.
Also, tritium ( decay half life 12.32 years) isn't much of a problem because it doesn't stay in the body.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_half-life#Water(And the decay energy is relatively low, so it does less damage)
Not quite. The low energy betas have a very short range in tissue so actually cause a lot of damage in a few cells - it's as nasty as many alpha emitters,
Quote from: wolfekeeper on 07/04/2021 03:19:18The long half life species decay very slowly and so give off very little radiation over a very long period. And the very short half life species decay rapidly and are soon gone; just keep out of their way for a while. No, it's the intermediate ones, that have a half life roughly comparable to human life spans that are the main problem, they give off large amounts of radiation for annoying lengths of time.For example caesium 137 (30 year half life) and tritium (11 year half life). You don't want to get them inside you or be near them.I understand what you are saying viz a vi's zapping radiation but it is usually if you injest these particles that they are the greatest threat. Plutonium has an very long half life, if on the skin it can be washed off, if injested it is pretty much lethal.
The long half life species decay very slowly and so give off very little radiation over a very long period. And the very short half life species decay rapidly and are soon gone; just keep out of their way for a while. No, it's the intermediate ones, that have a half life roughly comparable to human life spans that are the main problem, they give off large amounts of radiation for annoying lengths of time.For example caesium 137 (30 year half life) and tritium (11 year half life). You don't want to get them inside you or be near them.