
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Caustic Saint wrote:Which has nothing to do with the discussion of current events in Japan.
But if you'd like to keep going on this tangent, by all means. Just start a new topic down in Beyond Fucked, as that's the place for such a discussion.
cstaylor wrote:NHK reports the smoke is coming from the spent fuel pool and that the smoke is darkish gray.
canman wrote:Just read that TEPCO has evacuated all staff from the reactor area.
Caustic Saint wrote:Here's an email I just got from a Navy friend at 11:20 today:
"Maybe you don't want to keep hearing this. We just got a big sample that looks like it will equate to 2.2 rem to the thyroid per day down here allowing for a 40% fall-off from the point where the reading was taken to down here. We are going to start distributing KI (potassium iodide), I think. The book says when expected dose is 5 rems per day, you should take KI if you are pregnant or under 16. We are looking at 2.2 rems per day in Yokosuka, but another (conservative) school of thought is, you start taking KI well in advance of 5 rems. The significant point is, something is still coming out of these reactors that is not being reported to the press.
Anyway, don't panic. Stay out of the rain, though."
canman wrote:Japan Today.
After the smoke was spotted at the southeast of the building around 3:55 p.m., TEPCO said it had temporarily evacuated its workers from the site as it assessed the situation.
[6:26a.m. Monday ET, 7:26 p.m. Monday Tokyo] White smoke rose early Monday evening from the No. 2 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, a Japanese nuclear and industrial safety agency said. The cause of the smoke was not immediately known, Hidehiko Nishiyama said.
ttjereth wrote:2.2 rem in Yokosuka??? That's a hell of a lot higher than all of the published numbers I am seeing. all the reports I am seeing say .020~ MICROsieverts in Chiba and this guy is saying 22 MILLI in Kanagawa??:sad:
cstaylor wrote:2.2rem per day, not per hour.
cstaylor wrote:REMS, sieverts, becquerels... I'm starting to lose my place.
Kanchou wrote:rems aren't used any more.
It's grays and sieverts now... which mathematically are the same thing, except greys are how much you've absorbed, and sieverts are how much you're exposed to.
Basically anything less than a total dose of one sievert (that's a million microsieverts) probably won't kill you.
cstaylor wrote:REMS, sieverts, becquerels... I'm starting to lose my place.
Not Invented Here wrote:Here's the deal:
Grays (Gy), Sieverts (Sv), and Becquerels (Bq), are all SI units, which will be seen in Japan.
Grays measure energy absorbed per kilogram of mass, Sieverts do the same but adjust for type of radiation and where it is absorbed to try and quantify things in terms more suitable to predicting biological effects. Becquerels describe the number of times per second that nucleus decay occurs, and you can further derive those units over area, mass, or volume. Remember that 1 kg of water is usually a liter, give or take a few mL for density variations.
Rads are basically like grays, but 1 gray is equal to about 100 rads. Rems are basically like sieverts, and 1 sievert is basically 100 rems. Curies are like becquerels, but 1 curie equals 37GBq, or 37 billion becquerels. Roentgens are sort of like rads and grays, but 1 gray = about 115 roentgens.
Anything that says "counts per second" or "counts per minute" is likely just a direct reading off of some type of meter, which is not a direct equivalent to any of the units I've mentioned to this point. The meter has to be calibrated, calculations specific to the meter must be made, etc, before you can get a real number from that other than how many times the meter's probe was hit by something every second.
cstaylor wrote:I thought you were in Osaka?
Return to Earthquakes, Tsunamis, Nukes, and other Catastrophes
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests