Rise in nuclear particles detected in the Baltic
Rise in nuclear particles detected in the Baltic
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Discussion

tedmus

Original Poster:

1,933 posts

159 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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hidetheelephants

34,151 posts

217 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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Someone's done something stupid with a reactor and haven't owned up; there's one obvious candidate with a baltic coast and a record of doing stupid things with reactors and not owning up about it. Ockham suggests it's them.

tedmus

Original Poster:

1,933 posts

159 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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Darkslider

3,084 posts

213 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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Isn't there a decomposing nuclear sub on the sea bed round there somewhere? I wonder if any radioactive particles from that could end up in the atmosphere, or would they remain in the water?

S1KRR

12,548 posts

236 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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tedmus said:
They do have form for that when st goes bandy!

*cough Chernobyl*

would of course fit with how 2020 is playing out though to have a Nuclear Reactor melt down!

WatchfulEye

505 posts

152 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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The release of Ru103 is a bit odd - this isn't normally something released from a reactor accident. To vaporise ruthenium requires strong oxidation, so ruthenium releases have generally come from reprocessing accidents, or accidents while manufacturing medical or industrial radiation sources (where strong chemicals like oxidising acids are used). Additionally Ru103 has a very short half life, so can only have come from processing of very fresh used nuclear fuel.

Due to practical considerations, conventional nuclear fuel reprocessing is normally only done on used fuel which has "matured" for a decade or so, so that the radioactivity declines to more manageable levels. However, if the processing is intended for medical or industrial use where short lived isotopes are required, then it may be necessary to perform processing on fresh used fuel (or more usually, dedicated "targets" made from uranium which are more manageable than bulk reactor fuel).

For example, in 2017, a ruthenium release (Ru106 - with a longer half life, but still relatively short) was detected coming from the Urals. Although no responsibility was ever claimed, the timing of the event corresponded to a Russian radiochemical plant cancelling an extremely large order for radioactive cerium intended for a physics experiment in Italy, citing "technical difficulties". The only credible method of obtaining such a cerium sample is by industrial scale processing of used nuclear fuel of unusual freshness.

I suspect that this is probably not from a power reactor, but an accident during manufacture of medical or industrial radioactive materials.





Edited by WatchfulEye on Sunday 28th June 22:24

milkround

1,333 posts

103 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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WatchfulEye said:
The release of Ru103 is a bit odd - this isn't normally something released from a reactor accident. To vaporise ruthenium requires strong oxidation, so ruthenium releases have generally come from reprocessing accidents, or accidents while manufacturing medical or industrial radiation sources (where strong chemicals like oxidising acids are used). Additionally Ru103 has a very short half life, so can only have come from processing of very fresh used nuclear fuel.

Due to practical considerations, conventional nuclear fuel reprocessing is normally only done on used fuel which has "matured" for a decade or so, so that the radioactivity declines to more manageable levels. However, if the processing is intended for medical or industrial use where short lived isotopes are required, then it may be necessary to perform processing on fresh used fuel (or more usually, dedicated "targets" made from uranium which are more manageable than bulk reactor fuel).

For example, in 2017, a ruthenium release (Ru106 - with a longer half life, but still relatively short) was detected coming from the Urals. Although no responsibility was ever claimed, the timing of the event corresponded to a Russian radiochemical plant cancelling an extremely large order for radioactive cerium intended for a physics experiment in Italy, citing "technical difficulties". The only credible method of obtaining such a cerium sample is by industrial scale processing of used nuclear fuel of unusual freshness.

I suspect that this is probably not from a power reactor, but an accident during manufacture of medical or industrial radioactive materials.


Edited by WatchfulEye on Sunday 28th June 22:24
Genuinely interesting post.

Either this is something you have deep knowledge about. Or you get an a star grade in googling. Either way deeply impressive.

Willhire89

1,446 posts

229 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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milkround said:
WatchfulEye said:
The release of Ru103 is a bit odd - this isn't normally something released from a reactor accident. To vaporise ruthenium requires strong oxidation, so ruthenium releases have generally come from reprocessing accidents, or accidents while manufacturing medical or industrial radiation sources (where strong chemicals like oxidising acids are used). Additionally Ru103 has a very short half life, so can only have come from processing of very fresh used nuclear fuel.

Due to practical considerations, conventional nuclear fuel reprocessing is normally only done on used fuel which has "matured" for a decade or so, so that the radioactivity declines to more manageable levels. However, if the processing is intended for medical or industrial use where short lived isotopes are required, then it may be necessary to perform processing on fresh used fuel (or more usually, dedicated "targets" made from uranium which are more manageable than bulk reactor fuel).

For example, in 2017, a ruthenium release (Ru106 - with a longer half life, but still relatively short) was detected coming from the Urals. Although no responsibility was ever claimed, the timing of the event corresponded to a Russian radiochemical plant cancelling an extremely large order for radioactive cerium intended for a physics experiment in Italy, citing "technical difficulties". The only credible method of obtaining such a cerium sample is by industrial scale processing of used nuclear fuel of unusual freshness.

I suspect that this is probably not from a power reactor, but an accident during manufacture of medical or industrial radioactive materials.


Edited by WatchfulEye on Sunday 28th June 22:24
Genuinely interesting post.

Either this is something you have deep knowledge about. Or you get an a star grade in googling. Either way deeply impressive.
Totally this - it makes PH worth all effort of wading through the rubbish posted by Sambucket and Saaby93 just for these pearls

abzmike

11,473 posts

130 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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milkround said:
Genuinely interesting post.

Either this is something you have deep knowledge about. Or you get an a star grade in googling. Either way deeply impressive.
Indeed... but if the cause is some relatively (no pun intended) benign industrial accident, how has it reached the Baltic?

hidetheelephants

34,151 posts

217 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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WatchfulEye said:
<snip>
Apt username is apt; interesting stuff, thanks.


WatchfulEye

505 posts

152 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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abzmike said:
Indeed... but if the cause is some relatively (no pun intended) benign industrial accident, how has it reached the Baltic?
It has only been detected in extremely small trace amounts. The traces are so small, it is difficult to describe them in any kind of meaningful terms - quite literally, the concentrations detected are billions or trillions of times smaller than legal limits; never mind levels at which health effects might be relevant.

There are a number of monitoring stations around the world intended for enforcement of the nuclear test ban treaty. These use extraordinarily sensitive techniques to measure radioactive materials in the air; and it is these stations which have detected it.

They work by sucking a vast quantity of air through very fine filters over the course of several days or a week. The filter is then washed (or chemically dissolved) and the extract tested with a super sensitive radiation detector, often counting for several days or a week.

For airborne contamination, these systems can detect releases from hundreds of miles away. For example, a release of I131 detected in late 2011 across the Czech republic and parts of Germany. This was traced to a factory in Budapest manufacturing radioactive materials for medical use, where a faulty filter had allowed some material to escape through the ventilation system.

hairykrishna

14,392 posts

227 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
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Paper on the previous Ruthenium incident;

https://www.pnas.org/content/116/34/16750

Very interesting.


tedmus

Original Poster:

1,933 posts

159 months

Sunday 28th June 2020
quotequote all
Darkslider said:
Isn't there a decomposing nuclear sub on the sea bed round there somewhere? I wonder if any radioactive particles from that could end up in the atmosphere, or would they remain in the water?
Kursk? North of there I think and wasn't it mainly recovered?


Informative post WatchfulEye thumbup

Reciprocating mass

6,053 posts

265 months

Monday 29th June 2020
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parchin going bang in Iran and they claim a gas explosion, rumour has it Israel dropped a neutron bomb on parchin to stop Iran building nukes

hidetheelephants

34,151 posts

217 months

Monday 29th June 2020
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Reciprocating mass said:
parchin going bang in Iran and they claim a gas explosion, rumour has it Israel dropped a neutron bomb on parchin to stop Iran building nukes
That's one of the more bonkers things I've read this year, and I've been reading some of Trump's tweets so that's a high threshhold. Neutron bombs kill people preferentially over destroying buildings, the opposite of what you want if you're trying to put a reactor or enrichment plant out of action.

GT03ROB

13,993 posts

245 months

Monday 29th June 2020
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hidetheelephants said:
Reciprocating mass said:
parchin going bang in Iran and they claim a gas explosion, rumour has it Israel dropped a neutron bomb on parchin to stop Iran building nukes
That's one of the more bonkers things I've read this year, and I've been reading some of Trump's tweets so that's a high threshhold. Neutron bombs kill people preferentially over destroying buildings, the opposite of what you want if you're trying to put a reactor or enrichment plant out of action.
Its great on here sometimes, same thread some really interesting informative stuff, with some complete & utter bks tacked on for good measure!!

Plymo

1,238 posts

113 months

Monday 29th June 2020
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tedmus said:
Darkslider said:
Isn't there a decomposing nuclear sub on the sea bed round there somewhere? I wonder if any radioactive particles from that could end up in the atmosphere, or would they remain in the water?
Kursk? North of there I think and wasn't it mainly recovered?


Informative post WatchfulEye thumbup
Decomposing nuclear submarines? Nothing to see here whistle

Devonport and rosyth dockyards both have cold war nuclear submarines sitting alongside... They are still fuelled and are being "maintained" as so far they can't get the facilities up at standard to deal with them.




Some have been there longer than they were in service!

Johnnytheboy

24,499 posts

210 months

Monday 29th June 2020
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GT03ROB said:
Its great on here sometimes, same thread some really interesting informative stuff, with some complete & utter bks tacked on for good measure!!
From Watchful Eye to Reciprocating Mass's post is quite a contrast!

hidetheelephants

34,151 posts

217 months

Monday 29th June 2020
quotequote all
Plymo said:
Decomposing nuclear submarines? Nothing to see here whistle

Devonport and rosyth dockyards both have cold war nuclear submarines sitting alongside... They are still fuelled and are being "maintained" as so far they can't get the facilities up at standard to deal with them.




Some have been there longer than they were in service!
The RN sub decommissioning scheme is an enduring disgrace but IIRC the ones at Rosyth do not have fuel in, the ones at Devonport are waiting until there's a slot available at the refueling facility, which is naturally prioritised for the subs in service and there's been a problem there 'because reasons' i.e. it's old and creaky(mostly in a 'not working' way rather than a 'Plymouth disappearing in a mushroom cloud' way) and there is reluctance to spend money upgrading when the in-service subs that need it are due to be out of service within a decade or so. While it looks untidy having old subs laying about the danger presented to the public by them is nugatory, the radioactive bits are all secured inside the enginerooms and reactor compartments and are doing what radioactive things do, decaying and becoming less radioactive. Perhaps the bullet should be bit and the subs taken somewhere that does have the capacity to chop them up and make razor blades, the US seem to be getting on well with chopping theirs up.

Brads67

3,199 posts

122 months

Monday 29th June 2020
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If this was a burst can incident (breached fuel pin) they would likely be able to tell you what station it was from, they can be that accurate about what fuel is being used and what it decays to during use.

You don't get away with much in Nuclear reactor operation nowadays.