History of location is unknown.
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| - History of location is unknown.
- Chernobyl was a nuclear power plant and neighbouring city in Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union.
- Chernobyl is a city in Ukraine. On April 26, 1986, there was a reactor meltdown at the nearby Nuclear Power Plant. The radiation covering the surrounding area was the cause of many abnormalities, including that of Alexei.
- Chernobyl (Чернобыль) is an abandoned city in northern Ukraine. It was evacuated in 1986, after a meltdown at the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, located nine miles to the northwest of the city. Due to high levels of radioactive contamination, the city has been within an Exclusion Zone ever since, and the personnel charged with maintaining that zone are stationed in Chernobyl on a long-term though temporary basis. The city remains a permanent home to several hundred squatters and residents who either refused to evacuate in 1986 or illegally returned later.
- Chernobyl is proof that even a mushroom cloud has a silver lining. After every kind of disaster, there's a rebirth, a sort of return to Paradise when the slate is wiped clean (See: New Orleans). So even if there's an Earth-killing asteroid heading for us in 2029, keep a positive mental attitude: the right perspective on something like that could even get you laid. Chernobyl was The Wørd for January 24, 2007. It was caused by Bees
- Chernobyl was a city in the Ukraine and formerly in the Soviet Union, infamous for a nuclear disaster. In 2020, a picture of the disaster's results hung in the headquarters of the Human Extinction League. (TOS novel: The Rings of Time)
- Chernobyl Chernobyl was a city in norhern Ukraine. Next to Chernobyl there was a nuclear power plant, which is notorious for the Chernobyl disaster, when a reactor exploded on April 26,1986. As a result of the explosion and ensuring fire, clouds of radioactive particles were released. More than 100000 people were evacuated from the city and other affected areas. A 2005 report prepared by the IAEA and WHO attributed 56 direct deaths (47 accident workers and 9 children) and estimated that as many as 9000 people may die from some form of cancer.
- You have just arrived in Kiev by plane. It's winter, and the air is cold and stiff. A car has been provided for you. You begin to drive north and out of Kiev. As you continue to head down the road, you begin to have the feeling that you're not in the Ukraine anymore. There is no vegetation to be found, yet the ground is glowing a bright, noxious green, as if a giant had a bit too much to drink at the pub and puked everywhere. You also find trees with tentacles, a deer that has antlers on his bum, a married couple that has buttocks where their heads should be, and a Russian actually away from his vodka. As the sun sets, you reach a dark, terrifying structure. It turns out to be a billboard advertising Oprah Winfrey's new book, but behind that billboard is a dark, terrifying structure that i
- The immediate cause of the Chernobyl accident was a mismanaged electrical-engineering experiment. Engineers with no knowledge of reactor physics were interested to see if they could draw electricity from the turbine generator of the Number 4 reactor unit to run water pumps during an emergency when the turbine was no longer being driven by the reactor but was still spinning inertially. The engineers needed the reactor to wind up the turbine; then they planned to idle it to 2.5 percent power. Unexpected electrical demand on the afternoon of April 29 delayed the experiment until eleven o'clock that night. When the experimenters finally started, they felt pressed to make up for lost time, so they reduced the reactor's power level too rapidly. That mistake caused a rapid buildup of neutron-abso
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| - History of location is unknown.
- The immediate cause of the Chernobyl accident was a mismanaged electrical-engineering experiment. Engineers with no knowledge of reactor physics were interested to see if they could draw electricity from the turbine generator of the Number 4 reactor unit to run water pumps during an emergency when the turbine was no longer being driven by the reactor but was still spinning inertially. The engineers needed the reactor to wind up the turbine; then they planned to idle it to 2.5 percent power. Unexpected electrical demand on the afternoon of April 29 delayed the experiment until eleven o'clock that night. When the experimenters finally started, they felt pressed to make up for lost time, so they reduced the reactor's power level too rapidly. That mistake caused a rapid buildup of neutron-absorbing fission by products in the reactor core, which poisoned the reaction. To compensate, the operators withdrew a majority of the reactor's control rods, but even with the rods withdrawn, they were unable to increase the power level to more than 30 megawatts, a low level of operation at which the reactor's instability potential is at its worst and that the Chernobyl plant's own safety rules forbade. At that point, writes Russian nuclear engineer Grigori Medvedev, "there were two options: increasing the power immediately, or waiting twenty-four hours for the poisons to dissipate. [Deputy chief engineer Dyatlov] should have waited...But he [had an experiment to conduct and he] was unwilling to stop...He ordered an immediate increase in the power of the reactor." Reluctantly the operators complied. By 1 a.m. on April 26, they stabilized the reactor at 200 megawatts. It was still poisoned and increasingly difficult to control. More control rods came out. A minimum reserve for an RBMK reactor is supposed to be 30 control rods. At the end, the Number 4 unit was down to only six control rods, with 205 rods withdrawn. The experimenters allowed this dangerous condition to develop even though they had deliberately bypassed and disconnected every important safety system, including the emergency core-cooling system. They had also disconnected every backup electrical system, down to and including diesel generators, that would have allowed them to operate the reactor controls in the event of an emergency.
- Chernobyl was a nuclear power plant and neighbouring city in Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union.
- Chernobyl is a city in Ukraine. On April 26, 1986, there was a reactor meltdown at the nearby Nuclear Power Plant. The radiation covering the surrounding area was the cause of many abnormalities, including that of Alexei.
- Chernobyl (Чернобыль) is an abandoned city in northern Ukraine. It was evacuated in 1986, after a meltdown at the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, located nine miles to the northwest of the city. Due to high levels of radioactive contamination, the city has been within an Exclusion Zone ever since, and the personnel charged with maintaining that zone are stationed in Chernobyl on a long-term though temporary basis. The city remains a permanent home to several hundred squatters and residents who either refused to evacuate in 1986 or illegally returned later.
- Chernobyl Chernobyl was a city in norhern Ukraine. Next to Chernobyl there was a nuclear power plant, which is notorious for the Chernobyl disaster, when a reactor exploded on April 26,1986. As a result of the explosion and ensuring fire, clouds of radioactive particles were released. More than 100000 people were evacuated from the city and other affected areas. A cloud of radioactive fallout drifted over parts of the western Soviet Union, Eastern and Western Europe, Scandinavia, the British Isles and eastern North America. The disaster released as much as 300 times more radioactive fallout than the atomic bomb of Hiroshima and is regarded as the worst accident in the history of nuclear power. It is difficult to say the number of deaths caused by the event at Chernobyl. Lists were incomplete, and Soviet authorities later forbade doctors to cite "radiation" on death certificates. Most of the expected long-term fatalities, especially those from cancer, have not actually occured, and will be difficult to attribute specifically to the accident. A 2005 report prepared by the IAEA and WHO attributed 56 direct deaths (47 accident workers and 9 children) and estimated that as many as 9000 people may die from some form of cancer.
- You have just arrived in Kiev by plane. It's winter, and the air is cold and stiff. A car has been provided for you. You begin to drive north and out of Kiev. As you continue to head down the road, you begin to have the feeling that you're not in the Ukraine anymore. There is no vegetation to be found, yet the ground is glowing a bright, noxious green, as if a giant had a bit too much to drink at the pub and puked everywhere. You also find trees with tentacles, a deer that has antlers on his bum, a married couple that has buttocks where their heads should be, and a Russian actually away from his vodka. As the sun sets, you reach a dark, terrifying structure. It turns out to be a billboard advertising Oprah Winfrey's new book, but behind that billboard is a dark, terrifying structure that is the power plant that melted and spewed a massive amount of Fecesium-137 all over Europe. You have reached Chernobyl, or as the locals call it The Place Where You Will Die By The Time I Finish Speaking.
- Chernobyl is proof that even a mushroom cloud has a silver lining. After every kind of disaster, there's a rebirth, a sort of return to Paradise when the slate is wiped clean (See: New Orleans). So even if there's an Earth-killing asteroid heading for us in 2029, keep a positive mental attitude: the right perspective on something like that could even get you laid. Chernobyl was The Wørd for January 24, 2007. It was caused by Bees
- Chernobyl was a city in the Ukraine and formerly in the Soviet Union, infamous for a nuclear disaster. In 2020, a picture of the disaster's results hung in the headquarters of the Human Extinction League. (TOS novel: The Rings of Time)
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