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Japan's nuclear concerns explained
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Workers in Japan are struggling to contain the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which was badly damaged by a devastating earthquake and tsunami on March 11.
Click through this interactive explainer to learn more about how the Fukushima Daiichi reactors work, what's causing the problems with these reactors and what's being done to get this nuclear incident under control.
Reactor basics
There are several different types of nuclear reactors, including boiling water reactor systems and pressurized water reactor systems. The reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi plant are boiling water reactor systems. Here's how they work:
At the heart of a nuclear reactor is the reactor vessel, a large steel tank filled with water. It's loaded with 12-foot-long fuel rods made of radioactive pellets encased in zirconium alloy. These ceramic fuel pellets are usually made of enriched uranium 235, which is incapable of creating a nuclear explosion.
Reactor No. 3 at the Fukushima Daiichi plant used more toxic mixed-oxide (MOX) fuel rods, which contain a mixture of uranium and plutonium that is reprocessed from spent uranium.
The fuel rods are loaded vertically into the reactor vessel in a precise grid pattern known as the reactor core. Nuclear fission, or the splitting of atoms, is initiated. As each atom splits, it gives off large amounts of energy in the form of heat and radiation. It also sends free neutrons toward other atoms, causing some of those atoms to fission. This can lead to a chain reaction.
Rods that absorb neutrons control this chain reaction. When the control rods are present, neutrons are absorbed and the reaction slows. When the rods are removed, the reaction increases.
How bad is 'bad'?
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The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) developed the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale to identify the severity of incidents involving nuclear energy.
Chernobyl was a level 7 accident, the highest level, denoting a "major accident."
Three Mile Island was classified a category 5, which is an "accident with wider consequences."
The IAEA is not yet rating the incident in Japan on the INES scale.
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For inforation check out DEREKTROTTER's post
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