- #1,016
|Fred
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TCups said:...
Hint
the arrow on top of the drawing indicate "sea" 海 in japanse
so you got it the wrong way round
TCups said:...
TCups said:Fred: From the annotations that are in the English alphabet, that would be my guess, too - T/B = Turbine Bldg D/G = Diesel Generator, maybe. But the scale doesn't fit, unless it is only part of the building plan. The structure circled in the lower right of the floor plan, as usual, caught my eye. I was wondering if it might have something to do with the hole in the roof of Bldg 3. Probably not.
|Fred said:Hint
the arrow on top of the drawing indicate "sea" 海 in japanse
so you got it the wrong way round
|Fred said:[PLAIN]http://i.min.us/imry38.jpg
D/G = Diesel Generator, in line with the diesel tank.. makes sens
jlduh said:This nice insertion of the drawing makes sense to me also...
jlduh said:My instinct just tells me that the circle at the bottom of the drawing could represent the torus of the reactor n°3.
Some drawings also can confirm what my instinct tells me:
Typical BWR Mark I
http://www.netimago.com/image_181784.html
Oyster Creek reactor (US):
To help understand the scale of what we are talking about with these reactors, just consider the relative size of item n°32 on this sketch, which is the entrance gate for personnel and tools inside the containment vessel
http://www.netimago.com/image_181785.html
An other picture that give a good idea of the size of these litlle nuclear cookers:
http://www.netimago.com/image_181791.html
(I'm not sure if this represents the steel confinement or the concrete around it). On this picture, the round hole above the torus is maybe the gate of item 32 (it seems to be around 4,5 meters diameter based on the size of guy on the left side).
|Fred said:Breaking TCups news..
we are probably going to get answers (and likely more question) once I translated this:
News 3号機のプール温度 31度に Temperature Of the Unit 3 Pool 31° WTF ?
translating asap
edit:
According to a survey held the morning of the 24th by Self-Defense Force helicopter, the surface temperature of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station spent fuel pool at Unit 3, dropped to 31 degrees.
The surface temperature of the building No. 4 to No. 1 T, droped 23° or was bellow 23° (not sure)
artax said:can someone please explain what is producing this so called neutron ray that's been seen (sorry detected)? There was the mention of 1.5km, so I can only assume that it's been detected 1.5km distance from the plant, in a certain direction?
TCups said:News Flash for Fred:
That tells us about what may be left in the SFP, but not necessarily what is no longer present in the SFP.
Joe Neubarth said:That is exactly what I thought. How did the Japanese get the reactor core to stop heating up the primary. It is too soon after shut down last week for it not to be heating the water and the vessel that contains that water. So the question that comes to mind is where is the core?
If it is underground, we have lots of trouble on our hands.
havemercy said:Sorry, but they are discussing the temperature of the pool and not of the reactor no ?
the drop of the temperature of the spent fuell pool, i guess, could not lead to the conclusion that the core is gone undergroud, isn't it ?
Joe Neubarth said:I think there is a problem with translation from Japanese to English. The Neutron "Ray" is probably the detection of a stray neutron. Many particles that decay radioactively spit out neutrons. It happens normally with radioactive particles in our rocks and soil, but is only infrequently detected unless you are in a Uranium mine.
Picking up a stray neutron is no big deal. Picking up many neutrons outside of the plant implies that delayed neutron precursors have been released to the outside of the plant or that Uranium or Plutonium from the fuel rods is present.
The additional information that we need to know is what is the strength of the ray? If it is just one neutron, we have almost nothing to worry about. Many neutrons and we have trouble.
|Fred said:I thought that emphasized strongly enough my surprise , rather than my joy.. hence my hint that this would raise more questions...
Tepco had this information since this morning... and it was only released at 21:15
it is 2:45 am ... and we are still waiting for tepco press conference that has been delayed ... ( am I losing my science? )
NB: Japanese do not use barbaric units.. they use celcius )
TCups said:Corrected diagram of Steam Turbine Bldg 3 oriented to satellite photo (maybe).
AntonL said:the turbine building 3 is about 125 x 35 metres
the reactor building 3 is about 45 x 34 metres
reactor building to turbine building is about 25 metres apart
(source measured on google Earth 35:25:15N 141:02:02E)
Turbine building has an aspect ratio of 3:1Japanese plan has an aspect ratio of 2:1
I estimate it at 120 by 60 metres (based on door sizes, corridors)
Has no doors to the outside, so it is either a basement or an upper floor,
My guess upper floor as a ladies and gents can be identified. (just above the ng of Turbine Building)
My next guess - upperfloor of turbine building + connecting building between reactor and turbine
Joe Neubarth said:So all the diesel generators were on the ground floor? I have read that the diesel generators were washed away.
Bodge said:It states that all reactors should have ruptured their boilers within 8 hours.
Borek said:If memory serves me well, cooling systems were working for about 9 hours - first on DG, then on batteries. I don't know how fast heat output from decay goes down, but for sure it is the strongest during first hours after scramming.
KateB said:Here is what I had asked earlier re: the Neutron ray, as well as a person's excerpt of the press item describing said neutron ray- that also inquired above me (page 58 near the bottom) My knowledge of nuclear physics is rudimentary, but wouldn't neutron rays captured 1.5 km away, even such low readings, lead one to extrapolate that fissable material escaped the Suppression pools, and perhaps even containment?
From Reuters: "Radiation at the crippled Fukushima No.2 nuclear reactor was recorded at the highest level since the start of the crisis, Japan's nuclear safety agency said on Wednesday. An agency spokesman said 500 millisieverts per hour of radiation was measured at the No.2 unit on Wednesday. Engineers have been trying to fix the plant's cooling system after restoring lighting on Tuesday."
from Kyodo:
Electric Power Co. said Wednesday it has observed a neutron beam, a kind of radioactive ray, 13 times on the premises of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant after it was crippled by the massive March 11 quake-tsunami disaster.
TEPCO, the operator of the nuclear plant, said the neutron beam measured about 1.5 kilometers southwest of the plant's No. 1 and 2 reactors over three days from March 13 and is equivalent to 0.01 to 0.02 microsieverts per hour and that this is not a dangerous level.
Not trying to flame the fire here. The rad levels are low and I'm hoping TEPCO continues to make progress controling the site but the neutron beam got me thinking about reactor integrity. Neutron beams are product of fission correct? Would this finding confirm reactor damage even if it's just a pin hole?
Y, 11:28 AM #928
KateB
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Re: Japan Earthquake: nuclear plants
I was actually just going to query on the neutron beam reported 1.5 km from the Fukushima nuclear plant. As a Biochem undergrad, my knowledge of physics is rudimentary at best, but wouldn't a neutron beam offsite signify release of plutonium/uranium, and to extrapolate further, does this mean that one of the spent fuel pools blew fissable material "sky-high"? What are the implications of this news? I have been following this thread for a while, and this has been a great pool of knowledge and learning for me.
M. Bachmeier said:From post #22 https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=481620
Re: Astronuc
"The matter of the neutron 'beam' or neutron radiation is of concern. It would seem to indicate loss of transuranics (fuel particles/fines) from the containment, which is not a good sign.
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|Fred said:tepco conference just finished at 5 am !... ****
Borek said:They were not. They started to work as expected and failed after about an hour.
M. Bachmeier said:__________________
Getting the 'right' answer is important, but understanding how to solve the problem (i.e. how you get the right answer) is just as important, if not more so.
Peace on Earth, and Goodwill to all Peoples, each day, every day, ad infinitum. - Joy to the World, Joy to You and Me. - Three Dog Night
The other 2005 Engineering Gurus: FredGarvin, Clausius2, Brewnog, Morbius, PerennialII, berkeman, arildno, Cliff_J, Geniere, minger
Raspberry Jam Delta-V - Joe Satriani"
TCups said:News Flash for Fred:
That tells us about what may be left in the SFP, but not necessarily what is no longer present in the SFP.