Can you swim in a nuclear reactor pool?

Not only does the water spend several decades cooling the fuel rods, but it also affects their radiation. The water essentially acts as a biological shield with hydrogen absorbing and deflecting the radiation bouncing against it. This makes it completely safe for you to stand near the pool with no ill effects.
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Can you swim in a nuclear fuel pool?

If there's corrosion in the spent fuel rod casings, there may be some fission products in the water. They do a pretty good job of keeping the water clean, and it wouldn't hurt you to swim in it, but it's radioactive enough that it wouldn't be legal to sell it as bottled water.
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How deep is a nuclear reactor pool?

They are typically 40 or more feet (12 m) deep, with the bottom 14 feet (4.3 m) equipped with storage racks designed to hold fuel assemblies removed from reactors. A reactor's local pool is specially designed for the reactor in which the fuel was used and is situated at the reactor site.
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Is water from a nuclear reactor safe?

As huge amounts of water are required by every plant, most nuclear facilities are built on coastlines – or, in the case of Chernobyl, surrounded by huge lakes. That way, filtered waste water can be discharged into the ocean or lake once it's been assessed and confirmed safe by authorities.
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How hot is the water in a nuclear reactor?

Light water is used as the primary coolant in a PWR. Water enters through the bottom of the reactor's core at about 548 K (275 °C; 527 °F) and is heated as it flows upwards through the reactor core to a temperature of about 588 K (315 °C; 599 °F).
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Can you swim in a Nuclear Pool?



Why are nuclear reactors blue?

It's Cherenkov Radiation. Caused by particles traveling faster than light through a medium, Cherenkov Radiation is what gives nuclear reactors their eerie blue glow. In the miniseries "Chernobyl" when the reactor first explodes, there's an eerie blue light emanating from it.
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Why are spent fuel pools blue?

In a pool-type reactor, the amount of blue glow can be used to gauge the radioactivity of spent fuel rods. The radiation is used in particle physics experiments to help identify the nature of the particles being examined.
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What happens if you swim in Chernobyl?

For decades after the event it was widely reported that the three men swam through radioactive water in near darkness, miraculously located the valves even after their flashlight had died, escaped but were already showing signs of acute radiation syndrome (ARS) and sadly succumbed to radiation poisoning a short while ...
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How hot is the core of a nuclear reactor?

The temperature of corium can be as high as 2,400 °C (4,350 °F) in the first hours after the meltdown, potentially reaching over 2,800 °C (5,070 °F). A large amount of heat can be released by reaction of metals (particularly zirconium) in corium with water.
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How hot are uranium rods?

The nuclear fuel rods feed the nuclear reactor. There are lots of different variables here, but, in at least one situation, they get to about twenty-eight-hundred-and-eleven-degrees celsius (2811C). This is about fifty-one-hundred degrees fahrenheit (5100F).
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How hot is a spent nuclear fuel rod?

Heat released by a spent fuel assembly

Five years after being unloaded from the reactor, it emits heat equivalent to around a dozen 100 watt light bulbs. This heat release steadily tails off, falling to 85 watts after 300 years. Spent fuel assemblies must be cooled prior to disposal, either in a pool or in dry silos.
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How long is nuclear waste stored in pools?

After nuclear fuel has been in a reactor for five years, operators remove the bundles of nuclear fuel, called fuel assemblies and begin transitioning them for permanent storage. The fuel assemblies are then transferred to a 40-foot-deep cooling pool, where they will stay for about five years.
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Is the red forest still radioactive?

Because of the accident of April 1986, greenery growing around Chernobyl nuclear power plant was severely affected. The trees got so much radiation that they burned from inside and turned red. Even today, the area of the red forest remains the most contaminated and radioactive in the whole exclusion zone.
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Are nuclear cooling ponds radioactive?

Significant problems may result from decommissioning of cooling ponds with residual radioactive contamination. The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (ChNPP) Cooling Pond is one of the largest self-contained water reservoirs in the Chernobyl region and Ukrainian and Belorussian Polesye region.
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Is Chernobyl still active?

Although no longer a working power station, Chernobyl was never fully abandoned and still requires constant management. Spent nuclear fuel is cooled at the site.
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Are the 3 divers from Chernobyl still alive?

Contrary to reports that the three divers died of radiation sickness as a result of their action, all three survived. Shift leader Borys Baranov died in 2005, while Valery Bespalov and Oleksiy Ananenko, both chief engineers of one of the reactor sections, are still alive and live in the capital, Kiev.
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Who is buried under Chernobyl?

In the final moment of Chernobyl episode five, tribute was paid to Khodemchuk alongside the many others who died and have suffered as a result of Chernobyl. Underneath his portrait, the text reads: “Valery Khodemchuk's body was never recovered. He is permanently entombed under Reactor 4.”
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Did divers go into Chernobyl?

The Chernobyl divers consisted of senior engineer Valeri Bespalov, the mechanical engineer Alexei Ananenko and shift supervisor Boris Baranov who all volunteered to go into the plant and open the sluice gates.
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Do nuclear reactors give off light?

Often, these beta particles are emitted with such high kinetic energies that their velocities exceed the speed of light (3.0x108 meters per second) in water. When this occurs, photons, seen to the eye as blue light, are emitted and the reactor core "glows" blue.
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How long do fuel rods last in a nuclear reactor?

And just like any fuel, it gets used up eventually. Your 12-foot-long fuel rod full of those uranium pellet, lasts about six years in a reactor, until the fission process uses that uranium fuel up.
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Can spent nuclear fuel be reused?

That's right! Used nuclear fuel can be recycled to make new fuel and byproducts. More than 90% of its potential energy still remains in the fuel, even after five years of operation in a reactor. The United States does not currently recycle used nuclear fuel but foreign countries, such as France, do.
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Why are nuclear reactors under water?

Inside the reactor vessel, the fuel rods are immersed in water which acts as both a coolant and moderator. The moderator helps slow down the neutrons produced by fission to sustain the chain reaction.
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What does glowing radiation look like?

In books and movies, you can tell when an element is radioactive because it glows. Movie radiation usually is an eerie green phosphorescent glow or sometimes a bright blue or deep red. Do radioactive elements really glow like that?
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Why was iodine given after Chernobyl?

If this is inhaled or eaten in contaminated food, it can increase the risk of thyroid cancer—an effect observed after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster of 1986. Tablets of stable, non-radioactive iodine help prevent radioactive iodine concentrating in the thyroid gland.
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