Ad

Showing posts with label nuclear fallout precautions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nuclear fallout precautions. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Detectable Radiation Could Come To U.S. But Not Likely Significant Concern For Human Health

Posted by: JeffMasters, 2:16 PM GMT on March 16, 2011
If there is going to be a major nuclear disaster with massive release of radioactivity into the atmosphere from Japan's stricken Fukushima nuclear plant, today would be the best day meteorologically for this to occur. The low pressure system that brought rain and several inches of snow to Japan yesterday has moved northeastwards out to sea, and high pressure is building in. The clockwise flow of air around the high pressure system approaching Japan from the southwest is driving strong northwesterly winds of 10 - 20 mph over the region. These winds will continue through Thursday, and will take radiation particles emitted by the stricken reactors immediately out to sea, without lingering over Japan. Since high pressure systems are regions of sinking air, the radiation will stay close to the ocean surface as the air spirals clockwise over the Pacific. The contaminated air will remain over the ocean for at least five days, which is plenty of time for the radiation to settle out to the surface.


Figure 1. Surface weather map for 8am EDT today, taken from the 6-hour forecast from this morning's 6 UTC run of the GFS model. A high pressure system to the southwest of Japan, in combination with a low pressure system to the northeast are driving strong northwesterly surface winds over the country. Image is from our wundermap with the "Model" layer turned on. The lines are sea-level pressure (blue contours, 4 mb interval) and 1000 to 500 mb thickness (yellow contours, 60 m interval). Thickness is a measure of the temperature of the lower atmosphere, and a thickness of 5400 meters is usually close to where the dividing line between rain and snow occurs.

Thursday night and Friday morning (U.S. time), the high pressure system moves over Japan, allowing winds to weaken and potentially grow calm, increasing the danger of radioactivity building up over regions near and to the north of the nuclear plant. On Friday, the high departs and a moist southwesterly flow of air will affect Japan. These southwesterly winds will blow most of the radiation out to sea, away from Tokyo. Southwesterly winds will continue through Sunday, when the next major low pressure system is expected to bring heavy precipitation to the country. Beginning Thursday night, the sinking airmass over Japan will be replaced a large-scale area of rising air, and any radiation emitted late Thursday through Friday will be carried aloft towards Alaska and eastern Russia by this southwesterly flow of rising air.

Ground-level releases of radioactivity are typically not able to be transported long distances in significant quantities, since most of the material settles to the ground a few kilometers from the source. If there is a major explosion with hot gases that shoots radioactivity several hundred meters high, that would increase the chances for long range transport, since now the ground is farther away, and the particles that start settling out will stay in the air longer before encountering the ground. Additionally, winds are stronger away from ground, due to reduced friction and presence of the jet stream aloft. These stronger winds will transport radioactivity greater distances. I've made trajectory plots for the next three days assuming two possible release altitudes--a surface-based release near 10 meters, which should be the predominant altitude in the current situation, and a higher release altitude of 300 meters, which might occur from an explosion and fire from a Chernobyl-style incident. Given that the radioactivity has to travel 3000 miles to reach Anchorage, Alaska, and 5000 miles to reach California, a very large amount of dilution will occur, along with potential loss due to rain-out. Any radiation at current levels of emission that might reach these places may not even be detectable, much less be a threat to human health. A Chernobyl-level disaster in Japan would certainly be able to produce detectable levels of radiation over North America, but I strongly doubt it would be a significant concern for human health. The Chernobyl disaster only caused dangerous human health impacts within a few hundred miles of the disaster site, and the distance from Japan to North America is ten times farther than that.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

New Fukushima Fire, Meltdown, Iodide Interest Heightened, Nuclear Fallout Precautions, Warships Redirected, Radiation Towards Tokyo,


Fire breaks out at Japan Fukushima Daiichi No.4 reactor building



(Reuters) - A fire has broken out at the building housing the No.4 reactor of Tokyo Electric Power Co's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the electric utility said on Wednesday.
"That outlook, of course, changed overnight with the escalating nuclear meltdown. The spreading nuclear leak has changed the earthquake from a one day event to a continuing and growing disaster. Where it will end all of a sudden isn't clear. Worse case scenarios, even unlikely ones like the evacuation of Tokyo or nuclear contamination on the US West Coast, are now in play. And that has added the element of uncertainty that is now rocking the market." 


Read more: http://curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com/2011/03/15/how-far-will-us-stocks-fall-on-japanese-nuclear-concerns/#ixzz1GhyU0qAM

Japan crisis spurs iodide interest in U.S. and Canada







The No.3 nuclear reactor of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant at Minamisoma is seen burning after a blast following an earthquake and tsunami in this handout satellite image taken March 14, 2011. REUTERS/Digital Globe/Handout

SEATTLE | Tue Mar 15, 2011 6:05pm EDT
(Reuters) - Fears of transpacific nuclear fallout fromJapan's reactor crisis has sent consumers scrambling for radiation antidotes across the ocean in the U.S. Pacific Northwest and Canada.
But U.S. and Canadian health authorities said on Tuesday that fears are unwarranted, and warned that people will expose themselves to other medical problems by needlessly taking potassium iodide they hope will protect them from cancer.
Drug stores and holistic clinics in Washington state, Oregon and British Columbia have seen a sharp increase in demand for potassium iodide and other potential antidotes to radiation since the Japanese reactor crisis began.
  •  A friend of mine here in the US says the pharmacy he works at has sold out of potassium iodide tablets! The tablets counteract the effects of radioactive iodine, but we're not in any real risk here. It seems that lots of people get very scared when the word "radioactive" is used and lose all sense.
    comment by Johan at 3:49 PM

    • Illustrated tips on how to protect against a radioactive cloud.
      by Corinne Perkins at 3:46 PM
      FACTBOX: U.S. redirects warships over Japan radiation risk
      (Reuters) - The U.S. military took new steps to shield personnel from radiation spread by Japan's crippled nuclear plant on Tuesday, redirecting arriving warships to safer waters and telling some forces to limit time outdoors.http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/15/us-japan-quake-usa-aid-idUSTRE72E8R620110315

      (Reuters) - Winds over a radiation-leaking nuclear power plant in northern Japan will blow from the north along the Pacific coast early on Wednesday and then from the northwest toward the ocean during the day time, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

      Tokyo, with population of about 13 million, is located about 240 km (150 miles) southwest of the plant.

      A massive earthquake and tsunami on Friday crippled its cooling functions, forcing operator Tokyo Electric Power Co to put seawater into the reactors, releasing radioactive air into atmosphere, to reduce heat and high pressure inside.

      The direction of the wind is a key factor in judging possible damage to the environment from the radiation.

      Officials said radiation in Tokyo was 10 times normal on Tuesday, when the wind was blowing from the north and northeast.

      (Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Michael Watson)