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Registered Member #2431
Joined: Tue Oct 13 2009, 09:47PM
Location: Chico, CA. USA
Posts: 5639
in nevada and utah here in the US, i think the DoD found that even a simple nuclear weapon broke the rock strata, With the persistent long lived isotopes following water below it, then the radiation "layer" seems to rise above and below this rock strata through out the year...
so, for this ad other reasons, i would generally say no.
Registered Member #72
Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 08:29AM
Location: UK St. Albans
Posts: 1659
Were you hoping that the intense radiation would transmute the waste into something stable or shorter lived, and/or perhaps melt it and fuse it with the inside of the cavern it had just explosively created? It ought to be possible to compute whether the first makes sense, and the second sounds like a great idea, if you say it quick.
However, I think I'll go with the "f'ing great bang would probably fracture the surrounding rocks and connect everything to the water table" theory. I can't think of any rock stratum where giving it a good kicking would be better than just drilling carefully into it and then leaving it well alone. Doesn't the explosion cavern tend to collapse after a while, further compromising any tendency that stuff might have to stay put?
Now, if you could just drill a hole deep enough into where tectonic plates were being subducted, and try to tuck the stuff in there, it would be drawn down into the mantle never to reappear for squintillions of years, but you might have to replace the end of your drill bit quite often.
Registered Member #543
Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Soviet underground tests on Novaya Zemlya vented into the atmosphere on a number of occasions.
"During an underground test on 14 October 1969, three devices were exploded in two tunnels with a total yield of 540 kt. In his Database of radiological incidents and related events, Robert Johnston explains how a gas plume burst from the surface near one of the tunnels about one hour after the test. Several hundred test personnel were in the vicinity and were not evacuated until up to one hour later. On 24 October those most seriously exposed were transported to Moscow for examination and treatment. Over 80 people received doses of 40 to 80 rad.
On 12 September 1973, four nuclear devices with a total yield of 4.2 Mt were detonated on the northernmost island. The explosion had a seismic magnitude of 6.97 and triggered an 80 million-ton rockslide that blocked two glacial streams and created a two kilometre-long lake.
Venting at Novaya Zemlya in 1987 reportedly released fission products throughout Sweden, writes Peter Gizewski in Military Activity and Environmental Security: The Case of Radioactivity in the Arctic. The venting produced the highest levels recorded in northern Sweden in 15 years, apart from the Chernobyl incident. Three years later, a second venting produced similar results.
A 1993 study of Novaya Zemlya’s topography by John Matzko, Physical environment of the underground nuclear test site on Novaya Zemlya, Russia, revealed that at least one test site had severe leakage due to cracks in the rock formations. There have been indications that several tests caused a significant amount of leakage."
See also. Skorve, J, Megaton nuclear underground tests and catastrophic events on Novaya Zemlya: a satellite study Norwegian Institute of International Affairs. ,d.bGQ
Waste from fission consists of long lived (10000nds of years) isotopes e.g. 239Pu and shorter living (100s of years) fission fragments, which account for almost all activity. A nuclear explosion won't do anything to the latter but might fission some of the Pu. If instead the waste is processed by separating the Pu from the rest it is possible to burn the Pu up in a reactor.
There is a security problem with transporting or storing Pu, though. It can be readily used in building a bomb. Lowly enriched Uranium, as used in reactors, cannot be made to explode unless you further enrich it. That requires big plants with lots of centrifuges.
Registered Member #3414
Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
Patrick wrote ...
We need a star-trek like understanding to modifiy nuclear chemistry.
We just need a bit more investment in fusion technology. No radioactive waste, except the reactor linings themselves. No chance of a 'runaway reaction', as power needs to be supplied to get the fusion process going, and to maintain it (no power in=no fusion).
All the research at the moment is into materials for the reactor linings, as these require regular replacement, and become radioactive in use. Ideally something is required where the resulting product has a short half-life, so therefore doesn't require long term storage.
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