Documentary Description
It’s a documentary which analyzes the Thursday 26th April 1986 that
became a momentous date in modern history, when one of the reactors at
the Chernobyl nuclear power station in northern Ukraine, exploded. It
was the most significant reactor failure in the history of nuclear
power, a Maximum Credible Accident (MCA). The plant, just 20 km away
from the town center, was made up of four reactor units each generating
an output of 1,000 megawatts. The reactor in question exploded due to
operational errors and inadequate safety measures and the meltdown was
directly linked to routine testing on the reactor unit’s turbine
generators.
The test required reactor activity and the thermal
reactor output to be run down to a lower level. During the procedure,
however, the reactor plummeted to an unexpectedly low and unstable
level of activity. At this point, it should have been shut down; as the
operators chose to continue with the test, the events subsequently
proved to be catastrophic.
More than 200 people died or were seriously injured
by radiation exposure immediately after the explosion. 161,000 people
had to be evacuated from a 30 kilometer radius of the reactor and
25,000 square km of land were contaminated. As time went on millions of
people suffered radiation related health problems such as leukemia and
thyroid cancer and around 4,000 people have died as a result of the
long-term effects of the accident.
Nobody was prepared for such a crisis. For the next
seven months, 500,000 men will wage hand-to-hand combat with an
invisible enemy – a ruthless battle that has gone unsung, which claimed
thousands of unnamed and now almost forgotten heroes. Yet, it is thanks
to these men that the worst was avoided; a second explosion, ten times
more powerful than Hiroshima which would have wiped out more than half
of Europe. This was kept secret for twenty years by the Soviets and the
West alike.
|
what does water and fuel have to do with a 2nd explosion if someone can answer that i will be very happy