Category: Radiation Leaks Japan Earthquake 2011

Pacific Jet Stream Forecasts, Flowcharts, Monitor Radiation, USA Europe Canada Mexico

Clouds along a jet stream over Canada.

The Pacific Jet Stream Aerial View

Copyright 2011-3011 Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

Top Radiation Forecasting Sites:

http://www.woweather.com/weather/news/fukushima?LANG=us&VAR=webcam&SA…

http://www.jaif.or.jp/english/

http://www.rivm.nl/milieuportaal/dossier/meetnetten/radioactiviteit/resultaten/

http://www.radiationnetwork.com/

http://www.blackcatsystems.com/RadMap/map.html

http://www.epa.gov (click on radiation update)

http://www.irsn.fr/EN/Pages/home.aspx

http://www.nucleartourist.com/

http://www.stuk.fi/index_en.html

http://www.mext.go.jp/english/radioactivity_level/detail/1303962.htm

http://www.nisa.meti.go.jp/english/index.html

http://www.rivm.nl/milieuportaal/dossier/meetnetten/radioactiviteit/resultaten/

http://www.yle.fi/tekstitv/html/P867_02.html

http://www.mapion.co.jp/topics/genpatu/

http://strahlenbelastung.wo-wann-wer.de/

dutch radiation monitoring:

http://www.rivm.nl/milieuportaal/dossier/meetnetten/radioactiviteit/resultaten/

swiss radiation monitoring:

https://www.naz.ch/en/aktuell/zeitverlaeufe.html

Finland radiation monitoring:

http://www.yle.fi/tekstitv/html/P160_01.html

http://www.yle.fi/tekstitv/html/P867_02.html

French radiation monitoring: (thanks to youtube user: RehKurts ! )

http://sws.irsn.fr/sws/mesure/index

http://www.irsn.fr/FR/Documents/france.htm

jet stream forecasting:

http://squall.sfsu.edu/crws/jetstream.html

http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/CT/animate.arctic.color.0.html

http://nowcoast.noaa.gov/

http://www.srh.noaa.gov/srh/tropicalwx/satpix/nwpac_ir4_loop.php

http://www.stormsurfing.com/cgi/display_alt.cgi?a=glob_250

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Updated: Japan Fukushima Nuclear Plant, A Fourth Explosion, Airborne Radiation Now Confirmed

In thermal nuclear reactors (LWRs in specific)...

Diagram: How Fuel Rods Work

Copyright 2011-3011 Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

There have now been a total of four devastating explosions at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant north of Tokyo since the 9.0 earthquake late last Thursday in Japan. Radiation leakage has been confirmed, and the threat of radiation poisoning to people in the surrounding region is growing more serious by the hour.

Here are gathered facts and reports coming out of Japan as of early 3.15.11. These reports are from various international media sources, however the Canadian website for Globe and Mail has compiled the most timely information, for which I am deeply grateful. I have re-posted numerous items from their info-pages on radiation and the health of the human body. I am also advising readers to get familiar with live maps of the Pacific Jet Stream to observe how it blows over the continental USA.

it is now confirmed that radiation is leaking into the atmosphere in Japan. Here’s the link: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/03/15/japanese-nuclear-panic-rises-agency-says-radiation-leaking-atmosphere/

Also, we are learning that iodine tablets are sold out at online locations everywhere, and by the grace of God, another reasonable sized dose of POTASSIUM IODIDE, which is the type of iodine you would need to fight radiation sickness, occurs built into doses of SOLARAY Brand Twice Daily Multi-Vitamins. So if you cannot procure iodine tablets, stock up on this brand of multi-vitamin as an alternative. The dose may be small, but it is at least getting some of the right kind of iodine into your system.

Watch these videos:

3.13.11 Breaking: Japan Faces Nuclear Disaster As Radiation Levels Rise

Cited from the New York Times 3.14.11 1149 pm, Breaking Info:

“After an emergency cabinet meeting, the Japanese government told people living within 30 kilometers, about 18 miles, of the Daiichi plant to stay indoors, keep their windows closed and stop using air conditioning.

Mr. Kan, whose government was extraordinarily weak before the sequence of calamities struck the nation, told the Japanese people that “although this incident is of great concern, I ask you to react very calmly.” And in fact, there seemed to be little panic, but huge apprehension in a country where the drift of radioactivity brings up memories of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the haunting images of post-war Japan.

The two critical questions over the next day or so are how much radioactive material is spewed into the atmosphere, and where the winds carry it. Readings reported on Tuesday showed a spike of radioactivity around the plant that made the leakage categorically worse than in had been, with radiation levels measured at one point as high as 400 millisieverts an hour. Even 7 minutes of exposure at that level will reach the maximum annual dose that a worker at an American nuclear plant is allowed. And exposure for 75 minutes would likely lead to acute radiation sickness.

The extent of the public health risk depends on how long such elevated levels persist — they may have declined after the fire at No. 4 reactor was extinguished — as well as how far and fast the radioactive materials spread, and whether the limited evacuation plan announced by the government proves sufficient.

In Tokyo, 170 miles south of the plant, the metropolitan government said Tuesday it had detected radiation levels 20 times the usual above the city, though it stressed that that level posed no immediate health threat. In Ibaraki Prefecture, just south of Fukushima Prefecture where the plant is located, the amount of radiation reached 100 times the usual levels.”

How radiation affects the body

Published Tuesday, Mar. 15, 2011 1:04AM EDT

Radiation can target many parts of the body. Symptoms vary, with severity depending on dosage or length of exposure

The Risks of Radiation Exposure

Radiation’s Effect Depends on the Amount of Exposure

Cited: “Japanese authorities warned Wednesday morning that they believed that the population living in the area immediately surrounding the stricken nuclear reactors now faced a health risk from further increases in radiation leaks.

Authorities said that radiation levels there had surged to levels that will “clearly have impact on the human body.”

See http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-12732015

More than 100,000 people have been evacuated from homes near Fukushima.


There have been two explosions at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan, following Friday’s earthquake and tsunami, and a third reactor is reportedly at risk of fuel-rod meltdown.

How great a danger do these problems pose for people in Japan and further afield?

Has there been a leakage of radioactive material?

Yes. Local government officials in Fukushima say 190 people have been exposed to some radiation. An American warship, the USS Ronald Reagan, has detected low levels of radiation at a distance of 100 miles (161km) from the Fukushima plant.

How much radioactive material has escaped?

The Japanese authorities say only low levels of radiation have been detected outside the plant. The International Atomic Energy Agency has described it as a level four event on the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES), which is used for an accident “with local consequences”. No abnormal levels of radiation have been detected in Russia.

What type of radioactive material has escaped?

There are reports of radioactive isotopes of caesium and iodine in the vicinity of the plant. Experts say it would be natural for radioactive isotopes of nitrogen and argon to have escaped as well. There is no evidence that any uranium or plutonium has escaped.

What harm do these radioactive materials cause?

Radioactive iodine could be harmful to young people living near the plant. After the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster there were some cases of thyroid cancer as a result. However, people who were promptly issued with iodine tablets ought to be safe. Radioactive caesium, uranium and plutonium are harmful, but do not target any particular organ of the body. Radioactive nitrogen decays within seconds of its release, and argon poses no threat to health.

How did the radioactive materials escape?

There have been problems with cooling systems, causing the reactors to overheat. Production of steam has caused pressure to build up inside the reactor, so small amounts of steam have been deliberately released. Experts say that the presence in the steam of caesium and iodine – which are among the by-products of nuclear fission – suggests that the metal casing of some of the fuel rods has melted or broken. But the uranium fuel itself has a very high melting point so it is less likely to have melted, let alone vapourised.

Could radioactive materials have escaped by any other means?

The authorities have pumped sea water into three reactors. This water will be contaminated by its passage through the reactor, but it is currently unclear whether any of it has been released into the environment.

How long will any contamination last?

Radioactive iodine decays quite quickly. Most will have disappeared within a month. Radioactive caesium does not last long in the body – most has gone within a year. However, it lingers in the environment and can continue to present a problem for many years.

Has there been a meltdown?

The term “meltdown” is used in a variety of ways. As noted above, the reported detection of radioactive caesium and iodine may indicate that some of the metal casing enclosing the reactors’ uranium fuel has melted (a “fuel-rod meltdown”). However, there is as yet no indication that the uranium fuel itself has melted. Still less is there any indication of a “China Syndrome” where the fuel melts, gathers below the reactor and resumes a chain reaction, that enables it to melt everything in its way, and bore a path deep into the earth. If there were to be a serious meltdown, the Japanese reactor is supposed to be able to handle it, preventing the China Syndrome from taking place. Reports suggest that underneath the reactor, within the outer containment vessel, there is a concrete basin designed to capture and disperse any molten fuel.

Could there be a Chernobyl-like disaster?

Experts say this is highly unlikely. The chain reaction at all Fukushima reactors has ceased. The explosions that have occurred have taken place outside the steel and concrete containment vessels enclosing the reactors, which apparently remain solid. At Chernobyl an explosion exposed the core of the reactor to the air, and a fire raged for days sending its contents in a plume up into the atmosphere. At Fukushima the explosions – caused by hydrogen and oxygen vented from the reactor – have damaged only the roof and walls erected around the containment vessels.

Could there be a nuclear explosion?

No. A nuclear bomb and a nuclear reactor are different things.

What caused the hydrogen release from the reactor?

At high temperatures, steam can separate into hydrogen and oxygen in the presence of zirconium, the metal used for encasing the reactor fuel. This mixture is highly explosive.

How do iodine tablets work?

If the body has all the iodine it needs, it will not absorb further iodine from the atmosphere. The tablets fill the body up with non-radioactive iodine, which prevent it absorbing the radioactive iodine.

What kind of radiation levels have been recorded at Fukushima?

The Kyodo news agency reports that a radiation level of 1,557 microsieverts per hour was registered on Sunday. At this level, one hour’s exposure is roughly equivalent to one chest X-ray. Later measurements included 750 microsieverts per hour at 0200 on Monday, and 20 microsieverts per hour at 1145. The last of these measurements is not much to worry about – on a long-haul flight passengers are exposed to about five microsieverts per hour. Furthermore, moving away from the source of radiation, measurements would quickly tail off. Five or 10km away from the plant, the radiation level would be significantly lower.

Is any level of exposure to radiation safe?

In some parts of the world, natural background radiation is significantly higher than others – for example in Cornwall, in south-west England. And yet people live in Cornwall, and many others gladly visit the area. Similarly, every international air flight exposes passengers to higher than normal levels of radiation – and yet people still fly, and cabin crews spend large amounts of time exposed to this radiation. Patients in hospitals regularly undergo X-rays. Scientists dispute whether any level of exposure to radiation is entirely safe, but exposure to some level of radiation – whether at normal background levels or higher – is a fact of life.

How do Fukushima’s problems affect the rest of the world?

It depends on how much radiation is released. At present, the IAEA says the effects are of a “local” nature.

Audio

Live update: Mark MacKinnon reports from radiation testing in Japan

Mark MacKinnon

Globe and Mail Update
Published Sunday, Mar. 13, 2011 9:49AM EDT
Last updated Sunday, Mar. 13, 2011 3:58PM EDT

The Globe’s east Asia correspondent witnesses Japanese residents tested for radiation after fears of leaks at nearby nuclear plant

More related to this story

More Interactives & Infographics

Is It Possible That Radioactive Fallout Could Enter The U.S. Via the Jet Stream?

Copyright 2011-3011 By Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

I found this post on another blog this morning and I am re-posting it as an introduction to this topic. What I am stunned by is that so few others are blogging about this topic! Where are your heads bloggers? Today is not the day to blog about recipes, your kid’s new gadgets, or your spouse’s snoring habits.

Today is the day to get your heads up out of the sand and begin educating yourself like mad about radioactive fallout, and how you can safely live through a possible situation where it floats right over your city.

Call me lo0nie, call me alarmist, call me anything you want to: I DON’T CARE. But call me concerned as hell right now about the very CLEAR and PRESENT DANGER for Americans of radioactive fallout floating over the US, posed by what is happening in Japan. They are literally losing control of their nuclear facilities. Read my earlier posts on this topic to get up to speed:

http://alligatorfarm.wordpress.com/2011/03/14/new-hydrogen-explosion-japan/

Meltdown Alert at Japan Reactor

Nuclear Expert: Radiation Could Spread To US West Coast: http://t.co/Uyfi5aV # 3 hours ago

Here’s the re-post, then on to my own research and updates.

The meltdown occurring at the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant in Japan is growing in intensity.  Out of its six reactors, #1 and #3 have exploded and have ejected their radioactive dust and steam into the atmosphere.  Japanese authorities also claim that the radioactive rods in reactor #2 are  now fully exposed and on the verge of critical mass.  Reactors #4, #5, and #6 have been shut down.  (Could they be the next ones to go?)  This incident is already bigger than Chernobyl.  The radiation emitted from the reactors at the Fukushima plant will, most likely, spread to the United States by way of the jet stream.

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Breaking: New Hydrogen Explosion Rocks Nuclear Power Plant 135 Miles North of Tokyo, Second Quake Now Predicted

Copyright 2011-3011 By Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

This is a breaking story first spotted on The Bloomberg News website.This post will be updated every 15 minutes. There is now a 20 mile exclusion zone around the plant which exploded. The plant is located 135 miles north of Tokyo Japan. 22 people have already tested positive for radiation exposure close the the plant. That number is expected to rise. Government officials in Japan are urging calm.

Japan nuclear alert: before and after

A screen grab taken from news footage by Japanese public broadcaster NHK shows the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power station before (bottom) and after (top) a hydrogen explosion at the number three reactor of the plant, the yellow ring in the top image shows the collapsed building after the explosion. Photograph: -/AFP/Getty Images

Japanese Government Urges Calm After Second Explosion Rocks Nuclear Plant

Japan Nuclear Crisis Worsens As Country Braces for Second Huge Earthquake

Live Video: Latest Hydrogen Explosion at Fukushima Daiichi Reactor #3

From Twitter:

#twcot #tcot Fox News Radio just reported that a Hydrogen explosion has occured at a Japanese Nuclear Power pl… (cont) http://deck.ly/~JeFlm

Reuters Breaking coverage:

Blast Strikes Japan Plant, 2,000 Bodies Found on Coasts

Huffington Post Breaking Coverage:

Fukushima Explosion: Japan Nuclear Plant Blast Believed To Be Hydrogen Explosion

Cited: “Japan’s chief cabinet secretary says a hydrogen explosion has occurred at Unit 3 of Japan’s stricken Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant. The blast was similar to an earlier one at a different unit of the facility.

Yukio Edano says people within a 12-mile (20-kilometer) radius were ordered inside following Monday’s. AP journalists felt the explosion 30 miles (50 kilometers) away.”

Edano says the reactor’s inner containment vessel holding nuclear rods is intact, allaying some fears of the risk to the environment and public.

Breaking video of the most recent hydrogen explosion at Japan nuclear power plant:

Yesterday’s First Explosion, video coverage:

From the Bloomberg website, 45 minutes ago [8:20 pm PT ] :

A hydrogen explosion occurred at Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s Fukushima Dai-Ichi No. 3 reactor at 11:01 a.m. local time today, Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said.

Tokyo Electric spokesman Daisuke Hirose said smoke was seen rising from the reactor. Japan’s Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency reported earlier pressure at the reactor had fallen and Prime Minister Naoto Kan said the situation remains a concern.

The pressure declined after rising earlier today, Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director-general at the safety agency, said at a media briefing. The Fukushima Dai-Ichi station lies 220 kilometers (135 miles) north of the Japanese capital.

Asia’s largest utility is seeking to avoid a meltdown of at least two reactors at the nuclear power station by flooding them with water and boric acid to eliminate the potential for a catastrophic release of radiation into the atmosphere. The station lost power to keep the reactor core cool after the March 11 earthquake, the largest ever recorded in Japan.

On March 12 a hydrogen leak caused a blast that destroyed the walls of the No. 1 reactor. Four workers were injured in the explosion, while no damage was reported to the container holding the reactor’s radioactive core, according to Tokyo Electric.

Winds in the area of the Fukushima plant are blowing at less than 10 kilometers (6 miles) per hour generally in an northeasterly and northerly direction, according to a 9 a.m. update from the Japan Meteorological Agency today.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yuji Okada in Tokyo at yokada6@bloomberg.net; Shigeru Sato in Tokyo at ssato10@bloomberg.net;

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Amit Prakash at aprakash1@bloomberg.net.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-14/hydrogen-explosion-occurs-at-nuclear-power-plant-135-miles-north-of-tokyo.html

Radiation Levels Reported At 1000 Times Above Normal At Nuclear Power Plant 120 Kilometers North of Tokyo Japan

Copyright 2011-3011 By Alternative News Forum, All Rights Reserved.

Selected breaking tweets concerning the Japan earthquake and tsunami:

rt @itecursos & @therightblue & @BreakingNews:U.S.helicopters detect radiation 60 miles from damaged Japanese plant: http://nyti.ms/fp9b7L

GambiaUser Quake Moves Japan Closer to U.S. and Alters Earth’s Spin http://dlvr.it/K7sjw

toothygrin2000 Satellite Photos of Japan, Before and After the Quake and Tsunami – http://nyti.ms/hYQF9W

Optivion Help Japan: Facebook Click Helps Dogs Rescue Trapped Quake Victims http://t.co/i3BKf5e

russbengtson Unbelievable. RT @DrewUnga: RT @latimes: Japan quake: Death toll could be tens of thousands; power rationing begins http://lat.ms/eFeo9k

Japanese officials are sending mixed signals to the west regarding the possibility of a nuclear meltdown. Several explosions have already occurred and one report states that radiation levels surrounding the nuclear plant reactor which is 120 kilometers north of Tokyo are over 1000 times above normal.

The 18 year Super Moon and the Japan Earthquake and Tsunami

Atlantis, Mythical Lost City Swamped By huge Tsunami, May Be Found

Australia NINE News Report on Japan Nuclear Power Plant North of Tokyo By Damian Ryan

More news coverage on the Japan earthquake and tsunami from Australia:

Quake moved Japan 2.4 metres

JAPAN-QUAKE-USGS AAP JAPAN’S massive earthquake, one of the largest ever recorded, appears to have moved the entire island group across the sea.

Survivor rescued 15km out to sea

Japan rescue AFP UPDATE 9.30am: RESCUERS have captured the moment a Japanese man was spotted clinging to debris after surviving two days at sea.

6 comments on this story

We’re watching a new Chernobyl

Radiation check Nick Leys and Wayne Flower THE world is waiting to see if Japan has avoided a nuclear catastrophe as the crisis from the earthquake and tsunami worsens.

18 comments on this story

A wasteland of mud and despair

natori Rick Wallace SHATTERED residents returning to the wreckage of their homes near Natori tell of how they sheltered in terror from the tsunami.

Frantic efforts to avoid meltdown

Fukushima Mari Yamaguchi and Jeff Donn INSIDE the nuclear power plant, officials knew the risks were high when they vented radioactive steam from an overheated reactor vessel.

100,000 troops to hit the ground

Japan troops AFP JAPAN has committed 100,000 troops to a relief effort for the disaster-stricken nation.

Japan blast sparks nuclear talk

PN JAPAN QUAKE AAP UPDATE 4.05pm: THE federal government has refused to buy into a debate on nuclear energy following a nuclear explosion in Japan.

Eerie lull belies a tragedy

Rick Wallace Rick Wallace of The Australian I WAS in an interview with two managers from Japan’s Nippon Steel Engineering when the quake struck on Friday afternoon.

‘Another reactor could explode’

Plant explodes AFP UPDATE 3.15pm: JAPAN is desperately trying to bring an overheating nuclear reactor under control.

74 comments on this story

Walls fall from Japan nuclear plant

Plant explodes AP AN explosion at a nuclear power station tore down the walls of one building today as smoke poured out.

Strong tremor rocks Tokyo

Nuclear plant explosion AFP, Aaron Langmaid UPDATE 11.28am: A STRONG offshore quake has struck 150km northeast of Tokyo, shaking tall buildings in Japan’s capital.

82 comments on this story

The high life can give you the shivers

rule Andrew Rule THE 10th floor seems a long way up when an earthquake hits. The hotel sways like the bridge of a big ship in rough water.

1 comment on this story

Radiation threat after cooling failure

quake10 Anne Wright RESIDENTS living near the Fukushima power plants are bracing themselves for what could be the biggest nuclear disaster in history.

5 comments on this story

Japan fights nuclear emergency

Nuclear plant explosion NewsCore JAPAN and the world struggled to come to terms with the devastation caused by the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear emergency.

Spectre of Chernobyl haunts Japan

Nuclear alert NewsCore EXPERTS warn that pumping sea water to cool reactor is “act of desperation” that may foreshadow Chernobyl-like disaster.

Japan shaken by aftershock

Earthquake AP UPDATE 2.17pm: JAPAN has been shaken by a 6.2 magnitude earthhquake off its eastern coast.

2 comments on this story

10,000 missing in Minamisanriku

Minamisanriku AFP ABOUT 10,000 people are missing in the Japanese port town of Minamisanriku in quake-hit Miyagi prefecture, NHK reports.

72 days that broke hearts

Tsunami Japan James Campbell THIS year nature is trying to tell us we are only here on sufferance. We’ve had floods, cyclones and two massive earthquakes.

28 comments on this story

Meltdown fears after explosion

Nuclear plant NewsCore PEOPLE near the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant were warned to stay indoors amid reports of a radiation leak and possible meltdown.

Quake appeal launched in Australia

Japan Tsunami AAP AN urgent appeal to help those affected by the deadly tsunami in Japan has been launched.