No
Covering it with cement will Never work, because the cement can only absorb a certain amount of radiation before it starts leaking through, and this will always happen because there is no way to completely contain it.
If you imagine a piece of foam and you run it under a tap, what happens here is it absorbs water, but it can only absorb so much before it starts to leak out.
Radiation works in a similar way. Materials like concrete and cement can only absorb so much radiation before it starts to leak through.
Yes, as long as there is a police report and all repairs have been documented, pictures invoices of parts used ect. This answer "yes" does have its limitations based on the laws of the state that the accident occured. I own a shop in New Jersey and have helped many customers resolve accident related difficulties with little to no problems. A GOOD Repair shop will help you resolve this matter. Good Luck!
Resolve can be a verb or a noun. As a verb: Please resolve the problem by the end of this month. As a noun: The information, instead of stopping her, strengthened her resolve.
Resolve the question on the board.
The past tense of resolve is resolved.
The Resolve was created on 1915-05-31.
Lights Resolve was created in 2006.
Resolve is a noun. It describes an action.
You've only strengthened my resolve to provide a good example. Let's resolve this issue congenially.
I resolve to get an A on this test!He had no resolve to quit smoking.The group discussed but could not resolve the problem.
When the two arguing boys went to the principal's office, she said they needed to resolve their problems.
wins resolve the netbios name to the system name
Let us resolve our differences.