The RBMK reactors at Chernobyl were probably the most unsafe reactors ever designed and built. They should never have been built.
There are a few dangers that are inherent in a nuclear reactor. The major danger inherent in a nuclear reactor is the effects of radiation. Radiation poisoning can be extremely deadly and harmful. Other inherent dangers include radioactive waste and the potential catastrophic damage of an accident such as at Chernobyl.
A concrete sarcophagus was built around the damaged rector but it leaks and has cracks in the walls. Uranium isotopes are water soluble and are polluting the ground water. The whole edifice is in dire need of replacement.
a completely mixed reactor. the concentration in the reactor is the same that flows our of the reactor
Chernobyl was a Nuclear Power Plant.
The Chernobyl Reactor is still active.
this was rote by amandaTHE Chernobyl Disaster was caused by a reactor.
1986
the reactor accident at the chernobyl nuclear power plant.
No, nothing happened like melting of people in Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident.
chernobyl
the happenings in Chernobyl were that the nuclear reactor 4 blue up sending a plume of radiation over chernobyl killing lots of peeps
Chernobyl started from an inherently unstable design, it's considered a breeder reactor, really good at making weapons grade plutonium but functionally unstable. The actual incident occurred during testing of the reactor to see how far it could be pushed.
At Chernobyl there was a steam explosion which blew off the top of the reactor followed by a fire due to the graphite moderator burning in air, and a huge amount of radioactive material was discharged, including fission products from the fuel. I'm not sure which fast reactor you are referring to, but certainly the incident did not involve massive catastrophic failure of the reactor vessel, or it would have become a world incident as Chernobyl did.
weathering
chernobyl
fallout from burning graphite mixed with molten reactor fuel.