i dont know try some where else
About 616 miles to Moscow from Chernobyl.
Given the topic this question is listed under, I think you might be confusing Chernobyl with the bombings of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of WWII. Chernobyl was a nuclear accident at a plant in the Ukraine which took place on April 26, 1986.
About 988.8 KM :)
As far as i know, Only God knows. :)
There was no famous disaster (or anything else) at Chernobyl in Russia as there is no such place. However for the disaster that occurred in Chernobyl in the Ukraine, please see the related question.
it threw radioactive materials into the atmosphere which was spread by the weather
it spread all around the world, even in US and Canada, that is the reason we have the problem with Autism The above is not quite true. The main fall-out spread in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus. However there were detections of low fall-out at a nuclear plant in Sweden, over 1,000 km away! The City located neat to the Chernobyl site, which I believe was called Pripyat or something similar was evacuated, and abandoned. People left many belongings as at the time they believed they were being evacuated only as a temporary measure. Radiation levels have dropped considerably at the abandoned City now. The United States were not affected in any way by the radiation spread.
it spread all around the world, even in US and Canada, that is the reason we have the problem with Autism The above is not quite true. The main fall-out spread in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus. However there were detections of low fall-out at a nuclear plant in Sweden, over 1,000 km away! The City located neat to the Chernobyl site, which I believe was called Pripyat or something similar was evacuated, and abandoned. People left many belongings as at the time they believed they were being evacuated only as a temporary measure. Radiation levels have dropped considerably at the abandoned City now. The United States were not affected in any way by the radiation spread.
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.
Its not. The Beta particles (Iodine 131 ) emmited from the diaster will have been spread far and wide now and will also have been less concentrated, so therefore the actual Iodine 131 emmited from the diasaster is of relativly low harm to us, about as much harm as backround radiation.
In the 2000 years, Christianity has spread far and wide, it is in all countries today, roughly.
Yes, Chernobyl is a city.