One: Chernobyl.
I guess they think it is dangerous. It can be, as Chernobyl demonstrated, but then other forms of energy are also dangerous. Think of accidents to coal miners, oil refinery explosions, and natural gas explosions.
Very unlikely. Also neither were nuclear explosions:Chernobyl was a massive steam explosion in the cooling system, and Japan was a combination of steam explosions and maybe hydrogen/oxygen explosions. The nuclear releases in both cases were due to breaches of the containment by these explosions. If they had been nuclear explosions many miles from the plants would have been leveled and that did not happen.
Chernobyl has three syllables: cher-no-byl
Because of the disaster at the nuclear power plant in Chernobyl, not many people live there. Chernobyl, Ukraine has a population of 500.
The United States had an incident in the Three Mile Island and Ukraine had one in Chernobyl but the results were not compared as the results reached on Japan in world war two.
lots
336,000 people
Not necessarily. Many of the explosions we are familiar with involve high-temperature chemical reactions, which do release light. Explosions at lower temperature, such as steam explosions, do not produce light.
Maybe by a volcanic explosions, because many scientists says the earth came from a giant volcanic explosions
nitrogen
The population of Chernobyl - city - is 500.