Swimming in radioactive water can pose serious health risks due to exposure to radiation. The level of danger depends on the type and concentration of radioactive materials present, as well as the duration of exposure. Short-term exposure may cause skin irritation, while long-term exposure increases the risk of cancer and other serious health issues. It's crucial to avoid swimming in any water suspected of being contaminated with radioactive substances.
They die.
The deeper you swim, the greater pressure becomes because there is more water above you pressing down.
No, water is not radioactive.
Nothing, Its still water. Boats and animals swim around the dam. So the water stays the same!
All radioactive isotopes will disintegrate.
Yes, it is possible for water to become radioactive if it comes into contact with radioactive materials or is contaminated by radioactive substances.
Ordinary water is not radioactive, so it has no half-life.
In that case, the radioactive materials will pollute the atmosphere.
This region become a radioactive contaminated area.
No, the waffled crane cannot swim. this happens because the size of their poops are so massive that their butt hole stretches out and it gets filled with water and kills it. Beware if you take a massive dump then dont swim!
Water itself does not become radioactive, luckily, but any dissolved material in the water in the reactor primary circuit gets irradiated by the neutron flux and so can become radioactive. Therefore it is very important to control the water purity, it is all treated in a demineralisation plant, but then that is normal practice for power plants anyway, the difference in a nuclear plant is that the removed material can be radioactive. The secondary water/steam system in a PWR will not become radioactive, neither will the station cooling water used to cool the turbine condenser.
yes sharks swim in the water