yes at one point in history it can
Mankind is not ready to use nuclear power. We must dismantle the reactors that are in use and perfect other safe methods of energy. Otherwise we are doomed to repeat Chernobyl again and again until the earth is laid to waste.
In 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine suffered a catastrophic meltdown due to a flawed reactor design and operator error during a safety test. The reactor exploded, releasing a large amount of radioactive material into the environment, leading to widespread contamination and a significant death toll. The area remains highly contaminated and is now a restricted exclusion zone.
There are emergency safety system that could be used to bring the nuclear plant again under control.
They aren't. Even including Chernobyl, which will never happen again, wind power kills more people per unit of energy produced than nuclear. As of 2010, 53 Americans have been killed working on wind turbines, while only 3 have been killed working on nuclear power plants.Nuclear is one of the safest forms of energy.Hydroelectric is the most dangerous, because people build cities under dams, which then fail. For instance, the failure of the Banqiao Reservoir Dam killed 171,000 people.Coal is the second most dangerous. Coal pollution kills as many people as Chernobyl every few weeks.
One word for 'to happen again' is 'recur.'
One word for 'to happen again' is 'recur.'
could what happen again? In order for me to answer you have to be more descriptive!
When a toddler has a phone call meltdown, try to stay calm and patient. Offer comfort and reassurance, and try to distract them with a favorite toy or activity. If necessary, end the call and address their needs before trying again later.
no
yes it will
Nuclear power plants don't explode, in the style of a nuclear bomb. That particular super prompt criticality is impossible to maintain for the length of time necessary to consume the core, leading to a true, nuclear detonation. If you are thinking about the explosions that occurred at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant, those were hydrogen gas explosions. Hydrogen gas built up as a consequence of the high temperature of the zircalloy fuel pins in contact with water. When additional water was added to help cool the fuel, the hydrogen combined with the oxygen in the water under temperature and exploded. Again, it was not a nuclear explosion.