lots
no
No, a nuclear explosion on a nuclear power plant would not cause the explosion radius to increase. The explosion radius would be determined by the yield of the nuclear weapon itself, not by the presence of the power plant.
nuclear plant explosion
The nuclear plant explosion of 1986
hibaku jumoku
No. There is no possibility whatsoever of a nuclear power plant having a nuclear explosion. It is not physically, or even theoretically, possible for the core to be brought into a super-prompt critical geometry and held there long enough to consume enough fuel to "go nuclear".
The Chernobyl nuclear plant used enriched uranium as fuel in its reactor. The accident at the plant resulted in a nuclear chain reaction, leading to a catastrophic explosion and release of radioactive materials.
The effects of the Chernobyl nuclear plant melt down were catastophic to the population. The plant lesked high levels of radiation in the area. People who lived near the plant were at risk of getting cancer.
Yes, the explosion happened in Japan. It was very tragic.
radiological not toxicological
no it was caused by the tectonic plates the nuclear plant disaster happened because of the earthquake
Radioactive material was shot 16,404.1995 feet in the Chernobl explosion in 1986.