As of October 2023, California has one operational nuclear reactor, which is located at the Diablo Canyon Power Plant. The other reactor at Diablo Canyon is also scheduled to be decommissioned, with plans for the plant to close entirely by 2025. California had previously operated several reactors, but most have been shut down over the years.
what is the estinated cost for running a red light when making a right hand turn in california.
If nuclear fusion power reactors were built they would depend on the fusion of Deuterium with Tritium which are two isotopes of hydrogen. However this cannot be done at this time. If you mean the nuclear fission power reactors now used, the chain reaction that sustains fission depends on neutrons: each fission generates 2 to 3 free neutrons which can potentially cause another fission. Impurities in materials and the positioning of control rods absorb enough of the excess neutrons to keep the reaction at a constant rate (i.e. the reactor is exactly critical at all times it is running at constant power). Readable spelling helps get the right answer, otherwise we must guess and might answer wrong because of a single letter.
When your running on your right leg.
It depends on what you mean as "recently": the Laguna Verde power plant in Mexico and its two 4.8 GW nuclear reactors were built since 1976 and 1977, respectively. Also both became fully operational since 1989 and 1995. There are no other "commercial" nuclear power plants in Central America: there were two plants in Puerto Rico, but were dismantled or decommissioned since 1968. The island of Cuba tried to build a nuclear plant with the help of the Soviet Union, but the construction was suspended due to the collapse of the later. Panama (the canal zone) had a floating nuclear power plant, but was decommissioned since 1976. Finally, the island of Jamaica has a pair of reactors, but those have a nominal output of a mere 20 kW, so they are used almost exclusively for research.If you mean why there are no new plants being built right now, the answer is the huge costs associated with such endeavour and the fears that resulted from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
Yeah you are right this incident happen in GE lightning industry in Fukushima, Japan this year & it involved nuclear reactor which lead to heavy air pollution in Japan.
what do u mean not running right? is it miss firing, etc?
It does right after mitosis.
korea
Nuclear weapons are right now the only barrier between WW3.
No, you cannot turn right on a red arrow in California.
First you have to build the right sort of reactor. You don't use large power reactors like PWR or BWR, because they have very thick pressure vessels operating at high pressure and introducing the sample material would be too difficult. Instead you have a small open pool reactor which is just an assembly of fuel plates in a pool of water, not pressurised, the small amount of heat produced is rejected to atmosphere. There will be built in re-entrant tubes which go into the heart of the reactor and enable material samples to be introduced, left for a while to be irradiated, and withdrawn. So then it's just a matter of choosing the material you want to activate, preparing the sample in the right form, inserting it and removing it into a shielded container.
No, it's part of Mexico not California. I say that because it's right beside Baja California (which is part of Mexico), and also the Gulf of California is right beside Mexico.