Crosswords5 mins ago
Fukushima
Fukushima Nuclear Plant in Japan has largely survived the quake/tsunami - this demonstrates that Nuclear Power is safe...........?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ixion. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
This is not another Chernobyl.
The nuclear material was not released into the atmosphere. I'm sure that the 'greens' will exploit this incident as reason not to use nuclear power – when simple mathematics and basic physics can show you that the world cannot be powered by wind, wave and solar power at this present time. I look forward to the time when these technologies can power the world but right now they can't.
The nuclear material was not released into the atmosphere. I'm sure that the 'greens' will exploit this incident as reason not to use nuclear power – when simple mathematics and basic physics can show you that the world cannot be powered by wind, wave and solar power at this present time. I look forward to the time when these technologies can power the world but right now they can't.
WShee9 - “Wait till the moon collides with it....then we will see how f*cking safe it is...... “
I've just read the other thread relating to this matter and you seem concerned that the moon is about to hit the Earth. Are you insane? The moon is not about to hit us.
The moon is hurtling around the earth at about 1km per second and is being stopped from spinning off into space by the Earth's gravity. It's a simplistic explanation but I thought it was befitting bearing in mind your apparent grasp of physics. In any case, the moon cannot hit us in a literal sense due to something called the Roche limit...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roche_limit
I've just read the other thread relating to this matter and you seem concerned that the moon is about to hit the Earth. Are you insane? The moon is not about to hit us.
The moon is hurtling around the earth at about 1km per second and is being stopped from spinning off into space by the Earth's gravity. It's a simplistic explanation but I thought it was befitting bearing in mind your apparent grasp of physics. In any case, the moon cannot hit us in a literal sense due to something called the Roche limit...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roche_limit
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
this might spook you out http://elearn.main.nv.../images/779/77964.gif - until you realise that it does this every lunar month
-- answer removed --