Overblog Tous les blogs Top blogs Environnement & Bio
Editer l'article Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
MENU
Le blog de fukushima-is-still-news

information about Fukushima published in English in Japanese media info publiée en anglais dans la presse japonaise

Publicité

Using muons (3)

 February 13, 2015

Tepco starts using cosmic rays to grasp condition inside damaged reactors

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/02/13/national/tepco-starts-using-cosmic-rays-grasp-condition-inside-damaged-reactors/#.VN3Ori51Cos

Publicité
Using muons (3)

This handout picture taken by Tokyo Electric Power Co. on Monday shows a measuring device of cosmic rays, to be used to look inside crippled reactors, being installed at Tepco's Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant at Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture. The device will use muons to check fuel debris inside the reactors. | AFP-JIJI/TEPCO

 

Kyodo

The operator of the disaster-hit Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant on Thursday began experiments using cosmic rays in an effort to look at the condition of the damaged reactor cores, hoping it will help determine how to remove the melted fuel they hold.

During the process of decommissioning the plant, which is expected to take up to 40 years, the eventual removal of fuel debris from the three reactors that suffered meltdowns in the 2011 earthquake-tsunami disaster is the hardest part. But the exact condition of the melted fuel inside the reactors is unknown, as high radiation levels have prevented anyone from obtaining data.

So Tokyo Electric Power Co. is now turning to technology utilizing muons, a type of cosmic ray that constantly showers down on the Earth’s surface. While muons pass through most objects, they are blocked by heavy substances such as uranium, which is used in nuclear fuel. This means muons can be used to create an image of the condition of the fuel inside the reactors similar to an X-ray, the operator said.

Tepco has installed devices — developed by Japan’s High Energy Accelerator Research Organization — around the reactor 1 building and began collecting data on Thursday. The same technology has been used to identify the condition of magma inside a volcano, the utility said.

Tepco plans to collect data for about a month and announce its results in March. But there are limitations to the muon technology and the operator aims to grasp the rough condition of the melted fuel as the first step.

The utility believes that most of the fuel in reactor 1 melted through the bottom of the pressure vessel, but details remain unknown nearly four years after the outbreak of the nuclear crisis.

 

Partager cet article
Repost0
Pour être informé des derniers articles, inscrivez vous :
Commenter cet article