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Nick Touran

@whatisnuclear36,736 subscribers

Nuclear engineer / advanced reactor designer (Ph.D. P.E.) who runs https://t.co/ofTjIciUnl.

Shorts

Germany: “Even tiny doses of radiation are bad. Burn coal instead of low-carbon nuclear!” Also Germany: “The U-Bahn station tiles in Berlin are glazed with slightly radioactive uranium.” Source:

Germany: “Even tiny doses of radiation are bad. Burn coal instead of low-carbon nuclear!” Also Germany: “The U-Bahn station tiles in Berlin are glazed with slightly radioactive uranium.” Source:

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Having fun at the Vallecitos Atomic Plant dedication, May 22, 1957

Having fun at the Vallecitos Atomic Plant dedication, May 22, 1957

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Sometimes you *really* need to go from 0 to 7,600 mph in 5 seconds. The Sprint anti-ballistic missile accelerated at 100 g and carried a W66 thermonuclear warhead. Man, Cold War missile defense was kinda crazy.

Sometimes you *really* need to go from 0 to 7,600 mph in 5 seconds. The Sprint anti-ballistic missile accelerated at 100 g and carried a W66 thermonuclear warhead. Man, Cold War missile defense was kinda crazy.

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An import PSA in this season of giving.

An import PSA in this season of giving.

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Videos

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Will you at least admit that a nuclear explosion is awesome?

Nick Touran

54,725 просмотров • 6 месяцев назад

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An incredible NUCLEAR-POWERED FLIGHT film is newly available online! We just scanned this declassified film showing 30 minutes of detail from the major reactor development program at its peak, between 1956-1958. It presents the program goals and evolution, including how global operating costs were expected to be reduced by eliminating the need to operate foreign air bases around the world. Materials problems required them to reduce requirements from high-altitude/supersonic to low-altitude/subsonic. Ongoing development and progress is shown on the GE direct air cycle (XMA-2) in Idaho and Evandale, and the P&W indirect liquid-metal lithium-7 cooled cycle at CANAL, where they developed niobium-based alloys and technology that could run at the required crazy-high temperatures and withstand lithium. It shows dozens of things I've never seen before, like the 3 ZrH and BeO inserts put into HTRE-2, and talks a bit about the HTRE-3 meltdown. The HTREs can still be seen in the parking lot of the EBR-1 museum on the INL site. They show an in-reactor test loop being fabricated and tested in a large oil-fired heater, destined to be inserted in the ETR in Idaho. Of course, shielding makes an appearance. The Convair Nuclear Test Aircraft is shown, and shields made of Lithium hydride, BeO, tungsten alloys, and depleted uranium are discussed. They also show some work on radiation effects on electrical components, using test reactors. Overall, another incredible find and amazing content given the deceptively simple and boring title. Huge thanks to my friends at Nuclear Talent Scout for funding the scan, and for choosing to prioritize it! As always, the engineers from the 1950s continue to throw the word "advanced reactor" back in our faces today.

Nick Touran

67,955 просмотров • 1 год назад

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