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1985
1986
Power unit explosion
At 01:23:47 on Saturday, April 26, 1986, an explosion occurred at the 4th power unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, which completely destroyed the reactor. The power unit building partially collapsed, killing two people. A fire started in various rooms and on the roof.
A large amount of radioactive substances were released into the environment. It was by this that the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was radically different from the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the explosion resembled a very powerful "dirty bomb" - the main damaging factor was radioactive infection.
From what and how the explosion occurred
During a routine inspection on April 26, 1986, the fourth reactor of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant experienced a power jump and a reactor protection and shutdown system was triggered. But the reactor was not shut down. Attempts to contain the surge and a dangerous increase in core temperature led to an even greater increase in power. Manual control rods used to monitor core temperature were inserted too late. When they were introduced into the core, they began to crack and got stuck. The temperature and power continued to rise until all the water used to cool the reactor evaporated, causing a powerful increase in pressure. The first steam explosion in the reactor led to the fact that its cover weighing two thousand tons pierced the roof of the power unit.
The damage proved catastrophic; the remaining cooling water from the destroyed channels rushed into the reactor, and contacting the hot fuel rods, immediately turned into steam. Shortly after the first explosion, another, more powerful explosion occurred, throwing the core material into the air. The fire and the spread of radioactive residues began.
And since the hot heart of the reactor was no longer protected by tons of steel and concrete, the core was no longer cooled. Melting began.
When we talk about melting the core, it's not just some kind of metaphor. Radioactive materials used as fuels are increasingly heated by the uncontrolled release of large energy particles, and this happens until they literally melt, turning into something resembling lava.
In Chernobyl, the loss of cooling water caused fuel to melt, some of which was released into the atmosphere. But another part of the glass fuel under the reactor into the pool, melting its base. The stream of radioactive lava, flowing through pipes and burning through concrete, gradually cooled and froze. As a result, a cluster of stalactites and stalagmites was formed, covered with hardened lava, as well as a large black mass, which was later called the "elephant leg."
"Elephant Leg"
By the fall of 1986, teams of liquidators fighting the Chernobyl nuclear disaster reached the underground corridor at the base of emergency reactor number four. Inside the so-called bubbler pool, they found black lava that flowed directly from the core. The most famous formation there was solid, and radiation sensors strictly warned liquidators that it was impossible to approach it. They pushed the camera around the corner on a tripod and removed this mass, giving it the grim name "elephant leg."
Discovered by liquidators in the basement of the fourth block of the nuclear power plant. She remains deadly today, in a few minutes next to her a person will receive a fatal dose of radiation.]]
According to measurements made at that time, the still hot part of the molten rod emitted such an amount of radiation that a lethal dose could be obtained in 300 seconds.
Elephant Leg may still be the most dangerous escape on the planet.
In 30 seconds, you can get a dose after which a week later you will feel dizzy and tired. Two minutes of radiation and you will soon be bleeding. Four minutes: vomiting, diarrhea, fever. 300 seconds, and you will have two days to live.
Delay in evacuating residents
The evacuation of Pripyat residents began only a day later, and Chernobyl only on May 4.
Dealing with the consequences of an accident
None of the three liquidator heroes died in 1986. Boris Baranov died only 19 years after the accident, having received the title of "Honorary Power Engineer" before that. Valery Bespalov lived in the city of Slavutich and back in 2008 gave an interview to the press. Alexey Ananenko in 2011 was appointed Director for Institutional Development of the Nuclear Association, in 2014 he made a report at an international conference.
The photo shows a rare watering BelAZ. During the decontamination of the city of Pripyat, it was supposed to be used as the most powerful watering machine for washing the tallest sixteen-story residential buildings in Pripyat, but it could not be used for this purpose, since its powerful jet knocked out the glass in the windows.
1989
1990: Children of Chernobyl Programme
Fidel Castro meets the first Ukrainian children who arrived in Cuba under the program "Children of Chernobyl," 1990. The program operated for 21 years.
The help of Cuban specialists was provided to boleye 22 thousand sick children, including 457 oncohematologic patients. 4,512 patients were treated for severe chronic pathology in inpatient health facilities. During this period, 355 surgical operations were carried out in Cuba.
Cuba spent more than $350 million on the program, but in 2012 it was curtailed at the initiative of Viktor Yanukovych, after a request from the Cuban side for joint participation in spending.
1993
2020: Boston Dynamics robosobak brought to Chernobyl to measure radiation
In October 2020, the Boston Dynamics robot was brought to Chernobyl to measure radiation. This was announced on its Facebook page by the State Specialized Enterprise "Central Enterprise for Radioactive Waste Management" (GSP "TsPORO"), which tested the robot together with specialists from the University of Bristol. Read more here.