Sunday, May 24, 2015

Nuclear Jello - 1st Fukushima Dreams

Mar 16, 2011


I was in this dream, it was in a nuclear power plant in what seemed like Japan, because the plant was in that same kind of crisis state...but it was a simulation in a lab somewhere, maybe Russia or Germany. I don't really know where...

But we were in this simulation, to find what to do...and we had made this solution, that was like a thick liquid, like a suspension, like amoxicilin suspension that they give to kids? it was that kind of suspension thickness, but it was clear.

We poured it over the whole area, and it jelled, and then the leaking radiation, or contamination, or what ever they call it...it was suspended in this jello, and it was not leaking out any more.

We did a small test in something the size of a large cup...and I was holding it, walking over to show one of the professors there, and thinking, 'nuclear jello...I wonder if they made it out of cow hooves...'

But anyways, whatever they made it out of, it worked...and it worked in the cup, and in the bigger simulated test.

~~~~~~~~~

This is not quite what I dreamt...but they seem to be looking in the right direction...



Test to contain radioactive dust
Teams working on the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant are going to use a synthetic resin to try and prevent radioactive dust from becoming airborne or being washed into the sea.

The hydrogen explosions earlier this month at the Number One and Three reactors spread contaminated dust and debris over a wide area.

The Tokyo Electric Power Company will begin sprinkling synthetic resin in certain places from Thursday. The resin is water-soluble and it is hoped that it will contain the contaminated dust.

TEPCO will use 9000 liters of synthetic resin to produce a 60000 liter solution. It will be sprinkled around the Number four and six reactors using water trucks.

TEPCO will study whether the sprinkling prevents the dispersal of radioactive material. If successful, it will expand the scope of the sprinkling.

Thursday, March 31, 2011 07:57 +0900 (JST)

No comments:

Post a Comment