Most Ridiculous Nuclear Videos Ever? - Nuclear Engineer Reacts

Ғылым және технология

Пікірлер: 138

  • @markevans2294
    @markevans22942 ай бұрын

    Funny to have a voice over saying how lifeless Pripyat is whilst the video shows the city in the process of turning into a forest.

  • @isakrynell8771
    @isakrynell87712 ай бұрын

    Chernobyl lifeless?!? The Chernobyl exclusion zone is Europes most successful nature preserve.

  • @Inkomstkatt

    @Inkomstkatt

    2 ай бұрын

    And he says it while showing an image of an overgrown amusement park ride! Where do they think the plants came from? The Soviet Union had its issues (to put it mildly), but even they didn't just let vegetation grow wild in their cities. Quite the opposite.

  • @isakrynell8771

    @isakrynell8771

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Inkomstkatt No as a matter of fact that amusement park was bran new when the accident happened. It hadn’t even opened yet it was scheduled to open about a week after the evacuation happened.

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan20232 ай бұрын

    6:50 the sign translates to: "NUCLEAR POLLUTION! Grazing, Hay Mowing, Mushroom and Berry Picking PROHIBITED!"

  • @oxylepy2
    @oxylepy22 ай бұрын

    It seems the green glowing goo trope might have come from radium paint.

  • @StormsparkPegasus

    @StormsparkPegasus

    2 ай бұрын

    Right but the stuff that glows isn't radioactive, it's just zinc sulfide. The radium just provides the power source to make it glow. The same chemical will glow when exposed to any energy source.

  • @Merennulli

    @Merennulli

    2 ай бұрын

    Correct, though the goo part comes separately. Germany stored mid level waste (corrosive chemicals used in nuclear power facilities) improperly, leading to damaged barrels labeled as radioactive waste and leaking chemical waste that were spread through news media decades ago.

  • @CodyFromUnknown

    @CodyFromUnknown

    2 ай бұрын

    Same with Uranium with UV Light .

  • @GlutenEruption

    @GlutenEruption

    2 ай бұрын

    @@StormsparkPegasus yeah, but the public doesn't understand that. All they know/knew is "my radium watch glows green because radiation, therefore radiation = green glow"

  • @T3H455F4C3

    @T3H455F4C3

    2 ай бұрын

    I think the Simpsons are mainly responsible for cementing the trope in modern culture.

  • @ActrosTech
    @ActrosTech2 ай бұрын

    Stupidity is the biggest threat, not the radiation.

  • @WR3ND

    @WR3ND

    13 күн бұрын

    As has been painfully demonstrated, they aren't mutually exclusive, but yeah...

  • @taitano12
    @taitano122 ай бұрын

    "... Will remain lifeless for thousands of years." Shows an overgrown bumper-car arena with plenty of moss lichen and a dense forest. 🙄

  • @CatInTopHat
    @CatInTopHat2 ай бұрын

    6:55 sign says "radioactive contamination! cattle grazing, haymaking, mushroom and berry picking are forbidden!"

  • @JonatanGronoset
    @JonatanGronoset2 ай бұрын

    These are indeed ridiculous, lol. With your aversion to the green glow and goop, I may suggest you looking into a video of the fanmade *Pokemon Uranium,* where radiation makes the pokemon evolve into their "nuclear" forms and of course turn green and shoot gamma rays! ☢

  • @kittycatcaoimhe
    @kittycatcaoimhe2 ай бұрын

    I mean technically the glow stick goo is toxic. You'll have a lot of phenols and PAHs left over, as well as possibly some oxalates. That's all irritants and carcinogens, and any leftover oxalates can cause kidney damage. But the "decontamination" needed for a hydraulic press (where, notably, people should not be licking or pressing their eyes up against) is to wipe up the goo and maybe clean with a solvent. But that's not nearly what they are trying to mean lmao

  • @sjcwoor
    @sjcwoorАй бұрын

    Do not substitute drinking normal water for spent fuel pool water... Thanks dude. Noted. I will definitly take your advice. lol

  • @StormsparkPegasus
    @StormsparkPegasus2 ай бұрын

    On the subject of heavy water...due to the molecular weight being different, it behaves SLIGHTLY differently chemically than regular water. In large doses, this is enough to make enzymes not work correctly, and thus cause a huge issue. It would take a LOT of heavy water to do this though, you'd have to drink nothing but heavy water for a long enough time to replace a significant fraction of your body's water before it started to become toxic. Also, a lot of people think heavy water is radioactive, and it's not. Deuterium is stable. Tritated water (using tritium instead of deuterium - what do you call that, extra heavy water?) is radioactive but that's not what anyone means when they say heavy water.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    The ancient term was heavy heavy water, as opposed to heavy water or light water. Obviously, due to the absurdity of repetition, tritated or deuterated water became the more accepted terms. Of course, then there's grading, which I'm uncertain for D2O vs D1H1O kind of water, etc... But, with heavy water, yeah, you'd need absurd amounts of it over time to replace the natural light water in the body enough to create problems and tritated water, beyond radiation damage also causes a much greater amount of enzyme malfunctions at a substantially lower LD50 due to how sluggish the reactions are. The body uses protons all the time, especially inside of mitochondria, tossing around that proton with a couple of neutron dance partners is rather energy intensive, what with three times the mass to lug between compartments in the pore system.

  • @robertsneddon731
    @robertsneddon7312 ай бұрын

    The image shown in the video at 21:00 is a piece of Pu-238, self-heating from radioactive decay. Pu-238 is used in radioisotope thermal generators (RTGs) because of this self-heating effect. Not a green glow though.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    To get it to glow for the photo, the physicist working with it had covered it for a few minutes with a graphite blanket. So, he likely needed to decontaminate that plutonium pellet before loading it into the RTG that was going into space. NASA's really funny about that kind of thing. The blanket likely just got eventually tossed into general contaminated low level waste, as it isn't really worth the man hours to test it.

  • @gdheib0430

    @gdheib0430

    2 ай бұрын

    I thought the main element used in the Russian RTGs was Strontium 90? Oh no seems that was I believe in a Kyle Hill video...thanks though made me look it up so see that not all candidates self heat as well. Straight from the wiki on RTGs (yeah I know not the best source of information but usually decently accurate). Plutonium-238, curium-244, strontium-90, and most recently americium-241 are the most often cited candidate isotopes

  • @Gin-toki
    @Gin-toki2 ай бұрын

    The second video you looked at was 100% AI generated, from scripting to voice acting. There are many people who have set up more or less automatic content creation bots to fill various social media platforms with autogenerated content, in hopes of earning some money off of it. The fourth video with the large crane claw, that one is standing in one of the abandoned equpment yards near the powerplant, all the equipment there was used to remove debris including the scattered graphite from the reactor and they're still heavily contaminated. There are a couple of videos on YT showing someone venturing into these areas and taking readings from the equipment and what the girls in the photo are doing, is rather stupid.

  • @Rusty-METAL-J
    @Rusty-METAL-J2 ай бұрын

    #2: Someone should ask him if he wants to take a trip to Pripyat to see the plants and wildlife, then maybe he'll adopt 1 of the, "Dogs of Chernobyl," A real charity that helps find dogs that are descendants of domestic dogs that were left behind. Some of Em are 2nd and 3rd Gen now. They're as healthy as dogs from elsewhere.

  • @Rusty-METAL-J

    @Rusty-METAL-J

    2 ай бұрын

    "Zone of Alienation" WTF LMAO

  • @Rusty-METAL-J

    @Rusty-METAL-J

    2 ай бұрын

    I took a screen shot and plugged the photo into Google Translator and the sign you wondered about is as follows. The numbers count the lines because Mushrooms is actually the end of the 4th line of text. 1 NUCLEAR 2 POLLUTION! 3 4 Grazing, Hay Mowing, Mushrooms, 5 And Berry Picking 6 7 PROHIBITED!

  • @markevans2294

    @markevans2294

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Rusty-METAL-J The Ukrainian Зона відчуження (Zona vidchuzhennya) does appear to literally translate to "Zone of Alienation", as well as "Exclusion Zone".

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow, been hanging around a black hole for a bit? A canine generation is, in the wild, around 6 - 10 months. So, we're talking 76 - 100 generations easily. But yeah, they're as healthy as dogs anywhere. This isn't 1986 any longer, despite the bullshit that these videos are peddling, likely some at Russian disinformation units behest to try to nuclear blackmail the US into submission (I'm not being paranoid, there is an ongoing campaign that's well documented to do just that to get our involvement with helping Ukraine halted). Having grown up during and served in some of the hotter times of the Cold War, I'm familiar with those types of antics, which are even easier now with the intertubes and all...

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Rusty-METAL-J darn! I wanted to eat some grass from there! But, giving the berry picking prohibition, they'd likely not even allow me to browse...

  • @SpasticSpelunker
    @SpasticSpelunker29 күн бұрын

    I’m pretty sure the Geiger counter from the guy eating uranium oxide is a prospecting Geiger counter that only measures in the mR/hr range. Either way, depending how long it’s in there, it’s a bold move.

  • @evanbrown7325
    @evanbrown7325Күн бұрын

    Moral of the story is that Tyler can't take a joke.

  • @LimitlessPossibilitiesX
    @LimitlessPossibilitiesXАй бұрын

    plutonium looking like a regular metal is even scarier

  • @seraphina985
    @seraphina98526 күн бұрын

    Having enough chemistry knowledge to have made home made glow lights myself the liquid itself is not the best stuff to have lying around. Most formulations definately qualify as irritants and are capable of causing inflammation on contact with human tissue of the skin, eyes, nose, mouth, or throat. Other than that pretty harmless, good idea to wear gloves etc while clearing it up but it's not going to kill you or harm you at all if you take even the most basic of precautions.

  • @meglukes
    @meglukes2 ай бұрын

    I feel like that second video was also written by ChatGPT lol

  • @AndrewMefford
    @AndrewMefford2 ай бұрын

    Tyler, please put all our minds at ease and tell us we will never have to worry about you turning into a zombie. 😂

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    No, the zombie is a natural state of merchant marines on liberty.

  • @ArtoPekkanen
    @ArtoPekkanenАй бұрын

    I've watched quite a few vids about people visiting Chernobyl ... and it's actually really lively over there. The vegetation has overgrown large areas of the city. Wildlife is abundant. There is even a population of dogs living there, descendants of those pets left behind.

  • @thomasxbr1411
    @thomasxbr14112 ай бұрын

    Hi Tyler, I really like your channel. I learn a lot from your videos 😁

  • @michaelmoorrees3585
    @michaelmoorrees35852 ай бұрын

    20:00 - From a copycat channel. Not the real hydraulic press channel !

  • @ThatJay283
    @ThatJay2832 ай бұрын

    11:30 given that swimming pools use boric acid too to keep it sterile, im guessing spent fuel pool water would taste abit like accidentally getting pool water in your mouth

  • @swokatsamsiyu3590
    @swokatsamsiyu35902 ай бұрын

    Every time he says "oooohhh no!" I know it's going to be a good video. Some of these TikTok videos really are terrible. And "the Zone of Alienation" is indeed a language thing. The Cyrillic that is on the signs roughly translates into that phrase. It sounds very strange to our ears, but that is what it's called. That equipment is known as "the Claw". It was used to lift radioactive debris and graphite out of the ruined remains of Unit 4. This thing was extremely radioactive, and to this day it would be unwise to cuddle up to it like these ladies do. They did try to decontaminate it at the time, but were largely unsuccessful. So, these ladies are taking unnecessary risks, to say the least.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    Meh, if they had a clue, it'd be low to no risk. Any neutron activation should be long gone, as well as any daughter products decayed or washed away by rain. Still, idiotic to screw around with heavy industrial equipment one knows nothing about, as it could roll on them, articulations suddenly move and sever body parts, fracture bones and well, generally help one attain one's goal in acquiring their Darwin Award.

  • @zacharytaylor190
    @zacharytaylor19010 күн бұрын

    If that cargo ship was carrying mostly high level nuclear waste, it would be carrying almost all nuclear waste that will ever be produced by all nuclear reactors ever.

  • @DarenMiller-qj7bu
    @DarenMiller-qj7bu2 ай бұрын

    What happens if i just happen to find a chunk of uranium in my woods? Would the govt come and take it or is it mine?

  • @John-ir2zf

    @John-ir2zf

    2 ай бұрын

    No it would be yours. There's no stringent regulation on uranium ore. Look up "mine operator" channel, they have a claim of a uranium mine. because it contains small amounts of U238 and even smaller amounts of U235, in the range of 1-3% in rich ore, and of that 1-3% uranium, .5% of that might be U235. Also, as long as you didn't do, or plan, anything illegal with it, simply having it would be no concern of the gov. Now, if you miraculously found a big fat chunk of 85% purity 235, yes, call the feds, because if they catch you with that, prison is what awaits you.

  • @user-fg5xs9lh7s

    @user-fg5xs9lh7s

    2 ай бұрын

    According to the NRC you're allowed to own as much uranium ore as you want. If you start processing and refining it into metal though it'll start being a concern. You can have a little bit (the amount you can possess without special permission depends where you live in the world) but there's a limit. And no enriched uranium at all. If you just find some somewhere it's probably fine cause you'll likely still be within limits.

  • @Yezpahr
    @YezpahrАй бұрын

    12:01 Isn't purified water already dangerous to drink? 20:53 I saw on Periodic Videos that Plutonium can also be dissolved and it'll have different colors based on its state/particle size. My question is, is green a possible color? And do any of those dissolved states glow?

  • @tempname8263
    @tempname82632 ай бұрын

    6:52 The sign says "nuclear polution grazing, hay moving.... and yada yada, eh, the rest you know

  • @gdheib0430
    @gdheib04302 ай бұрын

    The video on Chernobyl is why people are scared of nuclear...it is crazy how exaggerated people make these exclusion zones out to be. Amazing home much the dogs have flourished.

  • @Nerdnumberone
    @Nerdnumberone20 күн бұрын

    If there was any glowing or reflective/shiny radioactive material in the ocean, it could attract sea life. It wouldn't cause sea monsters, but I could see it spreading fallout, especially to larger predators. Could put a nasty dent in a coral reef ecosystem.

  • @ProtoHadron
    @ProtoHadronАй бұрын

    1:41 uh oh stereotypical green goo

  • @SurlockGnomez
    @SurlockGnomezАй бұрын

    Thanks for another video, not sure what the official request procedure is but could you please react to The Nuclear Scare Scam by Galen Winsor. Recently re-uploaded by Suspicious0bservers to give it a wider audience. As for the specific details on point to point, science is always changing so somethings would have undoubtedly changed either in favour or against the things he says. So whilst it would be interesting to see what has changed; I'd be more interested in your overall take in regards to how the relationship between knowledge and the regulations that are put in place have changed over time. A conceptual example would be do they now aim to have a tolerance of 100x when they used to "only" aim for 10x; when in reality 5x is unheard of for the thing in question. Galen's take from 1989 seems to be that the regulatory commissions are massively overstating risks in order to divert money (that counteracts said risk) towards their own industry. Which is completely understandable as that's how the world works; or at least in things that get public funding. Would be good to know if you think this has gotten worse or better since then or to put another way if the tax payer getting is more/less bang for their buck at preventing unwanted bangs.

  • @SurlockGnomez

    @SurlockGnomez

    Ай бұрын

    I posted this at the start of the video without realising he was shown later in the video; coincidence?

  • @Gabrooxy98
    @Gabrooxy982 ай бұрын

    Can someone explain why the left headphone bracket is slimmer that the right? I couldn't unsee it.

  • @RailfanKian2014
    @RailfanKian2014Ай бұрын

    Meltdown is usually used for Roblox fusion reactor games

  • @wondermenel2811
    @wondermenel28112 ай бұрын

    do the NPP staff sometimes relax in the spent fuel pool?

  • @thetruth7633
    @thetruth76332 ай бұрын

    The green nuclear waste looks like the containers coming from Ghostbuster inc. hahahahaha 🤣

  • @boweryst11
    @boweryst112 ай бұрын

    Tyler you're the most interesting person not to have an X account

  • @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a8145
    @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a81452 ай бұрын

    Tschernobyl was a result of graphite.

  • @akifunchannel831
    @akifunchannel8312 ай бұрын

    Tyler, you should watch,"Animator vs. Animation V (official)" by alan becker.

  • @raywhatshisname
    @raywhatshisname2 ай бұрын

    Why can't you just add some yellow paint and green neon lights to the nuclear waste silos?

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    I think that modern LED's would be far better at making them resemble an old disco lighting scheme. BTW, what is a nuclear waste silo? Do they store and dispense waste from it like grain? Or do they launch waste out of them like missiles? If you're asking about the casks, for one, they're stored on site at nuclear reactors, so are quite well illuminated all by themselves and no need to be lights on them, as any aircraft hitting them would be far below the building and cooling units aircraft warning beacons anyway. Might as well demand warning beacons on my car to warn airplanes that they're crashed into the ground. Still, a disco lighting scheme might be interesting, change them seasonally, like for Christmas and Halloween...

  • @SilverStarHeggisist

    @SilverStarHeggisist

    2 ай бұрын

    @@spvillano Probably means the casts because they look like silos

  • @mfbfreak
    @mfbfreak2 ай бұрын

    20:00 some people have actually checked out that specific claw (as well as some front loaders and such) and all of them are covered in radioactive dust particles. If you sit in or on one of those things, i think the chance that you get contaminated with it, is very high. I really want to know if those women managed to get through the entrance/exit contamination screenings.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    There's this neat new invention, you probably never heard of it, it's called rain. It tends to rinse away dust, hell, given the location, they do get some driving rain as well. Add in decay, my farts likely have greater radioactivity than that claw does. Still, damned idiotic to be playing around with heavy industrial equipment one knows nothing about, that's slowly corroding. Begging to get some offending body part pinched off or snipped off if a joint suddenly and unexpectedly articulates.

  • @T3H455F4C3

    @T3H455F4C3

    2 ай бұрын

    @@spvillano That claw is one of the most radioactive "landmarks" in the exclusion zone. Was probably used to clean up reactor debris including ejected fuel and graphite. Tho yeah one would probably need to spend a night sleeping in that thing to significantly jeopardize their health. However new particles are always being generated and shed from the exterior (rust and old paint). The rain just moves that shit to the ground. It doesn't disappear.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    @@T3H455F4C3 it still comes down to washdown, reactive isotopes well, react and wash down into the soil and generally do their naughtiness far and wide in diluted form, they simply refuse to stay put like some innocent substance. ;) Add in the time since the event, we're already fairly down the half-life curve, as for some example, strontium-90 or cesium-137 certainly weren't in pure form and the painted claw dipped into them. They'd be bound chemically to another element, say oxygen and be in solid microparticle form and already largely atomized and distributed by the explosion, fire, meltdown, fire control efforts and so on. Hotter than a two dollar pistol in 1986 is not necessarily very hot, or even warm today. Especially given that in tourist areas, a hell of a lot was decontaminated to avoid idiots doing well, what these two did and then spreading the wealth. Add in the highly likely neutron activation products, for which steel is infamous for, would've long decayed, still not exceptionally likely. Long and short, I'd not want to sit my ancient and robust butt on the thing, but that's really more out of concern that it's abandoned industrial heavy equipment that could suddenly shift, articulate or otherwise misbehave in a way conducive to severe trauma upon my royal arse. Secondary, concern of potential contamination, as decontamination is a royal PIA and well, it'd be unlikely that I'd have brought a change of clothing inside of the contamination zone. Now, what would be really interesting is the condition of fuel rods, control rods and graphite blocks recovered after the accident, their chemical nature, crystalline structures, isotopic levels, emissions, corrosion or degradation over time in storage, given the merry hell they experienced during the energetic event of the reactor's failure. I mean, we're talking conditions that made the hellish conditions inside of SL-1 during its failure look downright pleasant! Such information could inform future extremely long safe storage of the mess from such disasters. To hazard a guess, if in contact with the air, metallic components likely still are experiencing some degree of corrosion and breakdown. Most would likely benefit from vitrification before continued storage.

  • @perlind393
    @perlind3932 ай бұрын

    the locks that holds the containers on the ship is made to take some real damage and the locks are in 4 corner of the container. There is a gap in the locks so having many on top will give a wiggle room and if the container is NOT kept maintained it will fail. BUT it's built to more or less hold for a upside down travel if the ship does a flip the containers are made to stay in place. NOT adding the power of a water wave hitting the area that will be bad in the class of hammer of good .

  • @suicidalbanananana
    @suicidalbanananana2 ай бұрын

    Ugh, tiktoks, crediting CHATgpt for generated images & to top it all off a bunch of vertical videos with computer generated voice-overs filled to the brim with misinformation, i genuinely had to stop watching because of losing my temper that this is what kids consume these days 😂

  • @GlutenEruption

    @GlutenEruption

    2 ай бұрын

    It feels worse than it is - basically all surveys and studies have found that zoomers are actually far more science and media literate, politically engaged and skeptical of this type of garbage than prior generations. The average intelligence is steadily going up, but 50% of people are always going to be below average no matter what so there's always going to be a market for this terrible content.

  • @mikeholmstrom1899
    @mikeholmstrom18992 ай бұрын

    One narrative of the Windscale Reactor fire said that there was a risk of a nuclear explosion by using water to fight that fire. Wrong! Not enough U235 to do that, I don't think it could have even had a criticality excursion. There was a risk of a hydrogen or carbon monoxide explosion, though.

  • @ThatNerdDott
    @ThatNerdDott2 ай бұрын

    Have you heard of Safety Control Rod Axe Man?

  • @WolfkunDotInfo
    @WolfkunDotInfo2 ай бұрын

    You should react to half life. They always had an abundance of mysterious glowing goo.

  • @SilverStarHeggisist

    @SilverStarHeggisist

    2 ай бұрын

    To be fair, it could be passed off as alien in nature

  • @damaddog8065
    @damaddog80652 ай бұрын

    I have seen that machinje, in a movie, it is a hulk maker as in big green disagreeable and incredible strong in more than one way.

  • @neonalley9346
    @neonalley9346Ай бұрын

    I wouldn't eat uranium, but that's cuz it would taste really gross.

  • @hardnachopuppy

    @hardnachopuppy

    Ай бұрын

    Prolly bad for teeth's enamel too

  • @neonalley9346

    @neonalley9346

    Ай бұрын

    True. And that's if you were insane enough to eat it. Uranium probably tastes like poo-poo.

  • @ricardo_milos-4563
    @ricardo_milos-456326 күн бұрын

    bro really did the 🤓☝️ (loving the vid)

  • @GregOnSummit
    @GregOnSummit2 ай бұрын

    @ 6:52 ... . Nuclear Pollution Grazing, Hay Mowing, Mushroom and Berry Picking ARE PROHIBITED

  • @ericdanielski4802
    @ericdanielski48022 ай бұрын

    Nice video.

  • @SilverStarHeggisist
    @SilverStarHeggisist2 ай бұрын

    The glow stick video was just sad

  • @GlutenEruption
    @GlutenEruption2 ай бұрын

    Do some bionerd23 content! That claw is specifically one of the hottest items in the Chernobyl exclusion zone outside of the containment building. She measured the inside of the claw at over 1.5mSv/hr at some parts and found the contamination is easily wiped off onto any clothing etc.

  • @Therianwolf001
    @Therianwolf0012 ай бұрын

    Hey I was wondering if you ever did a react video on the nuclear submarine accident in Russia they made a movie about it called “k19 widowmaker “ I’d love to see your thoughts and reactions on it

  • @TheRealKimKitsuragi
    @TheRealKimKitsuragiАй бұрын

    we need to get him to react to those russian guys who dive in chernobyl

  • @Sugar3Glider
    @Sugar3Glider2 ай бұрын

    2:40 The barnacles....

  • @johncondon4081
    @johncondon40812 ай бұрын

    14:23 Maybe it is a birth control device….

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 ай бұрын

    Actually, looks like a claw from a crane with a generic radioactive contamination warning sign propped up against it. Which makes it a control device, a moron control device. They are at significant risk though - if they're not up to date on their tetanus boosters.

  • @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a8145
    @iloveaviation-burgerclub-a81452 ай бұрын

    Boy, you should visit Tschernobyl. It might rip your picture of reality. It is hot. Very hot particularly.

  • @StormsparkPegasus
    @StormsparkPegasus2 ай бұрын

    This is absolutely ridiculous, but the AI art is pretty good. It's like they're trying to create a Godzilla-ish story with AI.

  • @ProtoHadron
    @ProtoHadronАй бұрын

    10:04 one gram of uranium contains 20 million calories

  • @DougNoOnions
    @DougNoOnions2 ай бұрын

    Ohhh this chatgpt video wasn't fun :( try to make something with Mr Burns power plant

  • @KevinCook-tr9yq
    @KevinCook-tr9yq2 ай бұрын

    Tritium glows green. Yes there is very little of it but, it glows green.

  • @phizc

    @phizc

    2 ай бұрын

    The tritium vials have a phosphor coating on the inside that the beta decay of the tritium makes glow. Tritium itself does not glow.

  • @John-ir2zf

    @John-ir2zf

    2 ай бұрын

    Phizc is right. The tritium doesn't glow green, no nuclear material does. The container of tritium has a phosphorescent coating that emits green light when it absorbs alpha. radiation

  • @richard73
    @richard732 ай бұрын

    Have you heard of the Tokaimura nuclear accident?

  • @sasugaainz6824
    @sasugaainz68242 ай бұрын

    Those weren’t even good glow sticks, I didn’t see them pop out with whatever that liquid is. Also, the liquid is pretty toxic/poisonous so I guess they would have to “decontaminate” that

  • @philhalo66
    @philhalo662 ай бұрын

    Im glad channels like yours exist. so many people are so ignorant on the reality of nuclear and nuclear power.

  • @KetsaKunta
    @KetsaKuntaАй бұрын

    Hey Tyler have you seen "Hiroshima - Short Film" on KZread yet? I would like to hear your reaction to it.

  • @lordyaioshen3005
    @lordyaioshen30052 ай бұрын

    Check out swimming or diving in chernobyl

  • @Kalidor99
    @Kalidor99Ай бұрын

    9:15 What is U308? 🤣 There is only U234, 235 and 238 plus all others from 230 to 240 that are synthetically made.

  • @hardnachopuppy

    @hardnachopuppy

    Ай бұрын

    I think he meant U3O8

  • @Xellius13
    @Xellius13Ай бұрын

    The animal deformities are not myth and not coincidental. There’s already a 20+ years of research done primary on wolves and deers in the area and there’s a lot of different mostly internal deformities and mutations that reduce their life span by around 40-50%.

  • @John-ir2zf
    @John-ir2zf2 ай бұрын

    More proof of the misinformation peddled and the publics general lack of knowledge about topics like this....

  • @Rusty-METAL-J
    @Rusty-METAL-J2 ай бұрын

    #1: If you're gonna try your ship needs to be atop a massive inflatable Sooooooooooooo it's actually a hovercraft. In case that originator hasn't known it the desert is sand and not Hydrogen Dioxide. You can watch shows on television or KZread that show you what happens to a ship in the desert because there was water there but it evaporated away and ships centuries old are still sitting in the desert sands of Arabia, for 1 locale.

  • @Rusty-METAL-J

    @Rusty-METAL-J

    2 ай бұрын

    Yeah I love the 1 on the front.

  • @Rusty-METAL-J

    @Rusty-METAL-J

    2 ай бұрын

    The ship's named, 'TONDEANADIE', Which is Romanian for, haircut, according to Google Translator.

  • @travissmith2848

    @travissmith2848

    2 ай бұрын

    Well, at least part of the sand is silicon dioxide. That's 2/3s the same as water!

  • @Rusty-METAL-J

    @Rusty-METAL-J

    2 ай бұрын

    @travissmith2848 that's a great point. Still no silicon in Hydrogen Dioxide. That's just 1 Hydrogen(H, 1) & 2 Oxygen(O, 8) atoms. You only need 2 atoms to make 1 molecule. Water is 1 of the simplest examples of a molecule, containing 3 or more atoms. Most compounds that are the most used and made have 3- many atoms.

  • @travissmith2848

    @travissmith2848

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Rusty-METAL-J Yeah. But it is _almost_ water! Of course Hydrogen Peroxide is just water with an extra oxygen and they don't quite do the same thing either. Chemistry is kinda fun, two things can be "almost identical except for this one little thing" and be radically different.

  • @apeacebone6499
    @apeacebone64992 ай бұрын

    I really can't stand these AI-generated videos, which the first three definitely are to some degree or another. Irredeemably lazy and very clearly not even fact-checked. The greed, carelessness, and complete lack of integrity that they represent are far more harmful to us than any nuclear disaster.

  • @brodie29a
    @brodie29a2 ай бұрын

    Ok Mr. Folse swimming in a spent fuel pool and having a drink or take a swim or drink in Lake Michigan

  • @Tylerx-z
    @Tylerx-z2 ай бұрын

    Hi!

  • @johncondon4081
    @johncondon40812 ай бұрын

    9:42 Remember the Boomers and before them use to chew lead as if it was gum. And we wonder why we have kids today eating tide pods and making NyQuil chicken for there sleepy time meal. As a GenXer, we just chewed the window sills to get our lead intake.

  • @johncondon4081
    @johncondon40812 ай бұрын

    1:09 Nevada tsunamis are the most devastating tsunami on the planet. I know you are just a nuclear engineer, so you don’t understand the Vegas sea tide patterns. Just stay your lane, and let us professionals handle the Nevada and Arizona ocean shores

  • @Bean16429
    @Bean164292 ай бұрын

    YOU CAN'T ESCAPE ME IM FROM TIKTOK AND THIS IS DAY 8 OF ASKING HOW TO MAKE SMALL NUKE

  • @spvillano
    @spvillano2 ай бұрын

    Oh, come on now, the first video is entirely plausible, why tsunamis are extremely common in deserts! That's why unicorns are so rare. That a tsunami is a tiny six inch to a foot long swell at sea is utterly irrelevant, since this isn't at sea, it's really in the desert sand sea of dead unicorn carcasses. Second video, lifeless, dried up dead green plants, guess they're glowing green, just can't see them in the dayfright. And all of those Russian soldiers that dug fighting positions at Chernobyl during the Ukrainian invasion exploded into thermonuclear fireballs, consuming the earth and destroying the entire universe, so the video producer should shut up and respect being dead. Third video, I know people that drink uranium oxides. It's naturally in well water that's between granite layers, guess that they blew up too or something, again, destroying the universe for the fifth time this week. Didn't measure my poop, did notice radioactive pee after a diagnostic test that had me swallow some I-131. I decided that afterward, visiting the nuclear capable Air Force base for a PX trip wasn't an exceptionally good idea, lest I trip detectors and end up buried in paperwork. The young women were in grave danger, if they didn't have up to date tetanus boosters. Not a damned clue what a blown apart, burned down reactor has to do with a marked device that was larger than any RTG I've ever heard of or even well radiation source. Yeah, tetanus is horrific, can't be seen and is still frequently lethal - killing more people than radiation ever will kill - per year. But, I have a dollar bill, George Washington is on it, so he was eating dinner with me and loved my clams and linguine. The "plutonium" being pressed in a hydraulic press and I know where to get the sample they're using - of a tritium illumination rod. If tritium is plutonium, we're all black holes. Worse, they're pretending to be tritium illuminators in some ginned up, as you said it, glow sticks. They do sell tritium illuminator units, they're fairly small glass vials inside coated with a phosphor. The phosphor fails around one half-life of decay, causing significant dimming and eventual failure to glow by around year 20 - 25. That's right up there with showing a fleshlight and calling it a woman. I'd consider collecting those video producers and slapping them, but then I'd have to decontaminate the room, as shit splatters.

  • @EpikPaprika
    @EpikPaprika2 ай бұрын

    These videos are the issues with ai. Ai content slop damages society.

  • @someone24688

    @someone24688

    2 ай бұрын

    This stuff existed before, AI just streamlines it

  • @EpikPaprika

    @EpikPaprika

    2 ай бұрын

    @@someone24688 True

  • @HoneypawsModsDE
    @HoneypawsModsDE2 ай бұрын

    Dude, let whoever came up with these promts cook, okay? let them have their unrealistic and stupid fantasies... a little bit of silly fantasy never hurt anyone, it even makes peoples lives funnier...

  • @John-ir2zf

    @John-ir2zf

    2 ай бұрын

    Are you one of those people that also cries about "misinformation" regarding the fake pandemic of coronavirus ? Or the "misinformation" about election integrity in America ? Peddling any type of misinformation is bad, because uninformed people will accept it as fact.

  • @Joe-Dead
    @Joe-Dead2 ай бұрын

    it is countless because there was no consistent counting, little follow up or tracking. all those affected, and i mean all, they cannot all be counted. nor is there any real tracking of those that frequent the zone or the soldiers who dug into the dirt, cut trees and burned them. it is truly countless because all affected, during and after, cannot be counted, only some. casualties and effects were always played off as minimal by the soviets, the russian federation continued that policy. yeah, i get it, so do most anymore, nuclear power is far safer than fossil fuels by orders of magnitude, it has caused far less death and chronic disease than it's main rival. but you still have to recognize some facts when it's mishandled. chernobyl was and is bad. with the war there's even less 'counting' of those that might be affected. it's a lesson for why safety is paramount, respect the atom.

  • @MmmmJuicy
    @MmmmJuicy2 ай бұрын

    I'd much rather have nuclear power over coal power.

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