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Chernobyl Radiation Cloud

Chernobyl Radiation Cloud

Red indicates the extent of the radiation cloud on April 27, just after the accident in Chernobyl. 

Blue, indicates its almost worldwide distribution until the 6th of May.

CHERNOBYL CLOUD GLOBE

 

Original source of page:  http://www.worldprocessor.com/53.htm


On April 26, 1986, an accident at the Chernobyl nuclear reactor in the former Soviet Union released a full spectrum of fission products into the atmosphere. The accident was not promptly reported, and little information on the amount or character of the release was available. Within a few days of the release, ARAC produced quantitative estimates of the regional-scale contamination. For 16 days, ARAC supported the joint U.S. effort coordinated by the Environmental Protection Agency to assist western Europe's immediate response.

ARAC's long-range particle-in-cell model Also, ARAC's long-range particle-in-cell model accurately simulated the spread of the radioactive cloud over the entire northern hemisphere, as verified later by radiological measurements. A fraction of the radioactivity that was released by the initial explosion and subsequent graphite fire was apparently lofted to heights of 5 to 6 kilometers, as evidenced by its rapid transport around the northern hemisphere.

The globe at the left shows the distribution of radioactivity over the northern hemisphere 10 days after the Chernobyl accident. ARAC models determined that the lower section of the radioactive cloud headed toward Scandinavia, whereas the upper section headed in an easterly direction, across Asia, Japan, the North Pacific, and the west coast of North America.

 Original source of table:  http://narac.llnl.gov/responses/chernobyl.html

The integrated Cesium ground-level air concentration pattern four days after the beginning of the Chernobyl accident.
The integrated Cesium ground-level air concentration pattern four days after the beginning of the Chernobyl accident.

Chernobyl: 1986: Media coverage at the time
Chernobyl: 1986: Recent summary
Chernobyl Shuts own Permanently

 

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