Nuclear Energy Blog Carnival 274
The 274th edition of the Nuclear Energy Blog Carnival has posted at Next Big Future
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The 274th edition of the Nuclear Energy Blog Carnival has posted at Next Big Future
"The Atom Goes to Sea - Excursion in Science" a 1954 film by General Electric
by Will Davis
by Nicholas Thompson
President Obama took an historic step in establishing the first-ever national standards to limit carbon emissions from power plants in the administration's final Clean Power Plan.
"Movies and video games would have us believe that radiation is the most toxic thing you could be exposed to...how true is that?" Nuclear enthusiast Christopher Willis helps you to understand in his own witty way.
by Beth Kelly
DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this article
The 269th edition of the Nuclear Energy Blog Carnival has posted at Yes Vermont Yankee
This week's feature is a half hour documentary on the history of the National Reactor Testing Station, or NRTS (now part of Idaho National Laboratory) which has seen 52 different and largely unique reactors constructed on the same, enormous site. The importance of efforts at NRTS over the years cannot be underestimated.
by Jim Hopf
This week's presentation features one of the biggest stars in the world of nuclear energy today: Plant Vogtle's expansion project. You'll see the progress on site first hand, as always presented to us by the affable Joe Washington. Click the link and enjoy this Friday's Nuclear Matinee.
"Technical Area Five" or TA-V at Sandia National Laboratories encompasses a fascinating array of nuclear research activitites, which are detailed in this five-and-a-half minute video.
The development of any competitive technology has always been marked by a headlong rush by competitors in the field to achieve before others. The dash to develop workable nuclear power plants (no matter what their energy was employed to do) certainly saw this phenomenon from the late 1940s onward. In June we celebrate the anniversary of the first commercial power plant to be placed on the grid anywhere. It was not in the United States. It was in the Soviet Union.