Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
Originally posted by: cquark
Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
waste is a non-issue. We can bury the 1%, no biggie
Read the Hanover [sic] data - they're looking at 53 million gallons of radioactive tank waste.
The conversion job is to change it into a stable silica glass substance.
That's one site out of hundreds.
They aren't attempting to reprocess the Hanford waste; reprocessing refers to nuclear transformations, not sealing the stuff in glass (vitrification.) They're attempting to vitrify it then bury it for thousands of years, while we simply don't have the technology to seal a site securely for time periods of that magnitude.
Isn't that what I said ? Glassification = conversion job is to change it into a stable silica glass substance.
You did say that, but you said it in response to a comment which said to bury the 1% of the waste that was left after reprocessing, hence my clarification above.
and I had fixed the typo . . . Handford, Wa, USA National Park Come and watch us glow.
I've been reading about the work on B Reactor and would love to go see it some day. Trinity site in New Mexico is also open to tourists, but it was only on a once a year basis when I was last nearby.
