- #1
towly
- 5
- 0
If there is already a post/thread for this topic, i apologize, and please link me to it, if you'd be so kind.
I don't understand why the japanese workers have to die. In a hundred years already, hasn't someone yet invented a simple radiation suit to protect in nuclear accidents?
I've thought, if the Earth is protected from the solar wind by her own EM (electromagnetic shield), then why not make a EM shield for a plant-worker? I thought, geez, we just need to attach a batterypack belt to a worker, to energize a series of dipoles placed around a human, to deter &/or collect the harmful radiation. The dipoles would then be discared just before each exit from the damaged reactor.
I thought, well what about the heat? They're dousing it with hundreds of cubic meters of water, to suppress the heat, so an appropriate suit would need to be heat resistant, like the ceramic tiles on the space shuttle, and thus once again, too heavy (like lead suits), to be practical. Then i thought, well, the high-heat issue must be moot, since they're sending in workers anyways, in thin suits, obviously close enough to receive lethal radiation, but not close enough to be hot enough to cook them.
Today i found some stuff on youtube, it appears the starting point for my invention, would be something similar to what's already been created before, something called a 'faraday suit'.
However, i haven't seen any examples yet of 'faraday' suit, aka basically a metallic fiber suit, that's also been electromagnetized from within, so as to repel the outside radiation.
Seems to me were almost there. Just need like a 'hover-suit' (my word), pressurized from within, or an astronaut suit, or even just a series of 'dipoles'/('multipoles'), connected to, or activated by, an internal electrical, or electromagnetic source.
I must be naive. I must be missing something. I can't believe a nation, and a world, full of nuclear techs, MRI techs, physicists, electricians, defense department people, energy company people, etc. etc., over half a century no less, have yet to think of making some appropriate, protective clothing, to have on hand, in case of an accident.
My childlike, inquiring mind, has apparently discovered far greater, several times now in my life, asking similarily, seemingly simple, obvious questions, that i'd become perplexed with, after a time, of no-one else asking/recognizing, pointing out; that i don't to feel to remiss in asking again, something potentionaly naive or already well-decided. We need to help these people, for everyone's sake, and for our future's, like yesterday (weeks ago now).
Please respond.
I don't understand why the japanese workers have to die. In a hundred years already, hasn't someone yet invented a simple radiation suit to protect in nuclear accidents?
I've thought, if the Earth is protected from the solar wind by her own EM (electromagnetic shield), then why not make a EM shield for a plant-worker? I thought, geez, we just need to attach a batterypack belt to a worker, to energize a series of dipoles placed around a human, to deter &/or collect the harmful radiation. The dipoles would then be discared just before each exit from the damaged reactor.
I thought, well what about the heat? They're dousing it with hundreds of cubic meters of water, to suppress the heat, so an appropriate suit would need to be heat resistant, like the ceramic tiles on the space shuttle, and thus once again, too heavy (like lead suits), to be practical. Then i thought, well, the high-heat issue must be moot, since they're sending in workers anyways, in thin suits, obviously close enough to receive lethal radiation, but not close enough to be hot enough to cook them.
Today i found some stuff on youtube, it appears the starting point for my invention, would be something similar to what's already been created before, something called a 'faraday suit'.
However, i haven't seen any examples yet of 'faraday' suit, aka basically a metallic fiber suit, that's also been electromagnetized from within, so as to repel the outside radiation.
Seems to me were almost there. Just need like a 'hover-suit' (my word), pressurized from within, or an astronaut suit, or even just a series of 'dipoles'/('multipoles'), connected to, or activated by, an internal electrical, or electromagnetic source.
I must be naive. I must be missing something. I can't believe a nation, and a world, full of nuclear techs, MRI techs, physicists, electricians, defense department people, energy company people, etc. etc., over half a century no less, have yet to think of making some appropriate, protective clothing, to have on hand, in case of an accident.
My childlike, inquiring mind, has apparently discovered far greater, several times now in my life, asking similarily, seemingly simple, obvious questions, that i'd become perplexed with, after a time, of no-one else asking/recognizing, pointing out; that i don't to feel to remiss in asking again, something potentionaly naive or already well-decided. We need to help these people, for everyone's sake, and for our future's, like yesterday (weeks ago now).
Please respond.