biffvernon said:
What's all this >200Sv/hr in the #1 dry-well about?
http://atmc.jp/plant/rad/?n=1
This subject seems to keep coming up every day for several days in a row now. Is someone posting scare stories about this data elsewhere on the internet, or is it just that lots of people have been using that atmc website graphs all along and are now wondering why its showing scary stuff?
In any case, this subject has been addressed here multiple times in recent days. Main summary of points:
The atmc website makes some bad errors with what data it uses sometimes, so it is not a good idea to use it as main source. Use TEPCO data instead, which shows 2 x drywell CAMS and 2 x suppression chamber CAMS readings for all reactors.
Main data site index page:
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/nu/fukushima-np/index-e.html
The CAMS readings are part of the pressure & temperature data sheet, so for reactor 1 it is:
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/nu/fukushima-np/f1/images/11052606_level_pr_data_1u-e.pdf
So yes, one of the sensors is sometimes showing values of 200 or higher. But the other sensor shows much lower values, and TEPCO think the sensor(s) may be damaged because they don't agree with each other, and one of them fluctuates a lot.
Other thing to note is that this is not a new thing, only reason its suddenly being noticed is because TEPCO only started publishing the data for this sensor again recently (around may 17th), after not bothering for many weeks, probably because the readings seemed unreliable.
In conclusion, there are too many unknowns about this data to make any conclusions, and if there is a problem its not a new event, it happened quite a long time ago. I do not think the CAMS data is good enough to be able to use it to reach interesting and firm conclusions about how much of the core fell into the drywell, so there is no point getting excited about the big numbers. All it really tells us is that fuel got damaged, and we know that already.