Visit of Hiroshima City Naka Incineration Plant
We visited Naka Incineration Plant to see how far burning rubbish has advanced.
There is no longer a need for burning mounds of rubbish or incinerators streaming out toxic gases. In plants such as Naka you are invited in to see just how clean the waste incineration process is.
Check out the rest of the article and let us know what you think.
Maishima Incineration Plant - Bulky Waste Items
April 13, 2019 tour of the plant;
Tokyo Metro recycles waste water
Tokyo (Japan), Dec 06 (ANI): The Tokyo Metropolitan Government Bureau is making sincere efforts to recycle waste water and keep the city clean. Shibaura Water Reclamation Center is the third oldest Water Reclamation Center in Tokyo. A part of the treated water is cleaned through sand filtration and then used inside the Center for cleaning facilities, cooling machines and flushing toilets. The generated sludge is pumped through pressure pipelines to the Nanbu Sludge Plant for treatment. With the use of microorganism the dirt sinks to the bottom and water is gradually clean up. In a Secondary Sedimentation Tank, activated sludge masses formed in the reaction tank are precipitated for 3 to 4 hours, resulting in the separation of a supernatant (treated water) and sludge. The water, which was originally sewage, is processed and thus becomes clean. One of features of Shibaura Water Reclamation Center is Reclaimed Water Utilization Project contributing to recycling-oriented city. There is large volume of treated water, with stable water quality, so it can be used effectively as reclaimed water. A reclaimed water production facility operates with ceramic used in filtering material in reclaimed water treatment process. This helps meet growing demand for such as toilet water. Efforts of Tokyo Metropolitan Government are praiseworthy for its commitment towards providing safe recycled water.
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Medimax Melting Incinerator Installed in Japan specially, 50kg
Outotec Sludge Incineration Plant - Exceeding expectations at ERZ Zürich since 2015
Commissioned in 2015, the sludge incineration plant at ERZ in Zürich, Switzerland is one of the world's most modern facilities for thermal processing technologies.
Bali Incineration Plant 2
Ashes to Honey: In Search of Sustainability in Japan and in the World (Part 2)
On February 6, 2012 the UCLA Terasaki Center hosted a film screening of Ashes to Honey, as part of its 20th year anniversary.
ABOUT THE FILM
Ashes to Honey, the third film from acclaimed director Hitomi Kamanaka on the global nuclear issue, focuses on an isolated heart-shaped island of Iwai-shima, in Yamaguchi prefecture. The residents there have been fighting the construction of a nuclear power plant across their shores for nearly 30 years. Kamanaka also explores sustainable models of alternative energy in Sweden.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Hitomi Kamanaka is also the director of documentaries Hibakusha (2004) and The Rokkashomura Rhapsody (2006).
Daniel Hirsh is a lecturer on nuclear policy at UC Santa Cruz. He heads the Committee to Bridge the Gap, a non-profit nuclear policy organization focusing on issues of nuclear safety, waste disposal, proliferation, and disarmament.
Shigeko Uppuluri's Interview
Shigeko Uppuluri was born in Kyoto, Japan and lived in Shanghai, China during World War II. She came to the United States for graduate school, where she met her husband, mathematician Ram Uppuluri. The couple moved to Oak Ridge, TN in 1963. In this interview, Uppuluri tells the story of the Oak Ridge International Friendship Bell, a symbol of peace and reconciliation between Japan and the United States. She describes how she and her husband launched the effort to build the Bell, the opposition they faced, and the new Peace Pavilion for the Bell in Oak Ridge’s Bissell Park.
For the full transcript:
18.25 microSvh, Oguni Community Center, Ryozen Area, Date city 2012 AUG (MIRROR Birdhairjp)
Source video by Birdhairjp
Check out and sub his channel:
Normal background level is up to 0.2 uSv/hr (microSv/hr)
-rumorecurioso
Birdhairjp wrote:
On 25 Aug 2012, I measured radiation at Oguni Community Center, Ryozen Area, Date city of Fukushima prefecture Japan.
I monitored 1.03 micro Sievert per hour in air at chest hight, 15.21 ground level.
(Monitoring post showed 0.864 micro Gy/h in air)
Over-limit radioactive cesium have been detected in rice produced in this aria 2011.
Rice is not planted around this area in 2012.
The monument shown in the video is telling us that the first agricultural cooperative association in Japan was founded on this place in 1898.
The monitorinig place is 50 km from Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear power plant.
Measuring instrument is made of Ukraine, ECOTEST MKS-05.
15.21μSv/h 伊達市 霊山地区 小国ふれあいセンター 2012.4.22
FAIR USE NOTICE: Any copyrighted (©) material is made available to advance understanding of ecological, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues; this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law.
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
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How are the activities of those who design and operate nuclear reactors as well as nuclear storage facilities in any way private? How are the operations of companies extracting oil from, say, the Gulf of Mexico or the Tar Sands of Alberta, in any way private? What is private about the assaults on ecology and public health that have been shown to occur regularly and on a massive scale in the industrial transformation of matter into energy? Who is supposed to pay for the clean up when supposedly-private corporations mess up? Who is to be held liable in societies where the for-profit corporations have been legally structured around the concept of limited liability?
Dr. Anthony J. Hall: From Hiroshima to Fukushima, 1945-2011
Internal vs. External Radiation Exposure Explained (Arnie Gundersen)
Nuclear 101 - Advantages & Disadvantages of Splitting Atoms to Boil Water
Birdhairjp: 85.03 microSv/h, Fukushima city, mud into a river, June 2012, Whats going in rivers (vs. normal background of up to 0.2 microSv/h)
Nightmare Nuclear Waste (german, english subtitles)
Japanese Adventures #5 - Ecorium
Who would think a trip to a rubbish dump would be so fun? We found a trip to the Naka Incineration Plant wasn't as rubbish as you might think!
The Yakuza Papers 4 Police Tactics 1974 Fukasaku 1080p BluRay
Please help keep this channel alive. Thank you for your support :)
Why r the two biggest bosses so spineless? They should cut Yamamori out of this series. Fukasaku didn't want him but the studio insisted. He adds that comic relief that is signature to many studio flicks. But it doesn't fit this series of films. Btw anyone recognize his wife? Or Fukasaku's wife?
Radiation poisoning | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:02:45 1 Signs and symptoms
00:06:03 1.1 Dose effects
00:06:12 1.2 Skin changes
00:07:41 1.3 Cancer
00:09:03 2 Cause
00:10:58 2.1 Spaceflight
00:11:49 3 Pathophysiology
00:12:41 3.1 DNA damage
00:14:04 4 Diagnosis
00:16:43 5 Prevention
00:17:17 5.1 Time
00:17:26 5.2 Distance
00:18:57 5.3 Shielding
00:19:33 5.4 Reduction of incorporation
00:23:30 5.5 Fractionation of dose
00:24:23 6 Management
00:25:28 6.1 Antimicrobials
00:25:51 7 History
00:28:50 7.1 Notable incidents
00:31:23 8 Other animals
00:33:09 9 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
Listen on Google Assistant through Extra Audio:
Other Wikipedia audio articles at:
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Speaking Rate: 0.8708585078211053
Voice name: en-US-Wavenet-C
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
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Acute radiation syndrome (ARS), also known as radiation sickness, is a collection of health effects due to exposure to high amounts of ionizing radiation over a short period of time. Within the first days symptoms may include nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite. This may then be followed by a few hours or weeks with little symptoms. After this, depending on the total dose of radiation, people may develop infections, bleeding, dehydration, and confusion, or there may be a period with few symptoms. This is finally followed by either recovery or death. The symptoms can begin within one hour and may last for several months.The radiation generally occurs from a source outside the body, is applied over minutes with most of the body being exposed, and involves a total dose of greater than 0.7 Gy (70 rads). It is generally divided into three types: i) bone marrow syndrome (0.7 to 10 Gy); ii) gastrointestinal syndrome (10 to 50 Gy); and iii) neurovascular syndrome (50 Gy). Sources of such radiation may include nuclear reactors, cyclotrons, and certain devices used in cancer therapy. The cells that are most affected are generally those that are rapidly dividing. Diagnosis is based on a history of exposure and symptoms. Repeated complete blood counts (CBCs) can indicate the severity of exposure.Treatment of acute radiation syndrome is generally supportive care. This may include blood transfusions, antibiotics, colony stimulating factors, or stem cell transplant. If radioactive material remains on the skin or in the stomach it should be removed. If radioiodine was breathed in or ingested, potassium iodide may be recommended. Complications such as leukemia and other cancers among those who survive are managed as usual. Short term outcomes depend on the exposure dose.ARS is generally rare. A single event, however, can affect a relatively large number of people. Notable cases occurred following the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster. ARS differs from chronic radiation syndrome, which occurs following prolonged exposures to relatively low doses of radiation.