Rufus Chucklebutty - Radiation is dangerous when it is received in high doses. Unfortunately that is not the case here. The radiation they are receiving is in milisieverts, not sieverts. In some spots, it reached 1 milisievert of gama radiation, which is 0.001 sieverts. But you have to take into account that their dosimeters read 1 milisievert per HOUR. They were there no longer than 30 minutes. To put their dosage into perspective, natural background radiation is 1.5 - 3.5 milisieverts per YEAR. So they received a dose of about 6 months worth of radiation. An amount that is in-term safe and which the body can recover from. Not the several lifetimes worth of radiation that the engineers and firefighters received directly after the incident. Hope this educated you a little bit.
Irishpride Sorry, something you said is right BUT they increase without any doubts the possibility to develop long term damages. The stochastic effect is not so easy to quantify, to define, to forecast. They probably under estimate this risk and in 10-20 years there’s a bigger possibility to develop a Leucemia, a linfoma or a thyroid cancer . And after all for what reason? To play with your geiger????? Also, a woman increase the possible risks regarding her future children...Lots of weird things about these people...
Before I watched this channel I wasn't interested in radiation, now I own a CDV, several dosimeters and a beta-gamma scintillator. Dammit bionerd :P keep producing great content!
@@rainymornings if you are still curious I took my radiascan 701a on a flight to Rome. It was an 8 hour flight with a steady radiation level of 2.3 micro sieverts per hour.
The nuclear death cult propaganda is working I see. Soon everyone will kindly look away and let them go back to dumping 55gal drums full of radioactive stuff into the oceans... just like they did before Greenpeace and other environmentalist organizations finally stopped them.
Everytime I watch these Chernobyl videos I think about those poor 30 or so first responders that died a few days after the incident from acute radiation poisoning. I wonder if they knew what that tingling sensation was.
A bit late to the party... But wanted to comment on this in case you're still around. The first responders definitely felt more than tingling and prickly sensations. More like fire hot waves and pain, and extremities going jello later. The first two signals were attributed to the fire though...
I love your videos. Very interesting. I've become obsessed with your channel, Chernobyl, the history and I am learning so much! Thank you for posting these!
That was in the "Red Forest" near the DOSAAF camp. I think the footage is on Bionerd's Sony camera from Nov. 5. I have the not-very-good GoPro footage from Lucas showing the silly event, and showing Bionerd filming it, but I don't have Bionerd's footage on my drive from that day. Maybe she will post it.
what? how could we forget that? i thought we copied *everything* redundantly. it is a very, very very long single video file, maybe 10-15 minutes, running around the camp, looking at the ground mostly (80% useless video). it's at the VERY END of that file when you receive your gift. have a look again, i can't believe you don't have that!
I don't have anything from your camera before Nov. 8! Hard to believe, I thought I had it all. Do you have it? I hope it's not lost. Also: Happy New Year! RAD-ER 2017 is in the works!
damn! does your dropbox have enough space, should i just upload everything before nov. 8? i never deleted any of my SD cards (i never do until the next "big thing" comes up and i need to free space inevitably), so it will not be lost, that's for sure. PS: preferably answer by email, youtube's message system sucks ass (new messages inside a message thread will not be sorted to the top when chosing "newest first" sorting) and i've disabled notifications due to overwhelming spam, so would have to remember to scroll down here find your potential answer. :P
Looks like a Turbine bearing and shaft seal support structure. Thanks for such an interesting video, just wondering how much are your Radiation readings above what is considered to be acceptable doseage levels?
it's not like we set up camp between those parts there, we just stayed for a short amount of time. to put it into perspective, it was never possible for me to receive a yearly dose worth of a pilot or flight attendant within a year of visiting chernobyl and being exposed to other sources of radiation. my whole body exposure still remains way below the acceptable dose levels for professional exposure, with are 20 mSv / year.
+bionerd23 Thanks very much for your reply and I love your videos, would love to visit Chernbyl but thats a long way from central Australia. I was aware of allowable accumulated Radiation dose for workers in your industry but unsure exactly what can be considered to be safe, thanks for helping to explain that to me. Happy new year to you and stay safe!
The Roentgen unit is easy to measure electronically, because it is a measure of electronic charge released in air. Many instruments still directly read exposure in Roentgens or some division thereof. To relate this to absorbed dose units (e.g. rad or Gray), some knowledge of the radiation energy spectrum and absorption medium (if different from air) is required. To convert to an operational dose equivalent like Sv or rem, further assumptions are required. As a gross rule of thumb, owing to mathematical coincidence, 1 R exposure often produces an absorbed dose close to 1 rad (10 mGy) and an effective dose of about 1 rem (10 mSv). The SI units are becoming widely used, but there is no special unit in this system for exposure, so the Roentgen will probably continue to be used.
@@SuperCakeKing th-cam.com/video/CcDZtlm_pI0/w-d-xo.html - You can see "the elephant's foot" around 10 seconds in, and a closer look from 40 second in.
@@msdadsfsx You are truly ignorant in all your comments.... Chernobyl was the name of the Power Plant, not the surrounding city, or area, and experts have concluded that Pripyat will not be inhabitable for the next 24000 years.
@@joozemane9894 go onto Google maps. Chernobyl and pripyat are two different towns. The name of the power plant was the Vladimir Lenin nuclear power plant.
@3:32...are those pieces of the reactor that got blown away from the building from the blast? Wow! That's scary how much radiation there still is there, huh? Thanks for the awesome videos you post! I spent hours watching them, LOL!
So some of those darker rock like chunks may have actually been graphite that was blown out of the core during the disaster. Those things are probably still extremely dangerous
i wonder what a cloud chamber would look like in the hot zone.... and,, if you could use it as a fuel chip finder ? just by going the direction the cloud streaks are coming from the fastest? would love to hear your take on it or, if you try it would love to see the outcome
"Getting a lot of rads on the nads" she says lol. I wish I could visit Chernobyl. I'm not an engineer but the wholes thing has always sparked my interest.
Even a normal reactor shutdown leaves tons of radioactive materials that can never be used or recycled. Good to see the shine from far away, like on a video like this. So Thanks. But damn I hate that this gets normalized, there will be kids and tourists with no idea of the shoddy casino tour they enjoyed.
One of My Collage Professors Joined An International Coalition of scientists and Engineers but they only wanted older individuals that were either terminal or close to end of life and it was when the cement that they initially poured on Chernobyl was starting to break down and they were looking for a fix to help contain the radiation at Chernobyl by this time he was in his 70's and his wife had passed so he joined the Coalition, It was a one-way trip. But For A Good Cause. RIP. Mr. Luke Lee Jr.
bionerd23, I'm wondering what your official purpose is for visiting the zone so often? How did you get clearance to apparently go wandering off seeking heavily contaminated equipment? I visited the zone and reactor in September 2016 but only as part of an official tour. Your videos have always fascinated me and I greatly enjoy them. But please, I would feel much better for you if you wore a respirator while digging.
@@SuperCakeKing Yeah bio nerd is alive I travel to Chernobyl once and she was there.we talked a bit about youtube and Chernobyl she is still alive don't worry she has a Chernobyl visit planned for 7 september
bionerd i have a question...the geiger counter called "Gamma scout" detects only the alpha,gamma and beta rays or even the X-rays??I'm waiting for an answer, Best regards
Bionerd at what point do you say 'holy shit this is too dangerous I need to get the fuck out of here'? It seems like you guys are unconcerned that your geigercounters are screaming bloody murder. Will we get any elephant foot footage?
If I had to hazard a guess its probably decontaminating vehicles that were used to build the new safe confinement. That explains the hazmat suits and what looks to be a Karcher hds 558 pressure washer next to the truck. The suits are probably used because the water splashing off of the truck has the potential to be contaminated.
I know I'm a few years late on this but Jake (the student you see at 3:50) gave a presentation at an MIT Nuclear Engineering class where he talked about this trip. It's on MIT open courses and can be viewed on TH-cam. Really interesting stuff. The other commentator is basically right. Part of their job was to decontaminate vehicles. What's funny is that the local workers were not wearing any kind of protection and stood right next to them in their street cloths. Apparently that truck that we see at the end was not particularly highly contaminated to begin with, but rather served as an exercise to show the procedure.
A guy having a SCP coat at 0:24, my brain just went beyond and said “I think they are testing people with radiation or trying to find something to prevent radioactive crap.”
I assure you, they're in perfect health from that amount of radiation they were near at that portion of the video. They may have breathed some dust in but the levels of radiation being emitted were no where near harmful to their health. Not that I'm suggesting the ordinary person go around spelunking and digging around radioactive debris.... but they know what they're doing and this is part of their profession. They're trained to know how to deal with it.
1 mSv/h is actually very low. You have to go over 200 before it starts to effect you. Some study's even show that it may be beneficial for you to receive doses under 200mSv/h
*Sooo* pleased you're uploading new videos again! I've got a question that I wanted to ask a professional in this field and you were the first one that I considered. I just need some little pointers for acquiring an ideal setup for detecting low as well as very high levels of ionizing radiation. I've been subbed to you for a few years now and followed your pursuits and I wondered if I could ask you privately please?
It'd be amazing if that piece of rebar you were measuring was the one from the fireman's story that got radiation burns on his hands from trying to dislodge a bar lodged in his tire
bionerd23 why does there appear to be some much concern with radiation here yet in fukushima there doesn't the same level of interest or concern, no big containment shelters there?
Thanks to the teams working around Chernobyl's nuclear power plant, keeping the old "reactor 4" site safe. Highly radioactive scrap. The surrounding, abandoned in 86, and will be for a very long time to come. Thanks to the clean up teams, who gave their lives, saving us from another terrible explosion, that would made a lot of Europe radioactive.
Ye people who like to say that the background radiation doses in the Zone are now already perfectly fine to live clearly dont know what they are talking about. For sure in places that were properly decontaminated (like Pripyat) aside from very few "hotspots" background radiation isnt that much higher from what is considered to be "normal" background radiation...in my understanding it ranges on average from 2 to 10 times higher than normal background radiation. But then you have hotspots like this in the zone that are still showing over 1millisievert per hour readings, which is clearly considered to be unsafe for long term exposure, although ofc you would have to be in close contact with such hotspots for longer periods of time to really get into any real danger of increased risk of cancer, but still....no nation would be willing to take that risk of letting people live inside exclusion zone, especially children where such hotspots are still present and lots of radioactive soil, contaminted vehicles and such are buried in the ground. Although ofc Ive heard that the Ukrainian government cant really do anything about the elderly woman who insist living their last years in the place where they used to live their entire lives until the accident happened.
3:00 "Fairly high levels of radiation, lets go take a closer look." Sounds good :)
sifre2 Hey look glowing uranium! Let's get a closer look.
DeadlyEmoAngel xX nothing special but hey I need a picture of this.
DeadlyEmoAngel xX I know, just joking. :)
Famous last words xD.
sifre2 they are dead of cancer those idiots
Have a happy new radioactive year everyone!
Nope
We want normal new year
Can't wait to see what the hazmat suits are for.
These students must have missed the class about radiation being dangerous.
Rufus Chucklebutty - Radiation is dangerous when it is received in high doses. Unfortunately that is not the case here. The radiation they are receiving is in milisieverts, not sieverts. In some spots, it reached 1 milisievert of gama radiation, which is 0.001 sieverts. But you have to take into account that their dosimeters read 1 milisievert per HOUR. They were there no longer than 30 minutes. To put their dosage into perspective, natural background radiation is 1.5 - 3.5 milisieverts per YEAR. So they received a dose of about 6 months worth of radiation. An amount that is in-term safe and which the body can recover from. Not the several lifetimes worth of radiation that the engineers and firefighters received directly after the incident. Hope this educated you a little bit.
Irishpride Sorry, something you said is right BUT they increase without any doubts the possibility to develop long term damages. The stochastic effect is not so easy to quantify, to define, to forecast. They probably under estimate this risk and in 10-20 years there’s a bigger possibility to develop a Leucemia, a linfoma or a thyroid cancer . And after all for what reason? To play with your geiger????? Also, a woman increase the possible risks regarding her future children...Lots of weird things about these people...
Before I watched this channel I wasn't interested in radiation, now I own a CDV, several dosimeters and a beta-gamma scintillator. Dammit bionerd :P keep producing great content!
Dan could you take that dosimeter on a flight some day please 😆 I am so curious about the background radiation you'd be exposed to during the trip
Same
Links and or prices ?
@@rainymornings if you are still curious I took my radiascan 701a on a flight to Rome. It was an 8 hour flight with a steady radiation level of 2.3 micro sieverts per hour.
The nuclear death cult propaganda is working I see. Soon everyone will kindly look away and let them go back to dumping 55gal drums full of radioactive stuff into the oceans... just like they did before Greenpeace and other environmentalist organizations finally stopped them.
Rads on the nads sounds like the name of an eighties pop band.
slovokia or a mission in one of the fallout games
slovokia rads on the Nadz, opening for fallout boy
slovokia the timing checks out
"Rads on the nads" is my kraftwerk radioactivity madame curie tribute band!
slovokia where are the hazmat suits?
Had me at, "rads on the nads." I spit coffee all over my screen and keyboard.
2:02 ... "it's time to get warmed up anyway". Oh you.
Finally classic Bionerd video! :D
Everytime I watch these Chernobyl videos I think about those poor 30 or so first responders that died a few days after the incident from acute radiation poisoning. I wonder if they knew what that tingling sensation was.
Nubbins how do you know there was a tingling sensation
A bit late to the party... But wanted to comment on this in case you're still around.
The first responders definitely felt more than tingling and prickly sensations. More like fire hot waves and pain, and extremities going jello later. The first two signals were attributed to the fire though...
“Fairly high levels of radiation. Let’s go take a closer look.”
wow
@@tonytingles4230 I'm told it's no more than a chest x-ray
@@colchronic not even 3.6 roentgens. i dont know why wear the suits, they must be crazy
Looking forward to next video and see what those suites was for :D Keep it up!
Maybe going INSIDE ?
bobl78 you don't know the death
Max Hill what do you mean
"You're getting a lot of rads on the nads!" XD
I love your videos. Very interesting. I've become obsessed with your channel, Chernobyl, the history and I am learning so much! Thank you for posting these!
Now you have to show Carl "squealing like a tickled toddler"(his words) when he sees one of the stringer caps just laying there.
That was in the "Red Forest" near the DOSAAF camp. I think the footage is on Bionerd's Sony camera from Nov. 5. I have the not-very-good GoPro footage from Lucas showing the silly event, and showing Bionerd filming it, but I don't have Bionerd's footage on my drive from that day. Maybe she will post it.
Carl Willis Didn't know there was a DOSAAF camp near the red forest.
what? how could we forget that? i thought we copied *everything* redundantly. it is a very, very very long single video file, maybe 10-15 minutes, running around the camp, looking at the ground mostly (80% useless video). it's at the VERY END of that file when you receive your gift. have a look again, i can't believe you don't have that!
I don't have anything from your camera before Nov. 8! Hard to believe, I thought I had it all. Do you have it? I hope it's not lost. Also: Happy New Year! RAD-ER 2017 is in the works!
damn! does your dropbox have enough space, should i just upload everything before nov. 8? i never deleted any of my SD cards (i never do until the next "big thing" comes up and i need to free space inevitably), so it will not be lost, that's for sure.
PS: preferably answer by email, youtube's message system sucks ass (new messages inside a message thread will not be sorted to the top when chosing "newest first" sorting) and i've disabled notifications due to overwhelming spam, so would have to remember to scroll down here find your potential answer. :P
oh btw I did go to Chernobyl for Pokemon GO
It would be funny if the elephants foot was a pokestop
@@ryanhopf8324 Some say a Shiny Mewtwo is in there, got to do a gym battle in there though... :)
Lol
You got a radioactive Pokémon
Please say sike
what was the hazmat job you were supposed to be doing?
You forgot to remove the gloves and pack some fuel meat in your bag.
Looks like a Turbine bearing and shaft seal support structure. Thanks for such an interesting video, just wondering how much are your Radiation readings above what is considered to be acceptable doseage levels?
it's not like we set up camp between those parts there, we just stayed for a short amount of time. to put it into perspective, it was never possible for me to receive a yearly dose worth of a pilot or flight attendant within a year of visiting chernobyl and being exposed to other sources of radiation. my whole body exposure still remains way below the acceptable dose levels for professional exposure, with are 20 mSv / year.
+bionerd23 Thanks very much for your reply and I love your videos, would love to visit Chernbyl but thats a long way from central Australia. I was aware of allowable accumulated Radiation dose for workers in your industry but unsure exactly what can be considered to be safe, thanks for helping to explain that to me. Happy new year to you and stay safe!
Rip
It is only 3.6 roentgen. Not great, not terrible.
🤣😅
*vomits
🤣
Ha they said the thing from the show lol
Is there a reason that Carl is measuring in Roentgens? I thought those units were largely obsolete and replaced by the metric Sievert.
The Roentgen unit is easy to measure electronically, because it is a measure of electronic charge released in air. Many instruments still directly read exposure in Roentgens or some division thereof. To relate this to absorbed dose units (e.g. rad or Gray), some knowledge of the radiation energy spectrum and absorption medium (if different from air) is required. To convert to an operational dose equivalent like Sv or rem, further assumptions are required. As a gross rule of thumb, owing to mathematical coincidence, 1 R exposure often produces an absorbed dose close to 1 rad (10 mGy) and an effective dose of about 1 rem (10 mSv). The SI units are becoming widely used, but there is no special unit in this system for exposure, so the Roentgen will probably continue to be used.
@@Carl_Willis Hi Carl!
@@noahshomeforstrangeandeduc4431 Greetings!
This video is awesome; Carl Willis at his finest. I love how excited he gets hunting for the spicy stuff.
Show us elephants foot........
@@msdadsfsx im very curious what are you talking about
@@SuperCakeKing th-cam.com/video/CcDZtlm_pI0/w-d-xo.html - You can see "the elephant's foot" around 10 seconds in, and a closer look from 40 second in.
@@msdadsfsx You are truly ignorant in all your comments.... Chernobyl was the name of the Power Plant, not the surrounding city, or area, and experts have concluded that Pripyat will not be inhabitable for the next 24000 years.
30 km around the power plant can not be livable for years to come
@@joozemane9894 go onto Google maps. Chernobyl and pripyat are two different towns. The name of the power plant was the Vladimir Lenin nuclear power plant.
I hope that they disposed of their shoes when they left.
What do you do as job at there? Uncontaminate the parts?
@3:32...are those pieces of the reactor that got blown away from the building from the blast? Wow! That's scary how much radiation there still is there, huh? Thanks for the awesome videos you post! I spent hours watching them, LOL!
3.26, u guys are crazy as. Seriously that is hazardous to be there
So some of those darker rock like chunks may have actually been graphite that was blown out of the core during the disaster. Those things are probably still extremely dangerous
4:27 is that corium?
There's more radiation there than you can shake a fuel rod at
3:11 whats that bottle behind his right foot? radioactive cola?
does anyone know why she "disappeared" and does not make videos anymore?
i wonder what a cloud chamber would look like in the hot zone.... and,, if you could use it as a fuel chip finder ? just by going the direction the cloud streaks are coming from the fastest? would love to hear your take on it or, if you try it would love to see the outcome
"Getting a lot of rads on the nads" she says lol. I wish I could visit Chernobyl. I'm not an engineer but the wholes thing has always sparked my interest.
OH MY GOD YOUR ALIVE!
Even a normal reactor shutdown leaves tons of radioactive materials that can never be used or recycled.
Good to see the shine from far away, like on a video like this. So Thanks.
But damn I hate that this gets normalized, there will be kids and tourists with no idea of the shoddy casino tour they enjoyed.
2:43 ‘we’re measuring 8 to 9 miliroentgens per hour right here’
Those are rookie numbers, but still kinda high...not great, not terrible
One of My Collage Professors Joined An International Coalition of scientists and Engineers but they only wanted older individuals that were either terminal or close to end of life and it was when the cement that they initially poured on Chernobyl was starting to break down and they were looking for a fix to help contain the radiation at Chernobyl by this time he was in his 70's and his wife had passed so he joined the Coalition, It was a one-way trip.
But For A Good Cause. RIP. Mr. Luke Lee Jr.
Is that corite at 4:48
Pulls out a surprise engagement radioactive ring “Marry me”
At 6:59 I don't hope that the doctors also get "the thrill of a hunt" when they investigate your body after a few years.
@ 6:06 That's actually a part from an oil-film bearing housing. (works like a car bearing system with no ball bearing).
Quem veio pelo fatos Desconhecidos
.
Minuto Do Rap eu
Eu kakak
Euu
eu
"Bionerd" and that guy finally found each other:)
@6:07 is piece of a steam turbine low pressure exhaust to condenser i think.
The black Stone... Is that graphite with molten Uran???
Are they still monitoring the elephants foot in the reactor basement?
bionerd23, I'm wondering what your official purpose is for visiting the zone so often? How did you get clearance to apparently go wandering off seeking heavily contaminated equipment? I visited the zone and reactor in September 2016 but only as part of an official tour. Your videos have always fascinated me and I greatly enjoy them. But please, I would feel much better for you if you wore a respirator while digging.
What it looks like when santa brings everyone a new geiger counter. I did like 'rads on the nads'.
ok so let me get this right, 1 milli Sv, u need about what 16 or so to be seriously in trouble? So now u are getting your yearly dose from that dirt?
does anyone know if these guys are still alive today?
Who the people on the video or the Chernobyl workers who operated reactor 4?
video people, yeah.
any update?
@@SuperCakeKing Yeah bio nerd is alive I travel to Chernobyl once and she was there.we talked a bit about youtube and Chernobyl she is still alive don't worry she has a Chernobyl visit planned for 7 september
I was surprised when I saw you on the "Uranium Dragon" documentary, I thought that program was very well done!
bionerd i have a question...the geiger counter called "Gamma scout" detects only the alpha,gamma and beta rays
or even the X-rays??I'm waiting for an answer,
Best regards
Suddenly I realise I shouldn’t be scared of radiation too much after seeing how much you’re being exposed to there 😅
Bionerd at what point do you say 'holy shit this is too dangerous I need to get the fuck out of here'? It seems like you guys are unconcerned that your geigercounters are screaming bloody murder. Will we get any elephant foot footage?
she won't do that as she is not stupid... she knows what is too dangerous to do...
What does your job entail?
If I had to hazard a guess its probably decontaminating vehicles that were used to build the new safe confinement. That explains the hazmat suits and what looks to be a Karcher hds 558 pressure washer next to the truck. The suits are probably used because the water splashing off of the truck has the potential to be contaminated.
I know I'm a few years late on this but Jake (the student you see at 3:50) gave a presentation at an MIT Nuclear Engineering class where he talked about this trip. It's on MIT open courses and can be viewed on TH-cam. Really interesting stuff. The other commentator is basically right. Part of their job was to decontaminate vehicles. What's funny is that the local workers were not wearing any kind of protection and stood right next to them in their street cloths. Apparently that truck that we see at the end was not particularly highly contaminated to begin with, but rather served as an exercise to show the procedure.
Interesting demonstration of skyshine. What model of Automess did you buy?
Do you taste metal?
You guys need a radiological "flir" camera to find those hot spots.
Sorta looks like someone dumped the most radioactive stuff, and perhaps sold the rest for scrap.
"Off they went, into the autumn dusk, their geiger counters chirping like crickets..."
A guy having a SCP coat at 0:24, my brain just went beyond and said “I think they are testing people with radiation or trying to find something to prevent radioactive crap.”
Not sure I'd be making any radioactive sandcastles but I really want to go to the exclusion zone sometime!
Do you play STALKER?
Why have you stopped uploading
So how much radiation is that for you to take? Isn't dangerous? :S
6:30 Ahhh,radioactive dust in your lungs .
Wtf they thinking??
I assure you, they're in perfect health from that amount of radiation they were near at that portion of the video. They may have breathed some dust in but the levels of radiation being emitted were no where near harmful to their health. Not that I'm suggesting the ordinary person go around spelunking and digging around radioactive debris.... but they know what they're doing and this is part of their profession. They're trained to know how to deal with it.
@Joshua Actually, because of science. We already do know.
Why did you stop making videos :-( we miss you.
Can You Make More Video About Chernobyl ?
Aren’t those some of the of the like 5 miles of steam pipes necessary for the rmpk reactor?
Awesome! Totally awesome! And Carl Willis was there! I love his work! I wish I were there too! What a blast that would be!
*_Alguém veio pelo Fatos Desconhecidos?_*
Nerd's MCPE euu
sim
será que ela teve algo na saude faz 6 meses que ela posto o video vish
Vlog WIS vdd tó achando q deu alguma merda.
Nerd's MCPE *Eu*
1 mSv/h is actually very low. You have to go over 200 before it starts to effect you. Some study's even show that it may be beneficial for you to receive doses under 200mSv/h
"But in the end we were told to please stop digging around in our sandbox" ^^
I wonder what your dosimeters read afterwards :/.
Wonder how much Roentgen is safe ? I remember from the Chernobyl movie ...initial reading was 5 or so but later found it was around 15,000 Roentgen !
*Sooo* pleased you're uploading new videos again!
I've got a question that I wanted to ask a professional in this field and you were the first one that I considered. I just need some little pointers for acquiring an ideal setup for detecting low as well as very high levels of ionizing radiation. I've been subbed to you for a few years now and followed your pursuits and I wondered if I could ask you privately please?
what detector is he using at 3:00?
For how long are you safe near the reactor scraps
why is "discussion" removed from her channel ?
Are you still alive ??
Has been a while since you uploaded a new radioactive chernobyl video :(
how are you doing? been wondering about you! glad you're OK!
You and Carl Rock! - I had no idea you knew carl untill today - that is so cool - figures. Thank You.
It'd be amazing if that piece of rebar you were measuring was the one from the fireman's story that got radiation burns on his hands from trying to dislodge a bar lodged in his tire
*SERÁ QUE O BOCO TA POR AQUI?*
Yang •﹏• não kkkkkk
naum ;-;
Irineu
Yang •﹏• faz 6 meses q ela posta vídeo fudeu kkk
deve ter morrido
Is she still alive?
when will you upload more videos???
Did I see a Polimaster there? Which model?
"Carl, you're getting a lot of rads on the nads".... :D :D :D :D :D :D :D
Are you still around? I has been some time since you have uploaded something.
bionerd23 why does there appear to be some much concern with radiation here yet in fukushima there doesn't the same level of interest or concern, no big containment shelters there?
If I'm correct you can't use Gamma Spec equipment in zone?
The reason these people are not dead is that they are ghosts. They just have not figured it out yet.
Man it’s hard to know that 8 people lost their lives in the turbine hall. RIP.
Have you had problems with the radiation creating anomalies in film in those film cameras?
Guy without protection clothes: *digs in high radiation earth like a little kid*
Yes he has those hand thingies but ye
are you ok? just you hve not uploaded anything up in a long time
Mc Lovin she died
are you sure?? thats really sad :(
lol get your job done... Love your videos
Thanks to the teams working around Chernobyl's nuclear power plant, keeping the old "reactor 4" site safe. Highly radioactive scrap. The surrounding, abandoned in 86, and will be for a very long time to come. Thanks to the clean up teams, who gave their lives, saving us from another terrible explosion, that would made a lot of Europe radioactive.
Ye people who like to say that the background radiation doses in the Zone are now already perfectly fine to live clearly dont know what they are talking about. For sure in places that were properly decontaminated (like Pripyat) aside from very few "hotspots" background radiation isnt that much higher from what is considered to be "normal" background radiation...in my understanding it ranges on average from 2 to 10 times higher than normal background radiation.
But then you have hotspots like this in the zone that are still showing over 1millisievert per hour readings, which is clearly considered to be unsafe for long term exposure, although ofc you would have to be in close contact with such hotspots for longer periods of time to really get into any real danger of increased risk of cancer, but still....no nation would be willing to take that risk of letting people live inside exclusion zone, especially children where such hotspots are still present and lots of radioactive soil, contaminted vehicles and such are buried in the ground. Although ofc Ive heard that the Ukrainian government cant really do anything about the elderly woman who insist living their last years in the place where they used to live their entire lives until the accident happened.
This is like Pokemon Go, searching for the highest radioactivity
I have a question. Why would someone even go there? They are just playing around... She said “yeah” when she pointed a very radioactive spot...