Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I have SOOO many questions, and this report answers SOOO few of them.


My question is what happened between when they went in the water and when they got off-site medical treatment. 7 hours seems like a long time. Is there on-site medical that would be doing something during that time?


Anecdote: My house mate in grad school was working in a national lab when an experiment caught fire and the fire consumed a certain amount of radioactive material. (Tiny little buttons used for calibrating detectors). He was on shift and was the person who discovered the fire and pulled the alarm.

Among other things, he had to sit inside an enclosure made of scintillator material for a period of time, to make sure he wasn't contaminated. Then he also got blood tests for heavy metals etc. They pretty much went by the book for all of these tests.

Also, the facility is the only place that's equipped for this kind of situation.


Realistically, there is little to do besides decontamination which I'm sure they're equipped to do on site.


It’s a process to come into a high radiation area, as well as, a process to come out; I’m sure the worker was not injured so they processed he/she out and decontaminated the individual and did a whole body count. Then release him to medical for evaluation…which in itself is a process.


Like what is a reactor cavity? HN title makes it sound like they fell into the reactor but maybe this is some sort of moat or something? what did they fall into and why?


Almost certainly a refueling outage, this video will give you a good image of it

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoCfapqYy00


Palisades is not an operating reactor. It has been shut down since 2022. It's in the process of being recommissioned/restarted.


ooh, thank you for this!




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: