I get mail:
German physicist Peter Heller wrote a passionate plea for a return to science on the nuclear power issue, published in German here: http://www.science-skeptical.de/blog/fukushima/004149/
With Dr. Heller’s permission, I’ve translated it in English. But having gone over the content, I think his plea is worthy of a much wider audience – more than what NTZ can offer. So I send this to you with the kind request that you consider publishing it at WUWT.
Best regards,
P Gosselin
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German physicist Peter Heller makes a passionate plea for a return to science on the nuclear energy issue. He wonders if ignorance and fear will cause us to abandon the legacies of Einstein, Heisenberg and others.
Fukushima
By Dr Peter Heller, http://www.science-skeptical.de
Astronomer, Physicist
There’s no place on earth I would rather be right now than at Fukushima – right in the atomic power plant, at the centre of the event. I say this because I am a physicist and there is no other place that could be more exciting and interesting for a physicist. The same goes for many, if not most physicists and engineers, on the planet.
Already at a young age I knew one day I would study physics. As a boy, I received a telescope for Christmas, and from that point on my view was fixed on the night sky; gazing at star clusters, nebula and galaxies was my favourite preoccupation. It was only later that I learned that these lights and the twinkling in eyepiece were actually the expressions of a chaotic and violent force of nature – the direct conversion of matter into energy during the fusion of an atomic nucleus.
My curiosity carried me, as if on a high, through 10 semesters of study and subsequent graduation. It was a time of discovery that involved the tedious task of understanding. At times I felt exasperation and self doubt with respect to the sheer complexity and breadth of what there was to learn. Yet, there were times of joy whenever the fog lifted and the clarity and beauty of physical descriptions of natural phenomena moved in its place. It was a time that, unfortunately, passed all too quickly and is now some years in the past.
The great minds that accompanied me through my studies were Planck, Sommerfeld, Bohr, Einstein, Heisenberg, and a host of others who, for us physicists, are still very much alive today. They are great thinkers who contributed to unravelling the puzzles of nature and the forces which keep the world together through the most minute structures. I devoured the stories of Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner, of Enrico Fermi and Edward Teller – to name a few – and on how they created completely new technologies from theoretical concepts, how the energy stored in the nucleus of an atom could be used for the good of man and how it became possible in a single process to tap into this source of affordable, clean and plentiful energy on a large scale as never seen by man. Electricity illuminates our world, drives our machines, allow us to communicate over great distances, thus making our lives easier and more comfortable. It is a source of energy that staves off poverty and enables prosperity.
Electricity: manufactured by splitting atomic nuclei with neutrons, gained through the direct conversion of mass into energy. It is the principle by which (via the reverse process of fusion) the stars twinkle in the night sky, a principle by which our sun enables life on our planet.
As a physicist it fills me with great joy and pride to see how man is able to rouse this force of nature at the most minute structural level, then amplify, control, and use it for our benefit. As a physicist I have the fundamental understanding of the processes – I can imagine them and describe them. As a physicist I have neither fear of an atomic power plant nor of radioactivity. Ultimately I know that it is a natural phenomenon that is always around us, one we can never escape – and one that we never need to escape. And I know the first as a symbol of man’s capability to steer the forces of nature. As a physicist I have no fear of what nature has to offer. Rather I have respect. And this respect beckons us to seize the chances like those offered by neutrons, which can split nuclei and thus convert matter into energy. Anything else would be ignorance and cowardice.
Dark times in history
There were times in history when ignorance and cowardice overshadowed human life. It was a time when our ancestors were forced to lead a life filled with superstition and fear because it was forbidden to use creativity and fantasy. Religious dogma, like the earth being the centre of the universe, or creationism, forbade people to question. The forbiddance of opening a human body and examining it prevented questions from being answered. Today these medieval rules appear backwards and close-minded. We simply cannot imagine this way of thinking could have any acceptance.
But over the recent days I have grown concerned that we are headed again for such dark times. Hysterical and sensationalist media reporting, paired with a remarkably stark display of ignorance of technical and scientific interrelations, and the attempt by a vast majority of journalists to fan the public’s angst and opposition to nuclear energy – pure witch-burning disguised as modernity.
Freedom of research
So it fills me with sadness and anger on how the work of the above mentioned giants of physics is now being dragged through the mud, how the greatest scientific discoveries of the 20th century are being redefined and criminalized. The current debate in Germany is also a debate on freedom of research. The stigmatization and ostracism of nuclear energy, the demand for an immediate stop of its use, is also the demand for the end of its research and development. No job possibilities also means no students, which means no faculty, which then means the end of the growth of our knowledge. Stopping nuclear energy is nothing less than rejecting the legacy of Einstein, Heisenberg, Bohr and all others. It is tantamount to scrapping it, labelling it as dangerous – all in a fit of ignorance. And just as creationists attempt to ban the theory of evolution from the school books, it almost seems as if every factual and neutral explanation in Germany is now in the process of being deleted.
The media suggests a nuclear catastrophe, a mega-meltdown, and that the apocalypse has already begun. It is almost as if the 10,000 deaths in Japan were actually victims of nuclear energy, and not the earthquake or the tsunami. Here again one has to remind us that Fukushima was first hit by an unimaginable 9.0 earthquake and then by a massive 10-meter wave of water just an hour later. As a result, the facility no longer found itself in a highly technological area, but surrounded by a desert of rubble. All around the power plant the infrastructure, residential areas, traffic routes, energy and communication networks are simply no longer there. They were wiped out. Yet, after an entire week, the apocalypse still has not come to pass. Only relatively small amounts of radioactive materials have leaked out and have had only a local impact. If one considers the pure facts exclusively, i.e. only the things we really know, then it exposes the unfounded interpretations of scientific illiterates in the media. One can only arrive to one conclusion: This sorrowful state will remain so.
In truth, this does not show that the ideologically motivated, fear-laden admonitions and warnings were correct. Fukushima illustrates that we are indeed able to control atomic energy. Fukushima shows that we can master it even when natural disasters beyond planning befall us. Still, at Fukushima the conflict between human creativity/competence continues to clamour against the bond energy in atomic nuclei. It’s a struggle that that shows what human intelligence, knowledge gained, passion, boldness, respect, and capability to learn allow us to do. Personally this does not fill me with apprehension, but with hope. Man can meet this challenge not only because he has to, but most of all because he wants to.
Even though I have not practiced physics for some time now, I will never be anything other than a scientist and researcher, and there would be no other place I would rather be than on site at Fukushima. There is no other place at the moment where so much can be learned about atomic energy, which keeps our world together deep inside, and the technical possibilities to benefit from it. Do we have the courage to learn? Do we accept – with respect and confidence – the opportunities we are confronted with? Fukushima will show us possibilities on how to use the direct conversion of matter into energy in a better and safer way, something that Einstein and others could have only dreamed of.
I am a physicist. My wish is to live in a world that is willing to learn and to improve whatever is good. I would only like to live in a world where great strides in physics are viewed with fascination, pride, and hope because they show us the way to a better future. I would only like to live in a world that has the courage for a better world. Any other world for me is unacceptable. Never. That’s why I am going to fight for this world, without ever relenting.
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Translated from the German, with the permission of Peter Heller, by Bernd Felsche and Pierre Gosselin. Original text appeared here: http://www.science-skeptical.de/blog/fukushima/004149/
Noelene says:
March 20, 2011 at 7:00 pm
“When you think about it,building the reactor near the ocean is probably what saved it.How do you build a nuclear plant on land with access to water if an earthquake is going to bust pipes and bring down water reservoirs?Or am I being dumb again?”
You apparently didn’t consider that busted pipes due to earthquakes is just as likely to occur at the beach as on higher ground. Perhaps more likely, if the beach is susceptible to liquification.
What how dare you publish good sense from Peter Heller? The proper response is panic, run arround in circles and scream we are all going to dy. Thats true its only a question of when. Nuclear waste is a raining down, worlds end , think of the children, blah blah. Notice the MSM attention has moved on already, no meltdown no explosive spread of radioactive material, nevermind. There will be no return to science until scarcity bites the soft delusional masses we have created amongst us. Poverty and having to do without our marvelous technology tends to cure magical thinking real quick. Maybe its time for involuntary deprivement of technology for the anti science anti technology crew, social justice give them what they say they want.
I sympathize with this fellow’s general feelings, but I also have to admit that the cost analysis is not terribly good with nuclear power. Not currently at least, even with advanced designs. At present, fossil fuels are far cheaper and by the time they begin to run low and become cost-competitive with nuclear, other forms of energy such as solar or geothermal will be much cheaper than at present. So I’m not sure if there’s a real window for nuclear to ever become a truly competitive replacement for other fuels. The safety concerns are of course overblown, and even the waste issue I think is being resolved by new techniques, but the cost issue remains almost insurmountable. The same probably goes for any future fusion power plants. For the present, fossil fuels are probably the best bet, and for the future there’s all kinds of promising and likely cheaper alternatives that do depend on technology not yet developed, but I have faith that some of them will pan out quite well.
So I think we are going to bypass nuclear for the most part, even if for the wrong reasons.
I still havn’t heard an apology from the luddites who wanted to shutdown the LHC because of their irrational fear that it would produce a runaway blackhole that would engulf the Earth.
REF: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXzugu39pKM
Let’s return to science. Indeed? This so commonplace and yet boring distorted vision of the medieval times and religion not helps. For example, how many times more will be necessary to say that earth as a center of universe was not a religious dogma and, by the way, that the dispute between Galileo and the Church was essentially other thing than science versus religion? And could continue…
If you a have a sincere desire to learn about these topics, I sugest Thomas E. Woods, http://www.tomwoods.com/, as an introduction.
Two interesting authors will help to understand in deep what is happening in the world today: Olavo de Carvalho http://www.theinteramerican.org/ and JR Nyquist http://financialsense.com/contributors/j-r-nyquist
Amino Acids in Meteorites says:
March 20, 2011 at 5:16 pm
Douglas says:
March 20, 2011 at 1:40 pm
Are you intentionally changing the subject? Kinda strange that you think I don’t care about the people caught in the tsunami.
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???? Are you unable to read or understand my comment?
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What if next time it’s a 9.6 with an 80 foot tsunami? Is that planned for in any nuclear plant located on an ocean? That can’t happen?
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You expecting the sky to fall in or something – How high can you go? 10.8 and 100metres?
—————————————————————————————You shouldn’t expect all people to agree with you. You shouldn’t get bent out of shape so easily. You also shouldn’t assume that just because someone doesn’t agree with you about nuclear power that it also means they don’t care about people. That’s quite a leap to make. It could be that people have serious objection to nuclear power because they do care about people.
So please no more accusations that I or anyone else that doesn’t like nuclear power doesn’t care about the people caught in the tsunami.
Also, shouldn’t your conversation be only about the people caught in the tsunami since you think I should be doing that? Does it really make sense that you say just because I’m not rah-rah about nuclear power that I am insensitive about what really happened over there?
Please clean your own house before you think you see dirt on the floor of someone elses.
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What’s this diatribe all about? You missed your medication or something?
The context of my comment was in respect to your rather smug question @ur momisugly March 20, 2011 at 12:24 pm ‘They didn’t know about earthquakes and tsunamis ahead of time?’
Nothing more that this. It seemed to me that you were rather callous and smug. I was simply saying of course they knew about earthquakes and tsunamis but for all that were still overtaken by those events AND I have no doubt that they will sort things out soon enough as well as learn from the experience.
Calm down
Douglas
The anti-nuclear view has now been comprehensively proven to be wrong. No honest well-informed scientific-minded person can now henceforth credibly be ‘anti-nucler’.
What remains are fanatics, pseuds, con-artists and the irredeemably ignorant.
There is one very important use for a particular isotope of plutonium, without which there would probably not be a space program. Plutonium-238 is used as a heat and energy source in satellites and probes. Plutonium-238 cannot be used in weapons. There is no other material for building energy and heat sources that can last for about 50 years with no maintenance.
There is also the matter of medical isotopes, which have to be created in a reactor. Medical isotopes save many lives every year.
Nuclear. It’s not just for power and bombs anymore.
Attention,
“The land area around Chernobyl has been locked up as you say – a biologist was given permission to enter and check it out. She found thriving animal life more diverse and greater numbers than before Chernobyl.”
Reference: Wormwood Forest, a natural history of Chernobyl by Mary Mycio, published in 2005, A Joseph Henry Press Book, An Imprint of the National Academies Press, 259 pages, available at Amazon.com(about $14.00), and in their Kindle edition for about $12.00. Wormwood Forest means Red Forest. You can also do a google search on Wormwood Forest.
Refer to my write-up
DTaylor says
Mar20,2011 at 5:35pm
Fukushima was 40 years old and was due to begin decommission at the end of the month. That is highly relevant. The disaster will teach a great deal to nuclear engineers–but a lot of it was already learnt and is a feature of modern design.
Dr. Heller, by all means go help out in Japan. You are truly needed there and in that case why miss out??? But you might ponder what happened to the Soviet heroes who investigated the Chernobyl core–they died within a few years from heart failure.
I find nuclear engineers flippant about health risks, and consider that a very strong arument against the technology as they cannot think accurately about radiation risks if they think 31 people died at Chernobyl (try over 30 000) and none at Three Mile Island (estimated 3000–and it was not America’s worst disaster).
As an adult male, you have much less risk, Dr. Heller, than the general public. By far the worst risks are to developing embryos.
The US government had very good reason to fight for nuke bombs, for they were fighting a Soviet regime that was enormously crueler to its citizens that Americans are able to comprehend. The American government outright falsified public health statistics to protect the bombs. But now it is time for truth.
Go to ratical.org and download Ernest Sternglass’ Secret Fallout. It is exacting scientific research that should withstand even the tough “peer review” of this WUWT group.
As to the general public, it would be awful nice if we could somehow get across the actual level of risk and what is worth doing or fearing and what just isn’t. But you will find that their IQs have been lowered by fallout.
DirkH
“Do you trust NatGeo?”
Nope.
I think you all would be interested in comparing the US NRC’s guidelines and regulations for US nuclear facilities and power plants to Japan’s government nuclear regulation body METI. Google for their websites.
METI has adopted very broadly the NRC guidelines & regulations. You might find METI is more restrictive in general.
METI’s enforcement methodology appears to be more direct than the NRC’s.
John
Douglas says:
March 20, 2011 at 8:21 pm
How high can you go? 10.8
No, to 11, a Spinal Tap Richter scale.
DTaylor
Are their studies used in the book?
bob says:
March 20, 2011 at 8:21 pm
The anti-nuclear view has now been comprehensively proven to be wrong. No honest well-informed scientific-minded person can now henceforth credibly be ‘anti-nucler’.
What remains are fanatics, pseuds, con-artists and the irredeemably ignorant.
Not sure what ‘pseuds’ are there, but an interesting comment on western society can be found in the fact that within the psychiatric field, a ‘delusion,’ if it is widely held, does not allow one to diagnose its holders as delusional. It is no more empirically than if it were held by a single individual only, but where an uncommon delusional belief might see a single person 5150’d into a hospital, a commonly held delusion is simply passed off as ‘normal.’
Not to belabor the point, but the evolution of life forms on Earth is as much a fact as the existence of gravity. The evidence is the fossil record, and it cannot be gainsaid. What remains theoretical is the mechanism, namely natural selection by adaptation. We know a lot more about that than Darwin did, since the discovery of molecular genetics, which continues to introduce wrinkles and complications into a neat but clearly oversimplified 19th-century construct. But the concept of adaptation still has enormous explanatory power, and that is what science looks for, not some deus ex machina that ‘explains’ everything, and therefore nothing.
And that is but one example of the know-nothingism that Peter Heller decries, as the source of unwarranted and uninformed alarmism.
/Mr Lynn
Irrespective of whether or not he is right about nuclear power this man is sadly ignorant of the history and philosophy of science. Using words and phrases like, “forced”, “superstition and fear”, “forbidden”, “[r]eligious dogma”, “forbiddance” (sic), “backwards and close-minded” – he carefully summarizes thousands of years of our existence and moves blithely onwards to our bright future! Just because he can’t imagine “this way of thinking”.
Well, I’m pretty sure those “medievals” wouldn’t easily “understand” our “way of thinking” either; how we can slaughter tens of millions of people with totalitarian ideologies, nuclear war, “ordinary” war and last but not least, the murder of children by abortion. Or how the scientific world could be enamoured of “ether” or an infinite universe or (get this one folks) “climate change”! let alone multiverses, dark matter and time travel. After all, we are so advanced now! It’s a wonder he didn’t use the magical word, “Galileo”.
I’d be ashamed of that level of ignorance and bigotry if I was you Professor. Science was stillborn in every culture except Christian. Why was that? Because the idea of a creator who created out of nothing a world that was intelligible and not subject to the idea of eternal recurrences led to us being free to count and measure and know in a world that had a purpose. Please read just about anything by Stanley Jaki and you’ll begin to understand the medieval roots of physical science. Read Buridan’s statement about inertial motion way before Newton got to it. I’ve got to get back to work now. I hope he reads this, comment number 1,436 – oh well 🙂
“I am a physicist.”
Talk to an economist sometime, nuclear energy is a boondoggle. No private company will touch it without massive government aid/guarantees.
bob says:
March 20, 2011 at 8:21 pm
The anti-nuclear view has now been comprehensively proven to be wrong. No honest well-informed scientific-minded person can now henceforth credibly be ‘anti-nucler’.
Is there a consensus?
Glenn
They don’t need pipes when they have an ocean next door.If I am not mistaken,I believe they were forced to use sea water,I don’t know if they still are.
Further reading ‘outside these hallowed halls’ seem to indicate more than just the much-cited back-up generators being in harms way, i.e. being washed away/inundated by the Tsunami, but rather:
a) one source cites the diesel fuel tanks which were situated by the dock or pier are now absent (indeed, one tank is blocking a road just to the north of Turbine Building #1), and
b) the other situation being that electrics all over the facility were inundated by seawater which came in at a height not designed for, and, possibly because of land-height change (subduction zone land subsidence).
.
Please, Fukushima what?
Fukushima I or II ?
Fukushima I
o Daiichi (literally: Dai-Ichi or first in Japanese)
o Note: Six reactors, 1 – 6 (with a #7 and #8 planned) (1 – 4 currently with issues)
o http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_I_Nuclear_Power_Plant
Fukushima II
o Daini (literally: Dai-Ni, the second in Japanese)
o Note: Four reactors, 1 – 4
o http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_II_Nuclear_Power_Plant
Please also review at the two above websites for the dates various reactors at each site came on line, noting Dai-ichi came on-line commercially the earliest, in 1971.
.
Mr Lynn says:
March 20, 2011 at 9:21 pm
“Not to belabor the point, but the evolution of life forms on Earth is as much a fact as the existence of gravity.”
Evolutionary biologists often claim that evolution is a fact like gravity but you never hear a physicist claim that gravity is a fact like the existence of evolution.
I wonder why? /sarc
“So, 95%(if I am informed correctly) of the UO2 in spent fuel rods sits in pools of water being kept cool.”
Candu style reactors can can burn spent fuel rods from other reactors.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CANDU_reactor
Plutonium isn’t the only fissile material in spent nuclear fuel that CANDU reactors can utilize. Because the CANDU reactor was designed to work with natural uranium, CANDU fuel can be manufactured from the used (depleted) uranium found in light water reactor (LWR) spent fuel.
CANDU reactors can also breed fuel from natural thorium, if uranium is unavailable.
Funny, that was JUST the reason ‘the grid’ came into existence (increase reliability thru interconnection). You realize there is a field of study about this very thing?
Power Systems Engineering Research Center (PSERC) – The Grid
http://www.pserc.wisc.edu/documents/publications/special_interest_publications/grid_reliability/
Interconnected power systems, generation allow for … otherwise – YOUR power generation goes out, so do your lights! Regardless of ‘smart anything’ (lightning and other random trip events will see to that!)
Early history of power, “NIAGARA FALLS HISTORY of POWER”:
http://www.niagarafrontier.com/power.html
Also wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_grid