I'm a big follower and reactor to weather.
Satellite images suggest North Korea is building a light-water reactor and working on uranium enrichment. This is troubling.
I made a nuclear reactor when I was 14
I'm a reactor. I can react to crowds, performing situations.
Even if you build the perfect reactor, you're still saddled with a people problem and an equipment problem.
Bloggers and other flavors of lone wolf are publishing heart-wrenching photo-essays from the front line of the recovery effort. Newspapers and TV networks? They're writing about the temperature of the water in some part (they don't specify which) of some damaged reactor, illustrating it with video screen grabs of machinery they don't understand enough to explain.
I'm going to build a reactor, that's for sure.
Be a creator, not a reactor.
I, who had been in favour of nuclear energy for generating electricity. . . I suddenly realised that anybody who has a nuclear reactor can extract the plutonium from the reactor and make nuclear weapons, so that a country which has a nuclear reactor can, at any moment that it wants to, become a nuclear weapons power. And I, right from the beginning, have been terribly worried by the existence of nuclear weapons and very much against their use.
The middle class, in any society, plays the role of graphite rods in nuclear reactors: they slow down the reaction and, if it weren't for them, the reactor would explode. A society without a middle class is a society primed for explosion.
We have this handy fusion reactor in the sky called the sun, you don't have to do anything, it just works. It shows up every day.
Iran was nearing completion of a new reactor capable of producing plutonium for a bomb.