COVID-19

“We’re going to lose a chunk of activity, and then we’ll grow out of it. That’s the good news. But are we going to boom out of it or crawl out of it? Crawling is looking more likely.” — Julia Coronado, the president of MacroPolicy Perspectives

Good Morning all of you guys, first of all, i felt sorry for our lovely country. The virus is already entered this country. I just want to tell you guys to keep healty, keep all of the place in your house and in your body clean, just stay at home until we come back to our school (i miss my school and all of my friend, really). So, this is my brochure about the virus, i hope you’ll learn something from that

Warm hugs, absen 12.

CHERNOBYL

The chernobyl disaster was a nuclear accident on Saturday, April 26, 1986, in nooc. 4 nuclear reactors at chernobyl nuclear power plant, near pripyat’s town north of the Ukrainian SSR. This is considered the worst nuclear disaster in history and it’s one of the only two nuclear energy disasters in the world.

The chernobyl disaster explosion released an enormous amount of energy, vaporizing superheated cooling water and damaging the reactor’s core in a highly destructive steam blast. Some 49,000 people were evacuated from the area, especially from pripyat. The reactor explosion killed two of the reactor’s operating staff. In subsequent emergency response, 134 station and fire departments were hospitalised with acute radiation due to their heavy dose of ionisation radiation.

Of these 134 people, 28 died in the day to the next month and along with 14 suspected radiation cancer induction radiation followed within the next 10 years. The most faith-based model of predictions about the total number of deaths in the next few decades following chernobyl’s release would vary from 4,000 when only the three most polluted former Soviet countries, up to 9,000 to 16,000 in assessing the total number of European continents.

The disaster increased attention to fission reactors around the world and hundreds of reactor proposals, including those being built at chernobyl (no.5 and 6), were eventually canceled. The incident also increased attention to the culture of security in the Soviet nuclear power industry, lowering industrial growth and forcing governments to be more open about its procedures.