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Atomic Insights

Atomic energy technology, politics, and perceptions from a nuclear energy insider who served as a US nuclear submarine engineer officer

Letter from the Editor: Portable Nuclear Reactors

November 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

The United States Army ran an innovative nuclear power program for more than 20 years. The men involved operated a series of small, nuclear heated generating plants in some of the world’s least hospitable environments. The story of what those diligent heros did has been all but lost. Though the Army was the lead service […]

Filed Under: Army Nuclear Program, Atomic Insights Nov 1995, Small Nuclear Power Plants

Letter from the Editor: Breeding Better Reactors

October 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

Conventional wisdom holds that a breeder reactor produces more fuel than it uses. This idea is fascinating to some, but confusing to a whole group of rational people. It sounds too much like science fiction or Madison Avenue hype. Actually, a breeder reactor is not magic, but it is a marketing exaggeration to state that […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Oct 1995, Breeder Reactors

Plutonium Fuel Cycle: Under Attack

October 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

AEI would prefer to concentrate its efforts on discussing the incredible technical potential of nuclear energy while leaving the discussion of politics and personality to others. When trying to understand nuclear energy technical decisions, however, it is essential to understand some of the political issues involved. For the last 20 years, there has been an […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Oct 1995, Breeder Reactors

Liquid Metal Fast Breeder: Right Answer, Wrong Question

October 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

Soon after the development of the first nuclear reactors, scientists and engineers began to discuss the possibility of a nuclear fuel shortage. As far as these nuclear pioneers knew, there was a rather limited supply of uranium that was concentrated in certain areas of Africa and Eastern Europe. The situation was considered even more critical […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Oct 1995, Breeder Reactors, Liquid Metal Cooled Reactors

Light Water Breeder Reactor: Adapting A Proven System

October 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

At 12:30 am, on August 26, 1977, the operators at the Shippingport Atomic Power Station began lifting the central modules of the experimental breeder reactor core into the blanket section. At 04:38 am, the reactor reached criticality. During the next five years, the core produced more than 10 billion kilowatt-hours of thermal power – equivalent […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Oct 1995, Breeder Reactors, Technical History Stories

In the news: September 1995

September 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

Modern Hiroshima Described (August 7, 1995) (Knight-Ridder Newspapers) “This was supposed to have become a dead city, a toxic landscape so contaminated by radiation that nothing green would grow for generations. A nuclear desert – that’s what even some scientists saw in Hiroshima’s future. Instead, today’s Hiroshima is a thriving, flower-planted, ultramodern metropolis of 1-million […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Sept 1995

Rocket Technology Applications: Machines With Limitless Capabilities

September 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

Under any circumstances, there is a very limited market for nuclear rockets. Even if space exploration is raised in the national priority list, the first mission to Mars would probably occur in about 2010. For at least a decade or more after that, trips would probably be infrequent at best. There would be some utility […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Sept 1995, Nuclear Aircraft

An Inside View: How Do Nuclear Rockets Work?

September 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

Nuclear Rocket

Before learning about nuclear rockets, we should take a quick detour to review how conventional rockets work. There is a perception that rockets are fiendishly complex devices that need to be serviced and designed by people whose intelligence is far removed from that of mere mortals. Often, people even use the term “rocket scientist” to […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Sept 1995, Nuclear Aircraft

Letter from the Editor: Confessions of a Stargazer

September 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

I have a confession. I am a science fiction and space travel fanatic. I watched with rapt attention during the “race to the moon” even though I was quite young. I dreamed of being an astronaut, and made several visits to the Kennedy Space Center. My personal library includes a large collection of books by […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Sept 1995, Nuclear Aircraft

U.S. Nuclear Rocket Programs

September 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

The Nuclear Engines for Rocket Vehicle Applications (NERVA) program officially began in 1961, when NASA issued a request for proposals and established the Space Nuclear Propulsion Office (SNPO). Various government laboratories had been studying the concept for several years, several contractors were already working on conceptual design, and space was a big topic of interest. […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Sept 1995, Nuclear Aircraft, Technical History Stories

In the news: August 1995

August 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

U.S. discussing MOX with Germans (June 29, 1995) A group of American officials visited the Siemens AG Hanau mixed oxide (MOX) nuclear fuels plant on June 27th. The officials are in Germany to discuss the use of the facility to manufacture MOX from Russian weapons program plutonium. MOX is made by combining plutonium dioxide with […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Aug 1995

Nuclear Fission Vs. Combustion: Inexpensive Machines and Cheap Fuel

August 1, 1995 By Rod Adams

Nuclear fission is still in its adolescence, especially when compared to combustion, its major competitor. There is room for process innovations that will improve efficiency, increase flexibility and reduce machinery complexity. Changes in each of these areas offers the opportunity for major cost reductions. The next time you travel on a large jet, look out […]

Filed Under: Atomic Insights Aug 1995, Nuclear Cost Data, Smaller reactors

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