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  2. Crimes involving radioactive substances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimes_involving...

    Thereafter, Silkwood and two other co-workers personally associated with her (roommate Sherri Ellis and boyfriend Drew Stephens) would be tested at Los Alamos National Laboratory; while the latter two only tested positive for insignificant amounts of plutonium exposure, Silkwood was found to have 6–7 nanocuries (220–260 Bq) of plutonium-239 ...

  3. Criticality accident - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticality_accident

    Criticality accidents are divided into one of two categories: Process accidents, where controls in place to prevent any criticality are breached;; Reactor accidents, which occur due to operator errors or other unintended events (e.g., during maintenance or fuel loading) in locations intended to achieve or approach criticality, such as nuclear power plants, nuclear reactors, and nuclear ...

  4. Weapons-grade nuclear material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weapons-grade_nuclear_material

    Plutonium recovered from LWR spent fuel, while not weapons grade, can be used to produce nuclear weapons at all levels of sophistication, [25] though in simple designs it may produce only a fizzle yield. [26] Weapons made with reactor-grade plutonium would require special cooling to keep them in storage and ready for use. [27]

  5. Reports: 2 mishaps in LANL's plutonium facility in one day - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/reports-2-mishaps-lanls...

    Apr. 8—In two incidents on the same day last month, Los Alamos National Laboratory workers accidentally set off a decontamination shower, causing flooding in the lab's plutonium facility, and a ...

  6. Watchdogs want US to address extreme plutonium ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/watchdogs-want-us-address...

    “Cleanup at Los Alamos is long delayed,” Coghlan said, adding that annual spending for the plutonium pit work has neared $2 billion in recent years while the cleanup budget for legacy waste is ...

  7. Albert Stevens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Stevens

    [1] Plutonium, like radium and many other heavy metals, accumulates in the bones. [ 2 ] [ 10 ] None of the people at UCSF or those who treated Stevens ever explained to Stevens that he did not have cancer, nor did they disclose to him that he was a part of an experiment; his wife and daughter "figured they were using him for a guinea pig", but ...

  8. Reactor-grade plutonium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactor-grade_plutonium

    The odd numbered fissile plutonium isotopes present in spent nuclear fuel, such as Pu-239, decrease significantly as a percentage of the total composition of all plutonium isotopes (which was 1.11% in the first example above) as higher and higher burnups take place, while the even numbered non-fissile plutonium isotopes (e.g. Pu-238, Pu-240 and ...

  9. Plutonium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plutonium

    Trace amounts of plutonium-238, plutonium-239, plutonium-240, and plutonium-244 can be found in nature. Small traces of plutonium-239, a few parts per trillion , and its decay products are naturally found in some concentrated ores of uranium, [ 54 ] such as the natural nuclear fission reactor in Oklo , Gabon . [ 55 ]