Thursday, December 31, 2009

DEPLETED URANIUM in your NUKE REACTOR waste



The United States Navy had me repairing Aviation Electronics in Airplanes. I took physice in college. My science is excellent from troubleshooting all that electronic equipment. I am even a Honeywell Biomedical Electronics Technician. These digital radiation detecting instrumentation may be designed to not measure alpha particles properly.

After the apples and oranges mistake made by those Aussie scientists, I would have to troubleshoot and calibrate their electronic gadgets with a cloud chamber!!!

UNFORTUNATELY, THESE AUSSIE SCIENTISTS SAY NOTHING ABOUT INVESTIGATING ALPHA PARTICLES IN THE AIR AAROUND THE PLACE THE PENETRATING AMMUNITION HIT SOMETHING. GAMMA RADIATION IS OVER IN A NEW YORK MINUTE. YOU BREATH ALPHA PARTICLES INTO YOUR LUNGS YOU ARE MARRIED TO LUNG CANCER.

So General Electric and Westinghouse, why do you not tell the truth about all that DEPLETED URANIUM in your NUKE REACTOR waste stream nobody wants in their state NUKE REPOSITORY we ain't got yet

Sergeon General was bad mouthed about putting a warning label on smokes.
Seat belts in cars ran into, "What is good for General Motors is good for America."
Ask an electrician why General Electric dragged its feet on the grounded outlet with three prongs!!! So General Electric and Corporations are good at 3-card Monty and scientific research that is actually slight of hand!!!

http://www.sciencealert.com.au/news/20091612-20420.html

DU Bullet radiation not so harmful
Wednesday, 16 December 2009
University of South Australia

Depleted uranium is used in armour piercing rounds because it is very dense - but it is also weakly radioactive,
and previous studies suggested this causes unintended health problems.

Senior Research Fellow at the University of South Australia, John Pattison has led a research project that casts doubt on the aftermath impact of exposure to radiation from depleted uranium munitions.

The research recently published by the Journal of the Royal Society Interface investigated the health effects of the use of depleted uranium (DU) munitions which to date have carried the main blame for the cause of Gulf War Syndrome.

Pattison, with colleagues from Swansea University and the University of Birmingham, concluded that DU may not be as harmful from a radiation perspective as previously thought.

The study, conducted between 2006 and 2008, investigated the effect on the human body of exposure to DU in conjunction with natural background gamma-radiation in comparison to exposure to natural background gamma-radiation alone.

1 comment:

  1. Those two bright streaks in upper-left corner are fired out of the "A-10 Warthog's" 30-mm cannon. The molten DU ROUNDS pictured above already contaminated the "A-10 Pilot's" lungs with alpha particles. Measuer the gamma rays on the ground after that pilot gets back to his/her airport, and you will think those Aussie Scientists know what they are doing instead of what I accuse them of doing -- taking bribes to limit their liability for bad science.

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