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Members of
the International Atomic Energy Agency inspect a spent fuel
pool at the
crippled Tokyo Electric Power Fukushima nuclear power plant,
on November 27,
2013 (TEPCO/AFP/File, Tepco)
|
Tokyo —
Japanese researchers said Thursday they had succeeded in using cosmic rays to
find nuclear fuel inside a reactor, a technology that might be helpful in the
complicated decommissioning at Fukushima.
By
observing the way the particles behaved near reactors, container vessels and
spent fuel pools, they were able to obtain a clear visual picture of the fuel,
they said.
"We
are conducting this study carefully as this enables you to find where nuclear
fuel is anywhere in the world," said Fumihiko Takasaki, a researcher at
the High Energy Accelerator Research Organisation, or KEK, one of the
laboratories involved in the research.
The
technology could help Tokyo Electric Power Co. in the clean-up at its Fukushima
Daiichi power plant, he told AFP by telephone.
A massive
earthquake and subsequent tsunami knocked out cooling systems at the power
station, sparking reactor meltdowns that contaminated land, air and the sea.
Engineers
working on the decades-long decommissioning are faced with a series of
difficulties, not least of which is that they do not know exactly where the
molten fuel is inside the battered reactors.
Present
technology is not robust enough to allow them to get a look inside the units,
where some fear that fuel has melted through containment vessels and possibly
into the ground underneath.
KEK,
working jointly with University of Tokyo, University of Tsukuba and Tokyo
Metropolitan University, observed particles called muons in experiments.
Muons are
constantly falling on the earth and move without hindrance through water, human
bodies and many other objects.
But
substances with high density such as nuclear fuel reduce their penetration.
A team of
researchers monitored muons at three locations outside an off-line nuclear
plant in Ibaraki prefecture, east of Tokyo, from February 2012 to December
2013.
They
tracked where muon penetration was blocked to produce the image of nuclear fuel
at the plant.
Takasaki
said the team would propose use of the system to Tokyo Electric Power, adding
observations at some five locations for less than two months would enable them
to produce visual images of nuclear fuel at Fukushima.
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