Not to take anything away from them cause they are heroes, but if people think they had any choice in soviet union you are really misinformed. Its either go and be a hero or you will go along with your wife, child and rest of the family at gun point.
@@Dreadpirateflappy 1. That would have been a steam explosion, not a thermonuclear one (most certainly causing a much greater radioactive contamination of Europe) 2. Well 2 of the 3 are still alive so R.I.P does not sound appropriate. They received a medal a year ago for their bravery. The 3rd died in 2005 of heart failure.
There was a case in mexico They bought milk from ireland but they didn't know that milk was radiactive This happend in the same year at the chernobyl catastrope I don't know how many persons get sick
I worked at a diagnostic imaging center for 6 years. I enjoyed this content but I don’t think you should scare people away from CTs and MRIs. You wouldn’t believe how many young, healthy people have cancer and find out too late because they were misinformed about radiation. Radiology techs are required to wear badges and record their monthly exposure levels. They have done this for decades and are perfectly healthy. Please be responsible with your audience. Thank you :)
Especially when a CT scan potential dose is less then eating a banana. Who here have eaten more than 1000 bananas in their lifetime? Then you have recieved a dose of 1000*0.1 microsievert. And you are still alive.
6:15 to show you the power of Flex Seal, we found a Radioactive Lake, and poured tons of Flex Seal to cover the lake. After a day on the lake, I have been exposed to radiation, and I am going to die. But now, thanks to the power of Flex Seal, this lake is completely dry.
Chernobyl is one of my favorite thing to learn and read about. It's both fascinating and sad. It's a pity that it happened, and it probably saved us from future incidents but I can't stop thinking about all the innocent lives that got lost due to a human mistake... May all of them rest in peace and may we all learn from that mistake to avoid ever going through this again.
My father in law was on that roof cleaning graphite at the chernobyl powerplant as a liquidator. He was the last of his group to be still alive. He died 4 years ago from radiation related sicknesses.His last few months on this world, he lived as a greenhouse plant. He stayed there longer as he should have been, but he didn't want other young guys to go up there as well. It is still a miracle he survived that many years after all this.
What radiation related sickness? There's only cancer that could kill someone after so many years (and it wouldn't be obvious if it's connected with the radiation you've been exposed to)
Is your 2nd head agreeing with that statement too? Just joking, your father saved the whole Europe, you can be proud of him. Chernobyl cleaners are legendary .
Imagine people who died from Chernobyl having a chat with Fukushima 50 about their struggles and their last moments on heaven. Louis Stoin just sat in the corner for not having great moment like that
Trick with Chernobyl is that it had no containment building, so when the reactor went supercritical, that radiation went out into the world, where Fukushima's stayed mostly contained. Still, neither is any kind of picnic.
@@Highbrowser Fukushima was not contained. It released massive amounts of radioactive cesium 137 into the northern hemisphere, and continues to pollute the Pacific ocean. I suggest you educate yourself; Dr Helen Caldicott Nuclear Physicist. She worked on those GE reactors in Japan.
I'm no nuclear expert. But It all depends on the half life of the fuel. Both reactors are based on technology that made the atomic bombs. Chernobyl was uranium mix while Fukushima is probably mox. Mox has plutonium and depleted uranium. The plutonium is probably responsible for higher radiation reading. But fear mongering isn't good, if public puts more pressure, those doing the cleanup might make mistakes when speeding up cleanup. As long as containment is maintained. Fukushima most difficult struggle is getting the corium out of the core. But chernobyl corium is already everywhere, and the crumbling sarcophagus is a hazard. BTW if you see Fukushima underwater reactor drone videos, those rust looking streaks aren't just corrosion. They are possible microbe colonies that can survive in radioactive conditions.
@13:33 One of the control room workers managed to survive. They made their way up to the main control room after coming across their dead colleagues on the way to be greeted by an enormous hole in the wall and a huge dose of radiation.
I know that this video is 2 years old already but I had to say this. The Chernobyl tragedy could have been a far bigger problem than it is at the moment if not for the three men who volunteered for a very dangerous dive under molten uranium rods. Under this molten mass was a cooling tank of water that, when encountered with molten uranium mass, would melt and then spread this radioactive water into underground rivers and then around the world. But then, the three descended in pitch darkness into the water, with only flashlight that stopped working halfway to the goal to open the floodgates and drain the water before the tragedy took on an international scale. And they succeeded. They received a huge dose of radiation, as they were right under, in fact radioactive lava. They were all buried in metal coffins, who were radiating radiation from bodies inside. Even though, radioactive fumes were scattered by the wind to all places near Chernobyl.
Thank you for pointing it out, I almost didn’t realize, happy that they implemented this as respect for those who died and will die from it (probably as a form of respect)
Friendly Flamer thought it was the artificial Ghost Reaper? It was supposed to be a Carolina reaper/ Ghost Pepper mix, but it later got dropped and they stopped working on it. The testers said the effects were so potent it effected them for a couple days/weeks
Fusey you don’t get it the tho joke was the spiciest thing in the world was babushkas chili but van kessel did not get the joke and the wooosh was the sound of the joke flying over his head.
Those people who cleaned up Chernobyl must have known that they wouldn’t live long after but they did it anyway for the people they loved and for our planet! Eternal Respect!
Those people were in the army, Soviet Army. I don't imagine they had a choice. Rather were like "do it and die slowly, or don't do it an die right now, as a Mama Russia traitor with a bullet in head". Anyway, they were HEROES.
The authorities did equip the workers with lead vests and gloves and limited their exposure time to a very short duration of minutes on top of the plant. This clearly indicated to everyone how dangerous the task was.
Sieverts are a unit used to measure how much radiation a square foot of living tissue would take it per hour, roentgens are used to measure amounts of ionizing radiation around us
wrong. sieverts is full body dose adjusted for the damage to cellular structures each kind of radiation causes. you have to take that and adjust it further to get average depth, each organ or tissue susceptibility, medical treatment methods, energy levels of each type.... its not simple.
Jason Vyzer chernobyl was caused by old equipment and unsafe procedures fukushima was caused by a natural disaster cheap reliable energy is safe, unless some stupid shit goes down.
@@cheemsdog7662 what you said is absolutely true,although we can't dismiss the human factor.like in chernobyl most of the factory workers probably did their jobs correctly,it wasn't just old equipment but mostly greedy bussinesmen that ignored safety precautions when building the reactors,just to finish before a deadline. so what i'm saying is cheap reliable energy is safe,not unless but when something goes wrong
That's because it IS a great idea... ideally. When dealing with anything that *could* have the potential be dangerous someone is inevitably going to screw up and cause a incident.
even if we go to mars HUMANS will be there, without us humans earth would be way more safer than it is now, if we went to mars. It would be stupid, first of all there isn’t enough water, food, and oxygen to last us. And even if we found a way to get there safely it would just repeat, we would kill mars like we are doing to earth.
@@idontevennoticewhenithurts8300 well thats humans realistically Its like if we dont support the rest, then let em die then, 7 billion people is becoming hard to sustain
Something interesting about the Chernobyl roof cleaners is that the robots which were West German made, were made to endure low radioactivity as the Soviet government gave them a propaganda low estimates of the toxicity of the reactor fuel.
@@veljkovidanovic4204 Bad design of the RBMK reactors & Anatoli Diatlov are the only "others mistakes" of that suicide... Chernobyl is not to me an accident in any way, it's a real suicide, Anatoli was perfectly aware of the facts an RBMK reactor is totally unstable running at very low power level. The AZ-5 emergency was a joke too, 20 seconds to lower the control rods into the core is catastrophic. In the nuclear power plant were I'm working, our control rods are down the core in only 0.5 seconds thanks to gravity ! ;-)
@@MrToonfish The real "mistake" was the whole Soviet system. People like Dyatlov (whose role in the accident might actually be exaggerated somewhat) and the RBMK design were products of this system. Some of the big factors that played a role here were: 1. Systemic distrust towards anyone outside the party elite: "Here are the instructions - it's everything you need to know. Follow them and don't ask any questions! Unless you wan't to learn how cold siberian winters are...". 2. Pathological secrecy: even the known flaws of the reactor design - there were "incidents" previously that could give some clues about its safety (or lack of it) - weren't discussed much or disclosed (even to the operators). There were no "peer reviews" or independent analyses. In the soviet system there was no place for doubt or uncertainty. If the state said it was good, you'd better go along with it. 3. The blind belief in superiority of the soviet system in every way: "Soviet reactors don't malfunction! They're the safest designs imaginable! Only western reactors have flaws (because they're made for profit)." Putting all the blame on Dyatlov (and Fomin) was another typically soviet thing: it was the individuals who made errors, not the system. The masses (and the soviet state by extension) were always right.
MrToonfish on the bad design of the reactors/suicide idea, do you know of any resources I can read about that? I’m not doubting your claims, I just really like researching nuclear disasters lol
Albert Stevens is that irl supervillain with that past of getting injected with 64 sieverts dose of plutonium and surviving. Then people starts calling him "Radioactive Man" and then fights the Justice League.
Dear Mr. SLAV, You have always been such an inspiration to me and I don’t want to bother you too much so I just want to say keep up the good vids and keep doing what you are doing! By the way nice intro. I like how you made it dramatic!
Fun fact: The most radiation seveirts a human being ever had was 17,000 sv which is more than 10x then lethal limit, Hisashi Ouchi, the person that experienced this suffered 80 days in his death bed fighting for his life. His death was causes by an ignorance in safety measures in a power plant. Safety First
I think you mean 17 sieverts? That's also not the most siverts ever taken, surprisingly. That award would go to Robert Peabody, who took ONE HUNDRED in 1964.
鋼鉄の神 I think it might have been because they are not allowed to do that and because they needed to keep studying him. I’m not sure on this though, so I may be wrong. If I am, I would greatly appreciate some correction
@@erikmatos3422 What kind of monster can let someone live through agonizing pain just to study him ? Beside, I sure hope in the future doctors will be allowed to end the suffering of ARS patients. I think it's a huge argument in favor of euthanasia. Let the men die, they're doomed anyway.
@PixelatedGal Well, unfortunately, Slotin received a bigger dose of radiation. While Ouchi received "only" 12 Sv if my memory is correct, Slotin received 21. He died within 9 days, which is, by ARS standards, pretty fast. Ouchi, however, died within 3 months. So there's no discussion about who received the more radiation. Remember we're disscussing about how much radiation people received, not who had the more gruesome death. Because, if it was, Ouchi would "win" for sure. God I feel terrible writing with sentence. ARS is probably by far the worst way to go and i can't believe people actually let people go through this for 3 month even though they knew they were doomed.
caring for people in extreme pain, like when the body rots away from exposure, is difficult, but you cannot just quit. rotating staff can introduce some psychopaths that i would personally love to strangle, because they cause pain and suffering during care on purpose, but overall decreases the ER shock.
“If you feel the need to have a CT scan, just know that it is quite radioactive” Was laughing so hard at how inane that sounded that I started wheezing
Nuclear energy is one of the most impressive things discovered ever with a high potential of helping the humanity, yet we are still not prepared for its chaos it may do if an accident occurs.
6:53 It's "TICKLING THE DRAGON'S TAIL", not tale. It's referring to his way of handling the demon's core with only screwdriver, which is very dangerous. He's been doing it for several times, that's why he's so confident despite his colleagues warnings that he'll die if he continues doing that.
ya, if your doctor wants to do a CT scan, don't pretend you know more than him and refuse. he is aware of the risks and thinks it is necessary. Don't be an fool.
The Chernobyl accident was not explained very well in this video, so I'll try my hand at it. On the morning of April 26, 1986, the newest reactor (Reactor #4) of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station was to undergo a test. This test was conducted to see if the steam turbine could be kept spinning long enough for the backup generators to reach full power, in case of a reactor shutdown. This test was attempted several times before, each of which had failed. On the morning of April 26, the test was to be attempted again by the morning staff who had just been rotated. The test itself was meant to take place on the day before the accident, but was delayed due to a separate power station's unexpected shutdown. As the crew prepared for the test, the current on-duty reactor supervisor began to make impromptu changes from the test's intended starting protocol. The reactor's power output was accidentally too low for too long, causing a "xenon pit" , also known as reactor poisoning, where the reactor is producing xenon-135 (a byproduct of uranium fission, which absorbs neutrons) at such a rate (without the power of the reactor itself ordinarily burning the xenon away) that it essentially stalls the reactor. The intended procedure for dealing with xenon-135 is to simply wait an extended period of time, until the xenon is cleared from the reactor. However, instead of calling off the test and following reactor poisoning procedure, the supervisor ordered the reactor controllers to raise almost all of the control rods of the reactor in an attempt to raise the power output. The reactor reached a power of 200 MW, while the intended procedure for the test was 700 MW. The supervisor ordered extra water pumps to be activated (according to procedure), which increased the flow rate, and thus the coolant temperature. This also decreased reactor power slightly. The test began. The reactor, now at a very low power level, in a xenon pit, with too much water, and with almost no control rods, was in the absolute worst condition that a reactor of its type could possibly be in. The cooling water in the reactor was now boiling, creating steam bubbles, where neutrons could heat and boil more water, which made more steam. This positive feedback loop of steam voids was the fatal flaw of Chernobyl. The power output saw a sudden, massive increase. Reacting to this, the crew pressed the scram button, which enabled all the control rods to lower at once. The control rods, however, were made of graphite, which, in the scenario the reactor was currently in, actually accelerated nuclear fission. This sudden increase in fission, and thus heat, immediately flashed all the remaining water in the reactor into steam. The pressure of the steam continued building until the lid of the reactor literally popped out of place. The graphite in the control rods caught fire, and air rushed into the now exposed reactor core. This created a second, much more violent explosion, releasing hot and irradiated graphite chunks from the control rods, uranium-235, uranium-238, and miscellaneous byproducts of uranium fission into the air and all over the roof and grounds around the power station.
The three divers: 1 of them died because of heart attack in 2005 and 2 of them was reported to be alive in 2015, and was still working in the nuclear industry
Actually most of the background radiation (around 50%) we receive is from radon gas that mainly comes from stones like granite. Also sieverts measure any radiation, it’s not exclusive to dangerous radiation (because any type of radiation is dangerous at a high amount).
First one who will guess which movie inspired me to make the intro, will get my future merch store slav shirt :p (Clue: monsters)
amzn.to/2zXiFbX
well im first respond but idk
Early squad!!! But idk
Godzilla?
@@Yasser-mf9nb you fast.. Is there a way I can contact you privately?
@@MRSLAV yes of course
There are three types of men:
-cowards
-brave
-Chernobyl cleaners
Watch nuclear submarine accidents. It’s very interesting.
that's some facts you're spitting out there
Mr slav himself calls them brave
@@vghdiddy r/whoooooosh
The Chernobyl cleaners are no men, they re legends
The people who cleaned up Chernobyl saved so many people
I actually got the feels on that part
@Brennan Russell they survived
They were delusional. There was nothing to clean up!
After that they partied with vodka and listened to sum chiki briki
Are you delusional or what
I give huge respects to the people who risked their life for chernobyl
@@masteroogway5649Tbh if I was there I would have done it just so I can experience high levels of radiation
Not to take anything away from them cause they are heroes, but if people think they had any choice in soviet union you are really misinformed. Its either go and be a hero or you will go along with your wife, child and rest of the family at gun point.
@@whataweirdo2441 Then why didn't everyone else offered at once? Why those 3 people offered first? They cared the most
For what? It was only 3.6 roentgens, I'm told it's the equivalent of a chest X-ray.
They practically saved the world
13:17 Fun fact: The camera actually isn't glitching, it is radiation particles
Really?
@@wunpis9541 yup isnt that insane
i've read somehwere that it's called gamma interference
I don’t see the glitching
@@Eltralor set video quality to 1080p or higher and you will see it
R.I.P To the men who risked their lives for all of ours.
Dylan Elder yes RIP
F
@NoobPlayZ 245 More the guys who had to drain the water from the tanks to prevent a thermonuclear explosion.
@@Dreadpirateflappy
1. That would have been a steam explosion, not a thermonuclear one (most certainly causing a much greater radioactive contamination of Europe)
2. Well 2 of the 3 are still alive so R.I.P does not sound appropriate. They received a medal a year ago for their bravery. The 3rd died in 2005 of heart failure.
@@rviktor25 It wouldn't just be a steam explosion though as it would contain a lot of radioactive material.
Me: Is the Xray safe?
Doctor: Yes, Harmless.
Also the doctor: Proceeds to stay 2 miles away from me*
xD
xD
There was a case in mexico
They bought milk from ireland but they didn't know that milk was radiactive
This happend in the same year at the chernobyl catastrope
I don't know how many persons get sick
"Hey why are you leaving the room to take an x-ray?"
Mullo Ka Baap You need money in this shit capitalist society
"But where this radiation come from? "
Bananas.
The radiation is come from Bananius.
Robird Einstone
Lel
Yes
Thats a minion's answer
Is everyone replying to your comment 7?
I worked at a diagnostic imaging center for 6 years. I enjoyed this content but I don’t think you should scare people away from CTs and MRIs. You wouldn’t believe how many young, healthy people have cancer and find out too late because they were misinformed about radiation. Radiology techs are required to wear badges and record their monthly exposure levels. They have done this for decades and are perfectly healthy. Please be responsible with your audience. Thank you :)
Especially when a CT scan potential dose is less then eating a banana. Who here have eaten more than 1000 bananas in their lifetime? Then you have recieved a dose of 1000*0.1 microsievert. And you are still alive.
MRI scans dont use radiation
@K F ???
@@kf8575 they use electromagnetic radiation
@@kf8575 *ionizing radiation
“Space is dangerous”
The understatement of the decade.
I don't think there's a way to describe space tbh. My head hurts thinking about how infinite space is...
"Space is dangerous" duh
@@unnecessary111 ur pr9file name is derogatory🙄🙄
How about now with an asteroid coming towards us?
@@madarauchiha683 dude i cannot look at any comment thread without an insult.
6:15 to show you the power of Flex Seal, we found a Radioactive Lake, and poured tons of Flex Seal to cover the lake. After a day on the lake, I have been exposed to radiation, and I am going to die. But now, thanks to the power of Flex Seal, this lake is completely dry.
100 Lives Sasha Rosa 🤣🤣🤣
That is a really good one but it is almost like flex tape just way better
waht
Just don’t...
What the hell is flex seal?
“Louis slotin died of death”
Hmm yes
The floor here is made out of floor
Floor gang
Man killed to death
A guy named John was born when his mother gave birth to him
Sammie Isn’t Real Rasputin hmmm
Yeah this is big brain time
This house seems to be made from house, how strange.
Chernobyl is one of my favorite thing to learn and read about. It's both fascinating and sad. It's a pity that it happened, and it probably saved us from future incidents but I can't stop thinking about all the innocent lives that got lost due to a human mistake... May all of them rest in peace and may we all learn from that mistake to avoid ever going through this again.
🙏
it was more than a human mistake. it was caused by humans
That aint happening, human beings are pathetic and stupid after all. Theres no telling when we humans are gonna do the same mistake again.
Same
I just think it’s crazy that we have the potential to make a large part of the earth unlivable for thousands of years
My father in law was on that roof cleaning graphite at the chernobyl powerplant as a liquidator. He was the last of his group to be still alive. He died 4 years ago from radiation related sicknesses.His last few months on this world, he lived as a greenhouse plant. He stayed there longer as he should have been, but he didn't want other young guys to go up there as well. It is still a miracle he survived that many years after all this.
What radiation related sickness? There's only cancer that could kill someone after so many years (and it wouldn't be obvious if it's connected with the radiation you've been exposed to)
Your father was a brave man, I’m sure. I’m sorry for your loss, and I wish you well
Just know I respect your father in law with every bit of my heart.
Is your 2nd head agreeing with that statement too?
Just joking, your father saved the whole Europe, you can be proud of him. Chernobyl cleaners are legendary .
What a chad
CT scan
Straight to
SOLAR STORM
IKR that escalated quickly
same
@@jimmer828 Theyre not even gonna mention a banana?
@@syringistic that does have small amounts as well as microwaves
@@syringistic bro is CT scan that dangerous😢😢
My mom when she sees me get sick after watching this video
“Its that damn phone”
even me lol
Me: doing nothing
Mom: It's the damn phone
my mom is a karen who watches shit tok
Benjamin eyen Dominguez blanco ban her from existence
*breathes*
Mom: It's the damn phone
"still not as radioactive as my cooking"
same bro, same.
me to
Same
"Most radioactive things"
*gets ad about Chernobyl*
Same happened
Do you mean Chernobyl?
@@wesleynijboer9656 i dont really care how it's spelled
@@cookie1465 ok but i think a would help you a bit
@@wesleynijboer9656 nah, but i appreciate it man.
Our earth gets wrecked by radiation from space
Humans: we could wreck it from inside as well
THE SUN IS A DEADLY LAZER...
Not anymore there's a blanket!
@@Eye5x5 yes i did read that in the same tone as that video lol
@@Eye5x5 lol
Fact about Chernobyl: Chernobyl will likely be safe in 20,000 years
eg g 30,000 I think
@@idontevennoticewhenithurts8300 no he is correct
joeyland forever oh alright I saw somewhere it was 30,000 my bad
@@idontevennoticewhenithurts8300 nah it's ok we all get information from incorrect sites
joeyland forever it was my dumbass history teacher lmao
“Space is dangerous”
Hmm, yes, and death is fatal
Bruh chill
@@donmatteonero3701 bruh stop being a snowflake and take a joke.
@@Bedic-Mag lol
Lmao
Yes, it seems to be that the floor is made of floor
Imagine people who died from Chernobyl having a chat with Fukushima 50 about their struggles and their last moments on heaven. Louis Stoin just sat in the corner for not having great moment like that
I think Chernobyl was more radioactive when exploded, but Fukushima happened 8 years ago, and Chernobyl 33 years ago.
Trick with Chernobyl is that it had no containment building, so when the reactor went supercritical, that radiation went out into the world, where Fukushima's stayed mostly contained. Still, neither is any kind of picnic.
@@Highbrowser Fukushima was not contained. It released massive amounts of radioactive cesium 137 into the northern hemisphere, and continues to pollute the Pacific ocean. I suggest you educate yourself; Dr Helen Caldicott Nuclear Physicist. She worked on those GE reactors in Japan.
@@4g63gen1 Well Fukushima was regulated a lot more the Chernobyl ever was, also Chernobyl was preventable, Fukushima wasn't
@@Prof_Unknown Yes it was if it was built with the thought that a 4m tsunami was something that would happen, but sadly that wasn't the case.
I'm no nuclear expert. But It all depends on the half life of the fuel. Both reactors are based on technology that made the atomic bombs. Chernobyl was uranium mix while Fukushima is probably mox. Mox has plutonium and depleted uranium. The plutonium is probably responsible for higher radiation reading.
But fear mongering isn't good, if public puts more pressure, those doing the cleanup might make mistakes when speeding up cleanup. As long as containment is maintained.
Fukushima most difficult struggle is getting the corium out of the core. But chernobyl corium is already everywhere, and the crumbling sarcophagus is a hazard.
BTW if you see Fukushima underwater reactor drone videos, those rust looking streaks aren't just corrosion. They are possible microbe colonies that can survive in radioactive conditions.
Instead of 64 sieverts just say a stack of sieverts
Minecraft will take over one day 😈
Xx Dyblyat xX I h0w0pe so
@@brodster7042 and the weebs eventually
Xx Dyblyat xX furries say OwO too
Yeah TwT i have a weeb girl so i do know this
*"Does anyone else taste metal?"*
I understood that reference
Haha radiation sickness go brrrrrrrrrrrrrr
Haha cell dna go *_crunch_*
Haha nuclear meltdown go boom
Have you eat human meat before? It taste like metal
I'm joking lol
"How did he die?"
"Terrible agonizing death."
"Yes, but how?"
"Terrible, agonizing."
He died terribly and agonisingly
bruh, radiation poisoning and blisters that literally tear apart skin & internal organs
By ionizing the human cells
He melted
Crow_056 radiation? Ffs did you not watch the video?
10/10 intro
No
10000000000/10
I just said the same thing. Nice!!!
11/10 outro
No
100000000000000000/10 intro
3.6/3.6 not great not terrible
Respect to Chernobyl Liquidators and miners. We owe them so much.
Dont forget the guys that swam UNDERNEATH the melted reactor to release the stuck valve.
They were delusional..
@@deebow6486 meaning?
@@annepatton8727 ua-cam.com/video/ocBVLMHK6c8/v-deo.html
@@annepatton8727 2:10 and you know what I mean. Nothing ever happened at Chernobyl...
Those Chernobyl cleanup people were the real heroes of our lifetimes. Much respect. 🙏
They’re called liquidators
@@haody3494 does that destroy the fact that they kinda saved lives?
@@victorthecommentator408 no? why did u even think that
@@gjkdshgkjshjkgdfg wait i think they deleted a comment im not sure why i would randomly say that
Wow, I’d rate this vid 3.6/3.6.
Not great not terrible.
"It's not 3.6 roentgens, it's 15000"
YOU DIDN'T SEE GRAPHITE, BECAUSE IT"S NOT THERE!
@@ChaseThePinballWizard fricken BET site zulu has a FUSION REACTOR AND THAT DOES NOT EXPLODE
Elaxenator Gaemz clearly you are delusional take this man to the infirmary
@@Prof_Unknown Ruben Sim
Honorable mention: UA-cam's comments section
Oof
!?
True tho
Just Some Guy without a Mustache they aren't radioactive they're just really toxic
Toxic*
@13:33 One of the control room workers managed to survive. They made their way up to the main control room after coming across their dead colleagues on the way to be greeted by an enormous hole in the wall and a huge dose of radiation.
I know that this video is 2 years old already but I had to say this.
The Chernobyl tragedy could have been a far bigger problem than it is at the moment if not for the three men who volunteered for a very dangerous dive under molten uranium rods.
Under this molten mass was a cooling tank of water that, when encountered with molten uranium mass, would melt and then spread this radioactive water into underground rivers and then around the world. But then, the three descended in pitch darkness into the water, with only flashlight that stopped working halfway to the goal to open the floodgates and drain the water before the tragedy took on an international scale. And they succeeded. They received a huge dose of radiation, as they were right under, in fact radioactive lava.
They were all buried in metal coffins, who were radiating radiation from bodies inside.
Even though, radioactive fumes were scattered by the wind to all places near Chernobyl.
Yuvchenko saved thousands from one of the worst tragedies in history and then went home to have dinner with his wife. Those three were true heroes
Everything about your story is true. Except, they did in fact in fact live. Two of them are still alive today.
I thought they are survived the task.
love how he changed the song when Chernobyl appear. Respect for those heros
Thank you for pointing it out, I almost didn’t realize, happy that they implemented this as respect for those who died and will die from it (probably as a form of respect)
Well this dude has a 1 minute long intro.
*That’s dedication.*
You didn't watch the video did you?
@@Eye5x5 you dont actually main keqing do you?
most bizarre is that 3 of the workers in the controlroom of chernobyl survived, 1 of them i think died years later because of an heart attack
yea they lowered the control rods manualy and directly looked at the reactor core to prevent it form exploding more, Hats off t them
The background music gave my spine chills while watching all those. This was just a 20 minute video but I took more than half an hour to complete it
Top spiciest things ever
Use Scoville scale
Good idea. By the way I enjoy your vids, keep up the good work.
The spiciest thing ever is babushka’s chilli.
Friendly Flamer thought it was the artificial Ghost Reaper? It was supposed to be a Carolina reaper/ Ghost Pepper mix, but it later got dropped and they stopped working on it. The testers said the effects were so potent it effected them for a couple days/weeks
van Kessel r/woooosh
Fusey you don’t get it the tho joke was the spiciest thing in the world was babushkas chili but van kessel did not get the joke and the wooosh was the sound of the joke flying over his head.
still not as radioactive as imagine dragons
👏
Good one bro
u know everything
imagine dragon these nuts across your face
Baddum ptsss
Your channel is so underrated
Like your comment😂
@@aljazprijatelj2434 Do i see a fellow slovenian guy
@@davidmarinko7061 yasss
Lilpump 69 oh yeah yeah
quit screwing around, denton.
Those people who cleaned up Chernobyl must have known that they wouldn’t live long after but they did it anyway for the people they loved and for our planet! Eternal Respect!
Those people were in the army, Soviet Army. I don't imagine they had a choice. Rather were like "do it and die slowly, or don't do it an die right now, as a Mama Russia traitor with a bullet in head". Anyway, they were HEROES.
Sad part is many probably had no idea of up to how much dangerous of a task it was
The authorities did equip the workers with lead vests and gloves and limited their exposure time to a very short duration of minutes on top of the plant. This clearly indicated to everyone how dangerous the task was.
First
MR SLAV last
no u
DAMN SLAV
U r 7th
Oh well I thought I was second
says sieverts is a unit that measures radiation
*shows roentgens*
M4v3r1K 15000 roentgens
@@ayelmao2876 it was actually belived to be around 30000 not 15, the series got a lot of stuff wrong
Sieverts are a unit used to measure how much radiation a square foot of living tissue would take it per hour, roentgens are used to measure amounts of ionizing radiation around us
wrong. sieverts is full body dose adjusted for the damage to cellular structures each kind of radiation causes. you have to take that and adjust it further to get average depth, each organ or tissue susceptibility, medical treatment methods, energy levels of each type.... its not simple.
mav Because you didn’t see sieverts.
"Cheap reliable energy" -- it always sounds like a great idea until something goes wrong.
Jason Vyzer chernobyl was caused by old equipment and unsafe procedures
fukushima was caused by a natural disaster
cheap reliable energy is safe, unless some stupid shit goes down.
@@cheemsdog7662 what you said is absolutely true,although we can't dismiss the human factor.like in chernobyl most of the factory workers probably did their jobs correctly,it wasn't just old equipment but mostly greedy bussinesmen that ignored safety precautions when building the reactors,just to finish before a deadline.
so what i'm saying is cheap reliable energy is safe,not unless but when something goes wrong
Now Kids what did we learnind today.... Use that old trusty nuclear Power plant providing Energy and heat for over 4,5 Mrd. Years without failure.
Jason Vyzer, it's all fun and games until somebody causes an excursuin. Theres always 1 in every group. *SIGHS*
That's because it IS a great idea... ideally. When dealing with anything that *could* have the potential be dangerous someone is inevitably going to screw up and cause a incident.
i love the fact that everytime in the end he puts a funny comment like "still not as radioactive as my cooking" "still not as heavy than my mom"
Yaaay 😄 Thanks For Reading My Comment!😘😘
Most Dangerous Experiments Next. Like 6:43
@@Capade :D
Mine comment too.
Pretty much people asked for these theme
@@СтранныйЧеловек-ш7э You Just Stole From me Dude!
@@forknayt9282 Lol, I didn't.
6:42 plays a video with sodium bicarbonate and vinegar experiment
the title: back in the day scientists were doing crazy experiments
well, know we know why do our chemestry teachers say us that
I mean anything overly dangerous could get demonitized am i right??
"Earth is Dangerous Place".
Me: then why I'm living here?
Nowhere else to go
@@hamper6511 I'm sure we need to Mars
@@coffeeseriez much worse
even if we go to mars HUMANS will be there, without us humans earth would be way more safer than it is now, if we went to mars. It would be stupid, first of all there isn’t enough water, food, and oxygen to last us. And even if we found a way to get there safely it would just repeat, we would kill mars like we are doing to earth.
@@idontevennoticewhenithurts8300 well thats humans realistically
Its like if we dont support the rest, then let em die then, 7 billion people is becoming hard to sustain
"Sieverts unit measures the level of dangerous radiation."
* Shows Roentgens *
Edit: Note that this was a joke.
Guys did you know that one of the brave man was my grandpa brother? I am a bit still sad that i never saw him );
Vannapoiss GT Ahhb thats sad but u will die knowing u had a heroe that saved all europe and the world ;)
Rest in peace.
Are you Estonian?
I am & i know two people who helped there on chernobyl, they are my dad friends & they still alive.
@@stormy9144 Jah ma eestlane
@@AndreasAndu651 okei
Me: mods the microwave to see if I can pop popcorn outside of it
My skin: melts
That's gonna leave a mark
Hotel: Trivago
relatable
"F" to pay respects for Chernobyl people that saved so many lives
E
Official RayBiniC hOW dARe yoU, but seriously F
F
F
F
I almost cried how brave the men were who cleaned Chernobyl
8:21 he was an hero to save his friends ;-;
He was also the idiot who put others in danger in first place.
you said the bad word
A hero*
Possibly even from a nuclear explosion. If that plutonium reached critical mass well... kapoot
an?
6:36 The Demon Core was intended to be the 3rd bomb against Japan.
Most painful things ever endured using pain level scale
coyote Peterson better be on there
No. 1- kicked in the nuts.
SURGICAL SNIPEŔ lol no doubt #1
Step on lego should be on the list.
Lol
SURGICAL SNIPEŔ no 1: having a big ballsack so the torture guy lays it on a table and smacks it with a hammer
Something interesting about the Chernobyl roof cleaners is that the robots which were West German made, were made to endure low radioactivity as the Soviet government gave them a propaganda low estimates of the toxicity of the reactor fuel.
I watched this video in a refridgerator..
Just in case something explodes
WawaPlayer 😂😂😂
I know that's an Indiana Jones reference. 😂
That doesn't work anymore!
Old fridge have lead.
New ones plastic.
@@joseago7329 i have my 1940s GM fridge Holding my beers in my Basement...im ready
Hi billy where your parents?
(Fallout4)
3828 men were on the roof of the ChNPP #4 reaktor... Think about them each day, those guys are heroes.
MrToonfish respect they were cleaning shit from others mistakes
@@veljkovidanovic4204 Bad design of the RBMK reactors & Anatoli Diatlov are the only "others mistakes" of that suicide... Chernobyl is not to me an accident in any way, it's a real suicide, Anatoli was perfectly aware of the facts an RBMK reactor is totally unstable running at very low power level. The AZ-5 emergency was a joke too, 20 seconds to lower the control rods into the core is catastrophic. In the nuclear power plant were I'm working, our control rods are down the core in only 0.5 seconds thanks to gravity ! ;-)
@@MrToonfish modern time :D careful with cooler systems
@@MrToonfish The real "mistake" was the whole Soviet system. People like Dyatlov (whose role in the accident might actually be exaggerated somewhat) and the RBMK design were products of this system. Some of the big factors that played a role here were:
1. Systemic distrust towards anyone outside the party elite: "Here are the instructions - it's everything you need to know. Follow them and don't ask any questions! Unless you wan't to learn how cold siberian winters are...".
2. Pathological secrecy: even the known flaws of the reactor design - there were "incidents" previously that could give some clues about its safety (or lack of it) - weren't discussed much or disclosed (even to the operators). There were no "peer reviews" or independent analyses. In the soviet system there was no place for doubt or uncertainty. If the state said it was good, you'd better go along with it.
3. The blind belief in superiority of the soviet system in every way: "Soviet reactors don't malfunction! They're the safest designs imaginable! Only western reactors have flaws (because they're made for profit)."
Putting all the blame on Dyatlov (and Fomin) was another typically soviet thing: it was the individuals who made errors, not the system. The masses (and the soviet state by extension) were always right.
MrToonfish on the bad design of the reactors/suicide idea, do you know of any resources I can read about that? I’m not doubting your claims, I just really like researching nuclear disasters lol
3:43 they have found out that Chernobyl fungi stops radioactivity and it might be used for space travel
"If you were sitting for one hour at the shore of the lake, you would get a lethal dose of radiation in 1 hour"
If you were sitting IN the lake for an hour, you would get a lethal dose in 30 minutes.
Salute to those liquidators (the brave men) of chernobyl india salutes you,i salute you.
Gursheesh Singh but do you y’all still poop in the streets and create a fuckton of plastic pollution?
Cheeseburger with bacon
Ben Meyer yes ben 10 those are called washrooms and toilets.
Reckless Rex bacon with cheeseburger.
This reply section is radioactive...
Albert Stevens is that irl supervillain with that past of getting injected with 64 sieverts dose of plutonium and surviving. Then people starts calling him "Radioactive Man" and then fights the Justice League.
Dear Mr. SLAV, You have always been such an inspiration to me and I don’t want to bother you too much so I just want to say keep up the good vids and keep doing what you are doing! By the way nice intro. I like how you made it dramatic!
"always"
@@loganjames2433 LMAO
Yeah! He heard us! He made video about it! :D
DoubleTanker23 well good thing you didn’t correct him or that would’ve been rude
DoubleTanker23 yeah that would be really fucking rude
Странный Человек yesss
His grammar isnt that bad, there are native English speakers with worse.
Anyone who uses the word "finna" come to mind instantly.
took me 2 years to find this video again, and 2 years to realize the radiation ticking sound in this video is also used in STALKER series..
love it
I wonder how he managed to find all epic songs and video clips in every of his video
Slavtastic video comrade!
Your videos are the best
Yes, please
Fun fact: The most radiation seveirts a human being ever had was 17,000 sv which is more than 10x then lethal limit, Hisashi Ouchi, the person that experienced this suffered 80 days in his death bed fighting for his life. His death was causes by an ignorance in safety measures in a power plant.
Safety First
Was surprised to see he wasn't mentioned
I think you mean 17 sieverts? That's also not the most siverts ever taken, surprisingly. That award would go to Robert Peabody, who took ONE HUNDRED in 1964.
@eddiewprems5205 Peabody was exposed to 100 sv. Ouchi was exposed to 17 sv.
correction 17000 mSV. or 17 SV . in its 17000sv hishashi will just disappear instantly
You mean microsieverts
"Still not as radioactive as my cooking" I laughed so hard! That line got me to subscribe alone! Lol
Was surprised the accident of Hisashi Ouchi wasn’t on here
When I read that he had survived 83 days, I wondered why they wouldn't let him die? He even said he wanted to die.
鋼鉄の神 I think it might have been because they are not allowed to do that and because they needed to keep studying him. I’m not sure on this though, so I may be wrong. If I am, I would greatly appreciate some correction
@@erikmatos3422 What kind of monster can let someone live through agonizing pain just to study him ? Beside, I sure hope in the future doctors will be allowed to end the suffering of ARS patients. I think it's a huge argument in favor of euthanasia. Let the men die, they're doomed anyway.
@PixelatedGal Well, unfortunately, Slotin received a bigger dose of radiation. While Ouchi received "only" 12 Sv if my memory is correct, Slotin received 21. He died within 9 days, which is, by ARS standards, pretty fast. Ouchi, however, died within 3 months. So there's no discussion about who received the more radiation. Remember we're disscussing about how much radiation people received, not who had the more gruesome death. Because, if it was, Ouchi would "win" for sure. God I feel terrible writing with sentence. ARS is probably by far the worst way to go and i can't believe people actually let people go through this for 3 month even though they knew they were doomed.
caring for people in extreme pain, like when the body rots away from exposure, is difficult, but you cannot just quit. rotating staff can introduce some psychopaths that i would personally love to strangle, because they cause pain and suffering during care on purpose, but overall decreases the ER shock.
Most Radioactive Things Ever...
Boys toilet in my school
Fact
Best comment on UA-cam
☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️☢️
Lol
Oh, same. I never go to the toilet at school because they are so... radioactive. ☢️
Everybody gangsta til they find out bananas have a little bit of radiation In them
This EERIE background music
emits more Radiation than the universe.
YESYES
i thought a ct scan was a counter-terrorist scan
pinche de benejo
Hahaha xD
counter strike intensifies
Doctor: "Sir what is that thing at your belt?" Guy in the CT: " Uuuuh, it is a surprise tool that will help me later."
LMAO
“If you feel the need to have a CT scan, just know that it is quite radioactive” Was laughing so hard at how inane that sounded that I started wheezing
that intro was a masterpiece. really enjoyed it
"Not as radioactive as my cooking"
Well that's nice
My boyfriends farts are so radioactive they can kill in a second lol but I thought the Elephants foot at Chernobyl would be more radioactive ☢️
wh
at
th
e
fu
I felt incredibly nervous just watching those old atomic bomb videos
Mike Erickson you some type of pussy or something?
May be you lost your life back in that birth.
@@MikeMike-dv7iv how is he? Atomic bombs are the most powerful weapons every created by humanity you better be scared of atom bombs
Ryan Hopf because it’s a video
Ryan Hopf They are so powerful, nobody wants to use them in war.
That was the best Doco on the subject . Bloody brillant . Well put together . Cheers Mr Slav
Nuclear energy is one of the most impressive things discovered ever with a high potential of helping the humanity, yet we are still not prepared for its chaos it may do if an accident occurs.
6:53 It's "TICKLING THE DRAGON'S TAIL", not tale. It's referring to his way of handling the demon's core with only screwdriver, which is very dangerous. He's been doing it for several times, that's why he's so confident despite his colleagues warnings that he'll die if he continues doing that.
4:13 why did i hear the marvel theme song
Idk?
What is the theme song at that time anyway
Because it literally is?
Lol me too
i did too...
when MrSlav said "stars are pretty powerful" i knew that its gonna be destructive
The most radioactive thing: the song “Radioactive”
Haha radioactive go brrrrrrrrrrr
I love that song.
What group made that song again?
@@jaffil4026 Imagine Dragons
@@aimemari imagine dragon deez nuts across your face
3.6 roentgens? Not great, not terrible.
Chernobyl? Second episode?
If yes i watched it yesterday
@@grummanf14tomcat40 i am at episode 3, 1 and 2 are good let's see what is next
It's not that bad, I've seen worse
@@MinefighterLP so many memes from This mini Serie =)))
I think the most toxic thing in the universe is
*Fortnite Tryhards*
Wrong video bro
You are incredibly late
Yeah
I mean, your on the right track, no offense.
I agree. Addiction is baaad
ya, if your doctor wants to do a CT scan, don't pretend you know more than him and refuse. he is aware of the risks and thinks it is necessary. Don't be an fool.
Like the doctors injecting plutonium into people without telling them just to see how much radiation the could take before dying? Yeah, right.
@@PerritoGG Professionals have standards
The medicine and human rights are a thing in the XXI century
@@mduardo Tell that to the chinese.
"Don't be an fool" an? Or are u a fool?
@@PerritoGG wow
The most radioactive thing is a radio thats active
Prob more radioactive then 2000 billion nukes
*Yeah, this is big brain time*
Chernobyl was just 3.6 roentgen. Not great not terrible
Probably need to check again with the good meter from the safe...
Good meter broke
another faulty meter!
He is delusional take him to infirmary
Someone watched HBO (me too)
When you so early the quality is 360p
144p**
1880p***
Just Jokin its 360p
If I come in the morning the quality is 720p now it's 9:48 so I have to see at 360p
*t h a t s y o u r i n t e r n e t*
Sorry
The Chernobyl accident was not explained very well in this video, so I'll try my hand at it.
On the morning of April 26, 1986, the newest reactor (Reactor #4) of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station was to undergo a test. This test was conducted to see if the steam turbine could be kept spinning long enough for the backup generators to reach full power, in case of a reactor shutdown. This test was attempted several times before, each of which had failed.
On the morning of April 26, the test was to be attempted again by the morning staff who had just been rotated. The test itself was meant to take place on the day before the accident, but was delayed due to a separate power station's unexpected shutdown.
As the crew prepared for the test, the current on-duty reactor supervisor began to make impromptu changes from the test's intended starting protocol. The reactor's power output was accidentally too low for too long, causing a "xenon pit" , also known as reactor poisoning, where the reactor is producing xenon-135 (a byproduct of uranium fission, which absorbs neutrons) at such a rate (without the power of the reactor itself ordinarily burning the xenon away) that it essentially stalls the reactor. The intended procedure for dealing with xenon-135 is to simply wait an extended period of time, until the xenon is cleared from the reactor.
However, instead of calling off the test and following reactor poisoning procedure, the supervisor ordered the reactor controllers to raise almost all of the control rods of the reactor in an attempt to raise the power output. The reactor reached a power of 200 MW, while the intended procedure for the test was 700 MW. The supervisor ordered extra water pumps to be activated (according to procedure), which increased the flow rate, and thus the coolant temperature. This also decreased reactor power slightly.
The test began. The reactor, now at a very low power level, in a xenon pit, with too much water, and with almost no control rods, was in the absolute worst condition that a reactor of its type could possibly be in. The cooling water in the reactor was now boiling, creating steam bubbles, where neutrons could heat and boil more water, which made more steam. This positive feedback loop of steam voids was the fatal flaw of Chernobyl.
The power output saw a sudden, massive increase. Reacting to this, the crew pressed the scram button, which enabled all the control rods to lower at once. The control rods, however, were made of graphite, which, in the scenario the reactor was currently in, actually accelerated nuclear fission.
This sudden increase in fission, and thus heat, immediately flashed all the remaining water in the reactor into steam. The pressure of the steam continued building until the lid of the reactor literally popped out of place. The graphite in the control rods caught fire, and air rushed into the now exposed reactor core. This created a second, much more violent explosion, releasing hot and irradiated graphite chunks from the control rods, uranium-235, uranium-238, and miscellaneous byproducts of uranium fission into the air and all over the roof and grounds around the power station.
14:27 No actually most of the men on the roof are still alive today, and 2 of the three divers are also alive today.
The three divers: 1 of them died because of heart attack in 2005 and 2 of them was reported to be alive in 2015, and was still working in the nuclear industry
Before it starts let me guese
Elephants foot In Chernobyl
Nope sorry man it was, i forgot actually
Nah bruv space will always be at the top of all these lists
Most toxic place on earth?
Easy...
CSGO.
BIG CHUNGUS best comment posted by the best chungus
2:30
Me watching this video is the dark:
MY EYES
my toilet after taco bell is the most radioactive thing ever
You deserve at least 2 million subs
If he does he might get it in the future
1mPRO GMG he will get it
life of boris owns this channel i thino
his main channel has 2mil subs
Actually most of the background radiation (around 50%) we receive is from radon gas that mainly comes from stones like granite.
Also sieverts measure any radiation, it’s not exclusive to dangerous radiation (because any type of radiation is dangerous at a high amount).
@RenZ Edits huh