Travel

Thursday, September 9, 2004

The night at Chernobyl

Here is a moving account of an engineer on duty at Chernobyl's reactor number 4 the night it exploded on 26 April, 1986. The link on the Title displays his interview with Discovery Channel for a documentary on Chernobyl, published in New Scientist.

"That was when I realised that Khodemchuk was definitely dead. The place where I was told he'd been standing was in ruins. The huge turbines were still standing, but everything around them was rubble. He must have been buried under that. From where I stood I could see a huge beam of projected light flooding up into infinity from the reactor. It was like a laser light, caused by the ionisation of the air. It was light-bluish, and it was very beautiful. I watched it for several seconds. If I'd stood there for just a few minutes I would probably have died on the spot because of gamma rays and neutrons and everything else that was spewing out. But Tregub yanked me around the corner to get me out the way. He was older and more experienced."

This is courtesy a blog I randomly came across on blogspot.

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