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Nuclear Energy

With commitments to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, anxiety about the cost and continued availability of hydrocarbon fuels, and the questionable adequacy of renewable alternatives, interest in nuclear power has revived in the United Kingdom. Groups opposed to it have understandably raised objections, some based on valid concerns, some on misunderstandings of the science and technology involved.

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In the belief that the essentials are comprehensible to almost anyone prepared to consider them, here is an account of the basic principles and of some particular aspects with which I have been professionally involved; also a position statement for the Sellafield Churches’ Forum of which I have been a member for the past five years.

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More technical information can be found in "The Nuclear Fuel Cycle" (Oxford University Press, 1996), probably easier to obtain from an on-line bookseller than from the actual publishers.  Owing to various difficulties several slips remained in the publication, and an errata sheet is given here.

Peter Wilson, Seascale, October 2008

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Factual Information

Basic principles

Radiation risks

Reprocessing

Thorium Fuels

Accelerator-driven systems

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Lectures given at a familiarisation course, November 2009

An Introduction to Nuclear Science and Technology

The Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds, UK, November 24-25, 2009

Three of the lectures on this course were given by Peter Wilson in the form of Powerpoint presentations available below.

Radioactivity and Fission

Reprocessing and Recycling

Advanced Issues (a personal perspective)

 

A Powerpoint viewer can be downloaded from here

 

Introduction to Nuclear Technology

Lectures originally given in 2001, updated in 2012. 

Placed on YouTube 2015 by Stephen Pilditch, National Nuclear Laboratory

Personal intro

Basics

Reactors

Fuel manufacture

Reprocessing & recycling

Advanced issues

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Opinion

Churches’ Forum

 

Other

Report on Anglo-Norwegian conference on technetium discharges from Sellafield, 22-23 April 2003

 

Notes on an environmental conference at Lancaster University, 3 November 2007

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