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Why we need nuclear power : the environmental case /

"Makes a case for nuclear energy as a clean-energy solution."--

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Fox, Michael H. (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, USA, 2014.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • 1. Global Climate Change: Real or Myth?
  • What Is the Debate About?
  • The IPCC and International Conventions
  • The Greenhouse Effect
  • Skeptical Politicians and Pundits
  • Skeptical Scientists
  • Historical Temperature and Greenhouse Gas Record
  • The Last 10,000 Years of Climate: The Holocene
  • Recent Changes in Temperature and CO2
  • Melting Glaciers and Rising Seas
  • Models
  • Response to Singer and Avery
  • Predictions of Future Global Warming and Consequences
  • Sea Level and Acidification
  • Global Weirding
  • 2. Where Our Energy Comes From
  • A Brief History of Energy
  • Coal
  • Oil and Natural Gas
  • Uranium
  • How Much Energy Do We Use and Where Does It Come From?
  • World Energy Usage
  • What Can Be Done to Reduce Our Carbon-Intensive Energy Economy?
  • 3. The Good, Bad, and Ugly of Coal and Gas
  • Coal
  • Anatomy of a Coal-Fired Plant
  • Carbon Dioxide Emissions and Other Pollutants
  • Mining and Health Hazards
  • How Much Is There?
  • Carbon Capture and Storage
  • Natural Gas
  • How Much Is There?
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions
  • Fracking
  • 4. The Siren Song of Renewable Energy
  • Solar
  • Photovoltaic (PV) Solar Power
  • Concentrated Solar Power (CSP)
  • Solar Heating
  • Limitations of Solar Power
  • Wind
  • Limitations of Wind Power
  • Summary
  • 5. Back to the Future: Nuclear Power
  • Anatomy of a Reactor
  • Advantages of Nuclear Power
  • Baseload Power
  • Greenhouse Gas Emission
  • Location and Footprint
  • Cost
  • Subsidies for Nuclear and Renewables
  • Advanced Reactor Technology
  • Can Nuclear Replace Coal?
  • Arguments against Nuclear Power
  • 6. The World of the Atom
  • What Is Radiation?
  • Black Body Radiation: The Quantum
  • The Nuclear Atom
  • The Quantum Atom
  • The Nucleus
  • Radioactivity: Decay Processes
  • Fission
  • Summary
  • 7. How Dangerous Is Radiation?
  • Interactions of Radiation with Matter
  • Electromagnetic Radiation (Photon) Interactions
  • Charged Particle Interactions
  • Neutron Interactions
  • What Is a Dose of Radiation?
  • Effects of Radiation on DNA and Cells
  • How Does Radiation Cause Cancer?
  • What Are the Risks?
  • Death from Radiation
  • Cancer from Radiation
  • Hereditary Effects of Radiation
  • How Bad Is Plutonium?
  • Summary
  • 8. What Comes Naturally and Not So Naturally
  • Natural Background Radiation
  • Cosmic Radiation
  • Primordial Terrestrial Radiation
  • Medical Exposure
  • How Dangerous Is Background Radiation?
  • 9. Nuclear Waste
  • What Is Nuclear Waste?
  • The Long and the Short of Waste Storage
  • Yucca Mountain
  • Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP)
  • Recycling Spent Nuclear Fuel
  • Making New Fuel from Recycled "Waste"
  • Summary
  • 10. About Those Accidents
  • The Scare, March 16, 1979
  • Three Mile Island, March 28, 1979
  • How the Accident Happened
  • Consequences of TMI
  • Chernobyl, April 26, 1986
  • How the Accident Happened
  • The Hazardous Radioisotopes
  • Health Consequences
  • Environmental Consequences
  • A Trip to Chernobyl
  • Consequences for Nuclear Power
  • Fukushima, March 11, 2011
  • How the Accident Happened
  • Health and Environmental Consequences
  • Consequences for Nuclear Power
  • Public Perception of Risks from Nuclear Power
  • 11. The Quest for Uranium
  • Mining for Uranium
  • Shinkolobwe
  • Shiprock
  • Milling
  • In Situ Recovery
  • Enrichment
  • Fuel Fabrication
  • World Resources of Uranium
  • Megatons to Megawatts
  • Is There Enough Uranium for a Nuclear Renaissance?
  • Breeder Reactors
  • Thorium
  • Summary
  • 12. Now What?
  • Myth 1: Radiation Is Extremely Dangerous and We Don't Understand It
  • Myth 2: There Is No Solution to the Nuclear Waste Produced by Nuclear Power
  • Myth 3: Nuclear Power Is Unsafe and Nuclear Accidents Have Killed Hundreds of Thousands of People
  • Myth 4: Uranium Will Run Out Too Soon and Mining It Generates So Much Carbon Dioxide That It Loses Its Carbon-Free Advantage
  • Myth 5: Nuclear Power Is So Expensive It Can't Survive in the Marketplace
  • Afterword
  • Earth's Energy Balance
  • Radiative Forcing
  • The IPCC Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES)
  • Energy
  • Power
  • Powers of 10
  • Radioactivity.