... launch, SPOT 1 was tasked with acquiring the first 10 m images after the explosion of Reactor 4 at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine. SPOT 1 demonstrated one of the main benefits of commercial remote sensing for intelligence missions: that...
... used for rocket propulsion and life support. It also contains helium-3, an isotope that might be used in future nuclear fusion reactors. Asteroids can likewise host an array of valuable materials. Some contain water, organic carbon and...
... would be impractical.This limits the options to either nuclear power sources, or high-performance fuel cells. Microbes ...been taken to protect the Earth from the release of nuclear material during launch accidents and these might be enough to...
... an eventuality is not as likely as Hollywood would have us believe, but it is not impossible. As the holders of the two largest nuclear arsenals, Russia and the United States have a particular responsibility, but they don’t seem to be ready for...
... has demonstrated that the release of so much energy would lead to catastrophic consequences for the planet, equivalent to a ‘nuclear winter’. The reliability of such modelling was verified in 1994 when pictures were received of the effect of the...
... end of their operational lives. The process, known collectively as ‘decommissioning’, is undertaken across the oil and gas, nuclear and even nascent wind-power generation industries. Each industry has its own particular decommissioning protocols...