The turnaround began.”Įditors’ Note: This program and clip contain video recorded during the disaster, combined with footage filmed later. From there, finally the system was in order. … But on the 15th, we created the headquarters, and from the 16th we started to put water in. “Until then, we were pushed and pushed by an invisible enemy. “The SDF flying on the 16th and dropping water on the 17th was a turnaround,” Naoko Kan told FRONTLINE. Key Points On Monday, Georgia Power announced that the Vogtle nuclear reactor Unit 3 has started a nuclear reaction inside the nuclear reactor. While some subsequent water drop attempts failed because of the stiff winds, this moment was seen as a turning point in the week-long crisis by the Japanese government. “We could see the steam, so I knew it had gone in. In the excerpt above from our film Inside Japan’s Nuclear Meltdown above, Yamaoka describes what happened: an emotional pre-flight call with his wife his reaction to seeing the mangled plant from the sky and his feelings of victory post-flight: Yoshiyuki Yamaoka was the Self-Defense Force co-pilot on that first mission, one of the men zooming across the sky in the tiny dot. If it flew below 300 feet, it could expose the pilots to dangerous levels of radiation. Soviet pilots who’d performed a similar mission during the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986 subsequently died of cancer.įor protection, the helicopter was bolted with Tungsten plates to protect the pilots, who wore protective gear, from gamma rays. If the helicopter flew higher than 300 feet, it would risk missing its target. After several hydrogen explosions, pools of radioactive spent fuel were exposed to the atmosphere. If the pools boiled dry they could catch fire - and the resulting contamination could be even worse than a reactor meltdown. The mission, ordered by then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan, was a last-ditch effort to prevent yet another disaster. It was the seventh day of the unfolding disaster at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant last March. In fact, it was 2,000 gallons of water falling 300 feet against the wind. The helicopter, no bigger than a dot against the sky, releasing what resembled an exhale of breath on a cold day. You may have seen it on TV or online - a grainy video shot from 20 miles away. It airs tomorrow night check your local listings here. Watch a preview of our upcoming film Inside Japan’s Nuclear Meltdown, a rare inside look at what happened at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in the hours and days after the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
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