Incredible drop ! I remember watching this while in grade school . Thank you Mr Guardia , as usual , nothing but diamonds on your channel .
@MM22966Ай бұрын
Boy, I hope nobody tries to invade through there and has his troops dig trenches in the REALLY radioactive soil! Oh dear.
@pimpinaintdeadhoАй бұрын
*HO-LY SHIT* I never thought I'd see that intro at the start again.
@Laj-t9kАй бұрын
Thanks for the upload. Great content.
@montevallomustangАй бұрын
The soviets were really masters of weaponized narration
@leoa4cАй бұрын
11:20 I know that this is a serious video about a serious topic, but take a look at that Soviet era, weapons grade hair bleach peroxide. It was probably concentrated enough to be used as T-Stoff oxidizer in an Me-163. Come to think of it, it probably was recycled hydrogen peroxide from old German T-Stoff supplies. You never know.
@claudettes9697Ай бұрын
20:26 ooo, this is nova right? This is a great episode. Great explanation.
@erikwigelandiestad2270Ай бұрын
Weee! Radioactive decay
@GlorifiedG-z9cАй бұрын
I haven't heard that intro music in a while
@leoa4cАй бұрын
The basic principle of the Chernobyl reactor is not dissimilar to the Windscale reactor in Great Britain, which also suffered an accident. The main difference is that, in Windscale, the graphite was fixed, whereas in Chernobyl, the graphite was movable by being part of the fuel rods. Windscale had the problem of having to deal with Wigner energy stored in the graphite. The Soviet graphite surrounding the fuel must have stored Wigner energy as well. I am not seeing how that would not be the case. It is possible that, during the test that destroyed reactor number 4, Wigner energy stored in the many graphite rods was suddenly and catastrophically released. This is a phenomenon which is never discussed in regards to Chernobyl, but I am convinced that it played a part in its destruction, to one extent or another.
@ronaldtartaglia4459Ай бұрын
"Volunteer miners" 😂😂
@montevallomustangАй бұрын
Volunteered 😂
@MikeGuardiaAuthorАй бұрын
Or as we used to say in the Army..."voluntold"
@hobbyjacksonАй бұрын
10/10
@RonGyver1337Ай бұрын
Giving him the photos and the t-shirt was a dick move.
@MavelDraconia16 күн бұрын
Really felt like that they mentally laughed at them for not knowing how to deal with nuclear energy-
@Voodoo-ef9jrАй бұрын
I'm gunnar get me some of them radioactive ☢️ catfish wooooooooo great video 🎉
@ronaldtartaglia4459Ай бұрын
Where did you find this??😄
@leoa4cАй бұрын
Probably recorded by someone in analog form, and then it was converted to digital. In the "old days", that's what people had to do. I recorded the first Matrix movie from a TV channel into a VHS tape as late as 2003. Pulp Fiction was also in VHS format, as well as some history and universe documentaries. There are all sorts of interesting things forgotten in basements across the globe. Some end up in the trash, sadly.
@bartomiejtudryk5649Ай бұрын
there were basically no casualties from chernobyl, except the first responders the whole panic was created by the same kind of people that brought us covid "pandemia"
@SerenityMae11Ай бұрын
Wow you're literally nuts
@GlorifiedG-z9cАй бұрын
Interesting and maybe the case. Check out Bald and Bankrupt, "The Last House In The Chernobyl Village".