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Nuclear Energy

Discover the science of the cosmos harnessed on Earth. From the splitting of the atom to the burning of the stars.

Scroll to Ignite

The Power of Fission

Nuclear fission occurs when a heavy atomic nucleus, such as Uranium-235, absorbs a neutron. This makes the nucleus highly unstable, causing it to split into two smaller, lighter nuclei.

This split releases a massive amount of energy in the form of heat and radiation, along with more neutrons. These new neutrons can go on to split other nuclei, creating a controlled chain reaction.

High Energy Density

1 pellet of Uranium = 1 ton of coal.

Kr
Ba
U-235
The Science of Separation

Uranium Enrichment

Natural mined uranium contains two main isotopes: ~99.3% U-238 and only ~0.7% U-235. However, U-235 is the critical isotope needed to sustain a nuclear chain reaction.

Natural Uranium 0.7% U-235
Reactor Grade (Low-Enriched) ~5% U-235
Weapons Grade ~90% U-235

The Centrifuge Process

Most enrichment processes exploit the slight mass difference between U-235 and U-238. The uranium is converted into a gas (uranium hexafluoride) and fed into cylindrical centrifuges.

By spinning the gas at incredibly high speeds, the slightly heavier U-238 is pushed to the outer walls, while the lighter U-235 gathers near the center to be extracted.

The Work Curve The hardest part of enrichment is getting from 0.7% to 5%. Because so much of the unwanted U-238 is removed in this first step, once you reach 60% enrichment, achieving 90% weapons-grade requires very little additional effort.

Inside the Core

A nuclear reactor is essentially a highly sophisticated way to boil water. The fission process generates immense heat inside the reactor vessel.

  • Fuel Rods: Contain the Uranium pellets where fission occurs.
  • Control Rods: Made of materials like boron, they absorb neutrons. Lowering them slows the reaction; raising them speeds it up.
  • Coolant (Water): Absorbs the heat and transfers it to create steam, driving the turbine.
Historical Engineering

The Reactor Race

During the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union developed vastly different philosophies for commercial nuclear power.

Western Design (PWR/BWR)

Water Moderated & Cooled

The US focused on Light Water Reactors. Water acts as both the coolant and the moderator (the substance that slows down neutrons).

Inherent Safety Feature: If the reactor overheats and water boils away, there is no moderator left to slow neutrons. The chain reaction naturally stops. This is called a "negative void coefficient."
  • • Requires enriched Uranium.
  • • Housed in massive, reinforced concrete containment domes.

Soviet Design (RBMK)

Graphite Moderated

The USSR developed the RBMK reactor. It used water as a coolant, but solid graphite blocks as the moderator to slow neutrons.

The Engineering Trade-off: Because water wasn't needed to moderate neutrons, if water boiled away, the graphite kept the reaction going while cooling decreased. This dangerous "positive void coefficient" was a key factor in the Chernobyl accident.
  • • Could use cheaper, unenriched Uranium.
  • • Allowed refueling while running (useful for producing weapons-grade Plutonium).
Global Security

Modern Geopolitics & Iran

The intersection of nuclear enrichment capabilities and global security remains a highly volatile issue.

The JCPOA & IAEA

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) monitors global nuclear activity. The 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) set strict limits on Iran's nuclear enrichment to prevent the creation of nuclear weapons.

Currently, Iran claims its program is for peaceful purposes. However, they possess a sufficient amount of enriched uranium for those needs, leading the IAEA to express grave concerns over why Iran continues to enrich more uranium past the JCPOA limits.

Current Stockpile Concerns

Iran has accumulated 440 kg of uranium enriched to 60%. Because of the non-linear "work curve" of centrifuges, this is dangerously close to the 90% required to manufacture a nuclear weapon.

Prior to recent efforts by the US to neutralize their supply, Iran relocated much of its stockpile to Isfahan. Iran has since halted all cooperation with the IAEA. While recent strikes have damaged certain facilities, Iran's deep underground enrichment sites remain a major global concern.

The Holy Grail

Nuclear Fusion

Unlike fission which splits atoms, fusion merges light nuclei (like hydrogen isotopes) together to form a heavier nucleus. This is the exact process that powers the Sun.

100M °C

Clean Energy

No greenhouse gases. The only byproduct is inert helium.

Abundant Fuel

Isotopes can be sourced from seawater, lasting millions of years.

Inherently Safe

No risk of meltdown. If containment fails, the plasma simply cools and halts.

Atomic Timeline

Scroll horizontally to explore the evolution of nuclear technology.

1938

Discovery of Fission

German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann discover that bombarding uranium with neutrons splits the atom, verified theoretically by Lise Meitner.

1942

Chicago Pile-1

Enrico Fermi leads the team that creates the first artificial self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction under the stands of Stagg Field at the University of Chicago.

1951

First Nuclear Electricity

The Experimental Breeder Reactor I (EBR-I) in Idaho becomes the first nuclear reactor to generate electricity, lighting up four 200-watt lightbulbs.

1954

Obninsk Power Plant

The Soviet Union connects the AM-1 reactor to the electrical grid in Obninsk, becoming the world's first nuclear power plant to generate electricity for commercial use.

1957

Shippingport Opens

The first full-scale commercial pressurized water reactor (PWR) opens in Pennsylvania, heavily influencing global commercial reactor design.

2022

Fusion Ignition

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) achieves a historic milestone: a fusion reaction that produced more energy than was absorbed by the fuel to initiate it.

Early 2025

Diplomatic Tensions

A letter outlines a goal to dismantle Iranian enrichment facilities. During April's under-the-radar "Muscat and Rome talks" in Italy, Iran offers to slow enrichment, but the US demands a complete halt.

June 2025

Targeted Strikes

Israel conducts "Operation Rising Lion," a 12-day air raid campaign targeting nuclear sites. Shortly after, the US intervenes, striking Iranian nuclear sites directly for the first time. Iran officially suspends IAEA cooperation.

Late 2025

Sanctions & Epic Fury

The UN reapplies 2015 sanctions, contributing to an economic collapse in Iran by December. The US and Israel coordinate "Operation Epic Fury," a large-scale strike, though deep underground facilities remain a concern.