About Me

My photo
DINDIGUL, TAMIL NADU, India
Cool student . practical person luv 2 make friends ... I graduated BE in Electronics& Instrumentation . . Actually im an entertainment adict love to watch more movies again and again also love to hear songs .

Friday, August 12, 2011

Polar nuclear lighthouse

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 1

Russian Northern coast is a vast territory lays for a few thousand of miles and all this coastline is inside the Polar Circle. Long polar winters mean no daylight at all, just one day changes another without any sign of the Sun rising above the horizon. There is only polar night for 100 day a year.

But across this Northern coast there was always a short way for the cargo boats to travel from Eastern part of Russia to the Western. Now this trip can be made fairly easy with the appearance of all the satellite navigation equipment like GPS and others, but during the Soviet Era they had none of this.

So, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union decided to build a chain of lighthouses to guide ships finding their way in the dark polar night across uninhabited shores of the Soviet Russian Empire. So it has been done and a series of such lighthouses has been erected. They had to be fully autonomous, because they were situated hundreds and hundreds miles aways from any populated areas. After reviewing different ideas on how to make them work for a years without service and any external power supply, Soviet engineers decided to implement atomic energy to power up those structures. So, special lightweight small atomic reactors were produced in limited series to be delivered to the Polar Circle lands and to be installed on the lighthouses. Those small reactors could work in the independent mode for years and didn’t require any human interference, so it was very handy in the situation like this. It was a kind of robot-lighthouse which counted itself the time of the year and the length of the daylight, turned on its lights when it was needed and sent radio signals to near by ships to warn them on their journey. It all looks like ran out the sci-fi book pages, but so they were.

Then, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the unattended automatic lighthouses did it job for some time, but after some time they collapsed too. Mostly as a result of the hunt for the metals like copper and other stuff which were performed by the looters. They didn’t care or maybe even didn’t know the meaning of the “Radioactive Danger” sign and ignored them, breaking in and destroying the equipment. It sounds creepy but they broke into the reactors too causing all the structures to become radioactively polluted.

Those photos are from the trip to the one of such structures, the most close to the populated areas of the Russian far east. Now, there are signs “RADIOACTIVITY” written with big white letters on the approaching paths to the structure but they don’t stop the abandoned exotics lovers.

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 2

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 3

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 4

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 5

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 6

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 7

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 8

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 9

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 10

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 11

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 12

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 13

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 14

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 15

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 16

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 17

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 18

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 19

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 20

Russian Abandoned Nuclear Polar Lighthouse 21

No comments:

Post a Comment