question about bacteria in nuclear reactors
I am brand new to forums and this is the only one I've ever signed up for. I have a question so hopefully this is the correct place to ask: Where can I find proof that bacteria are growing inside nuclear reactors? I think it was David Wilcock who mentioned this. A friend who works at a reactor told me this: Bacteria growing in reactors? Not likely. The neutron fields are deadly to every living things (and affects a lot of other materials).
The neutrons and gamma fields are so intense that DNA gets ionized and messed up so badly that it can't reproduce. The water temperatures on the primary system are at about 350C as well. But, there are bacteria near the volcano vents on the bottom of the sea that survive temperatures in that range. There is the moderator system in CANDU reactors that stays at about 60C. This is inside the reactor also and has a lot of heavy water in it. But again the radiation fields are gruesome. Even the moderator water gives off gamma for a few seconds after it leaves the reactor. These fields are very high but short lived isotopes of oxygen and some other substance.
They use cobalt 60 to sterilize things since it gives off high gamma fields. But the fields in the reactor are higher.
Can anyone please point me to a site which actually verifies bacteria growing in reactors?
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