United Nuclear 263
goombah99 writes "Hey Mr. Science, need a rocket pack for your bicycle? Look no further than United Nuclear scientific supply where under their dangerous products category you can purchase your own radioactive uranium ore, as well as a two million volt generator if you need one. Or what mad scientist can do without his own particle accelerator (which they advertise can mutate DNA in seed, explore the atom, or simply transmute elements)"
on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:5, Funny)
This is 2 to 15 times the radiation level as our "High Radiation Level" samples.
Do Not store these samples on your person, and wash your hands after handling them.
Yeah, if I'm touching uranium that they label as being "Super High Radiation Level" I'm thinking I may want more than a "hand-washing".
Mike
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:5, Funny)
You can hold plutonium metal in your hand [cosmos-club.org] and you can even eat uranium metal with minimal harm. [theodoregray.com]
Wow, huh?
Even though these samples may be very radioactive, most likely, the handwashing as they say is all you would really need. They're the experts, they deal with it. Trust them.
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:3, Informative)
From their text:
Health risks:
In the former German Democratic Republic, thousands of miners were working with Uranium ore. Twenty years earlier they died than the rest of the people, by average.
See health hazards [antenna.nl].
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:5, Funny)
They should have washed their hands more.
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
That would probably be because they were breathing the crap. If I recall correctly, the GDR was the eastern portion of Germany, so safety precautions probably weren't the greatest, and miners have a way of kicking of early anyway. Alpha particles(the most common product of natural uranium decay) are generally stopped by the skin, and in fac
What the experts say (Score:2)
He said, "you can always tell the heavy metal chemists, they wash their hands before and after, urinating".
There are somethings you don't want contaminated!
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
Any physicists here care to comment on what the difference is? I thought uranium emitted alphas too? Is the parent
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:4, Informative)
Saying a kilogram of plutonium in a water supply could kill thousands of people is like saying the water in the oceans could kill every person on earth. Technically, it's true, if you divided it up into nice doses and deposited it specifically in the body where it could do the most harm, you'd kill a bunch of people, but that's not going to happen just by drinking the stuff.
Chemically, plutonium follows pathways similar to calcium. If you ingest it in a readily absorbable form, it can wind up in the bone marrow, and there it can do bad things. But most forms aren't readily absorbable; divide it finely enough to dissolve in water, and you're going to end up with plutonium oxide, which isn't readily absorbable and won't stay around in the body too long. There were accidents during the Manhattan Project of workers inhaling significant quantities of plutonium, and their death rates by lung cancer weren't any different from the norm. It's a very bad idea to ingest plutonium, but that's probably due more to its heavy metal toxicity than to its radiological hazards.
The water in the oceans could kill far more people than a bomb would, also, if you split it into handy 2-liter doses and crammed it into everyone's lungs.
It's not only an alpha emitter, however. Plutonium undergoes significant spontaneous fission, and depending on the fission mode can spit out betas, gammas, or neutrons depending on its whims.
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
Nope.
but plutonium is a quite different matter.
No, it's really not. If you take plutonium into your GI tract, only about
Breathing in 5,000
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
James
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:4, Informative)
People that claim that depleted uranium caused their illnesses are mistaken. The cancer rate among people exposed to depleted uranium is the same as that of the population. Any appearence of depleted uranium-caused illnesses is an illusion, just like the Gulf War syndrome. (Studies show that the symptoms of Gulf War syndrome are just as common among people who were not in the Gulf War.)
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:3, Informative)
Just saying I beleived what he said and the other reports they showed on the program.
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:4, Insightful)
Uranium facts (Score:5, Informative)
Some highlights
Of the uranium that is absorbed into the blood, approximately 70% will be filtered by the kidney and excreted in the urine within 24 hours; this amount increases to 90% within a few days.
In a number of studies on uranium miners, an increased risk of lung cancer was demonstrated, but this has been attributed to exposure from radon decay products. Lung tissue damage is possible leading to a risk of lung cancer that increases with increasing radiation dose. However, because DU is only weakly radioactive, very large amounts of dust (on the order of grams) would have to be inhaled for the additional risk of lung cancer to be detectable in an exposed group. Risks for other radiation-induced cancers, including leukaemia, are considered to be very much lower than for lung cancer.
Due to its high density, about twice that of lead, the main civilian uses of DU include counterweights in aircraft, radiation shields in medical radiation therapy machines and containers for the transport of radioactive materials. The military uses DU for defensive armour plate.
Erythema (superficial inflammation of the skin) or other effects on the skin are unlikely to occur even if DU is held against the skin for long periods (weeks).
Funny domain name (Score:2)
Mercy hosting... hahahahha. Wonder if they have had this happen before...
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:3, Informative)
Doug Rokke has a PhD in health physics and was originally trained as a forensic scientist. When the Gulf War started, he was assigned to prepare soldiers to respond to nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare, and sent to the Gulf. What he experienced has made him a passionate voice for peace, traveling the country to speak out. The following interview was conducted by the director of the Traprock Peace Center, Sunny Miller, supplemented with questions from YES! editors....
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:4, Informative)
Depleted uranium has a half-life of 4.5 billion years. You're more radioactive than an equivalent mass of DU, because of the carbon-14 and other trace radioisotopes in your body.
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with DU is that it vapourizes on impact and the dust goes off into the environment. It goes off and gets into everything. And the effects of DU on the people it hits are pretty atrocious; they call them "crispy critters [homelinux.org]" (a pretty t
Paranoia (Score:4, Insightful)
You have any credible evidence that they do? All I've heard from is "Mother Jones" and Greenpeace types combined with studies that make the cell-phone/cancer research look rock-solid.
Are they the ones that say you can hide from an H-Bomb by crouching under your school desk?
Nobody ever said that was a good idea, but it was the only option in a freaking classroom, eh? Besides, I bet it wasn't the poor guy running this web site, regardless.
YOU trust them.
And YOU adjust your tinfoil hat. The world isn't a conspiracy. Who is "them," in this context, anyway?
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:4, Informative)
Who would you trust? How about The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists [thebulletin.org]?
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
See, everyone loves to bring this up but no one stops to think about it. "Duck and cover" was never supposed to protect you from radiation. No one ever thought that you could "hide" from an H-bomb. People knew that radiation would penetrate most things, and that the only useful place to be that was potentially safe was deep underground. And, in fact, if your school had a fallout shelter, you went
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:5, Funny)
Uh, I thought that was the point? I know what you mean, though, it just seems kind of funny:
Scientist 1: Today we're testing to see if there are harmful effects from depleted uranium weapons
Scientist 2: Righto. Commence with experiment.
(Scientist 2 activates 30mm chaingun with depleted uranium shells to deliver DU to test subject)
Scientist 2: Uh...harmful effects?
(Scientist 1 inspects test subject)
Scientist 1: Hmm, hard to say. Maybe on that bit over there?
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
one question (Score:2)
Does that count as part of my person?
Re:on second thought, pass the lead gloves please. (Score:2)
important safety tip! (Score:5, Funny)
If you get more than one, don't cross the streams. It would be
Cats and dogs living together
Re:important safety tip! (Score:4, Funny)
What do you mean, "bad?"
Re:important safety tip! (Score:4, Funny)
Total protonic reversal.
Re:important safety tip! (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks Egon.
Re:important safety tip! (Score:3, Funny)
Ray: Total protonic reversal....
Potential Advertisement (Score:3, Funny)
Happy Fun Rock (Score:5, Funny)
Do not taunt happy fun rock. If happy fun rock starts getting hot, turn and walk calmly but quickly towards the nearest bomb shelter...
Re:Happy Fun Rock (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks prof!
Re:Happy Fun Rock (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Happy Fun Rock (Score:2)
Re:Happy Fun Rock (Score:2, Funny)
In his first radiation lecture he would pull the sucker out of storage for his coffee that day. He'd bring out the geiger counter and explain how it worked etc. and start writing stuff on the board while it ticked away background radiation. Then he'd casually take a sip from his mug and then set it back down next to the geiger counter, which proceeded to go mad.
Re:Happy Fun Rock (Score:2)
There's your cultural difference.
Kinda (Score:2)
Oh no, now you've done it! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Oh no, now you've done it! (Score:2)
Disappointing... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm surprisingly disappointed given that I had no idea I wanted a piece of pitchblende. But they made it sound so enticing, and then I discover they're out...
A cheaper alternative (Score:3, Informative)
You can almost certainly get anything United Nuclear carries cheaper at Archie McPhee [mcphee.com].
Re:A cheaper alternative (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A cheaper alternative (Score:2)
Sheesh, it was a joke! Archie McPhee sells, like, X-ray specs and weird googly-eyed dolls and rubber alligators. Sheesh again. I'll shut up now.
60 MPH on his Schwinn!? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:60 MPH on his Schwinn!? (Score:2)
I remember having that model of Schwinn when I was a kid. Nice bike- I sure as hell wouldn't want to be going 60 on it.
eh, a little fast but typical. (Score:2)
Just what the radioactive Boy Scout needs.... (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.dangerouslaboratories.org/ra
PayPal (Score:2, Funny)
Re:PayPal (Score:2)
Damn you people! (Score:2, Informative)
Not again! (Score:3, Insightful)
Christ!
Re:Not again! (Score:2)
If one simply copied the entry verbatim, that would be lame. If one looked up the site and wrote one's own blurb, then one wrote one's own material.
Will Scott Evil Shop There? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Will Scott Evil Shop There? (Score:3, Informative)
Just wait till they put a big red 'R' on it! (Score:4, Funny)
I think I heard the sound of a million ricer jaws dropping.
Re:Just wait till they put a big red 'R' on it! (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the webserver doesn't seem to be as fast as those cars on the site.... of course, it's still faster than the ricer cars I see everywhere.
neurostarNews Flash! (Score:3, Funny)
The military believe that they plan to build a nuclear warhead. George W Bush has asked for the slashdot.org terrorist communication and control center to be destroyed immediately. It is believed that Cmdr Taco is the mastermind of this attack.
More news as we get it...
Re:News Flash! (Score:2, Funny)
Almost looked like it might succeed a few days ago.
New favourite store (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot Works For US Government - Stopping Terror (Score:5, Funny)
Rumsfield: Hey CMDR Taco, there's this website we need to take down that sells nuclear supplies. We think that terrorists might be using them to build weapons of mass destruction.
Taco: No problem, i'll have a slashdot story posted immediateley. It should stop the website dead in it's tracks until we can permanently shut them down.
Rumsfield: Excellent, thank you for protecting our country.
Re:Slashdot Works For US Government - Stopping Ter (Score:3, Funny)
If they can't sell me . . . (Score:2)
No responsibility (Score:5, Funny)
I suppose a refund would be out of the question then.
Shipping? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Shipping? (Score:2)
So, um, yeah I think they deliver!
Are they hiring...? (Score:3, Interesting)
From the suspiciously cool
I gots to get me some of that.
Re:Are they hiring...? (Score:2)
Only 2 amps of power for my taillights? It's been a few years since had my EE classes, but from what I recall that's a helluva lot of current, so I sure hope my taillights use a lot less than 2 amps.
Re:Are they hiring...? (Score:2)
Re:Are they hiring...? (Score:2)
Re:Are they hiring...? (Score:2)
Oh great... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Oh great... (Score:3, Interesting)
Source [unitednuclear.com]. Of course, customers are expected to affirm that
Please confine your counter-revolutionary activities to non-federal states.
Invade Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
Rumsfield: What do you mean these slashdot terrorist have no oil?
CmdrTaco: They don't even have a country.
Rumsfield: Oh well that's just dandy! Now I got two excurisions I need to explain!
CmdrTaco: They have karma...
Rumsfield: "karma"? Is it worth anything?
Mad scientist necessity! (Score:2, Funny)
Hacker Dynamics (Score:2)
The irony (Score:2)
Server of Talc
Anyways, no way these guys can be for real. I think the editors need to get their BS detectors checked. While it is possible to sell refined uranium and uranium ores on the free market, it ain't easy, and it sure as hell doesn't use paypal.
Actually, they are. (Score:2, Informative)
Likewise, you' be surprised just how small an amount of uranium actually goes into making a full fledged nuclear weapon. Those "few flakes in a jiffy bag", would be fatal to a very, very large number of people if refined, and then mi
Suppliers like in "Science Made Stupid"? (Score:5, Funny)
I can't help but be reminded of some of the "supply stores" mentioned in "Science Made Stupid" [besse.at] as the places to get various dangerous things. U-235 rods from "Bud's Scientific Supply," anyone?
Footnote on page 25 (might not be in the web version linked above): "A fuller discussion of Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle may be found in the Appendix. Then again, it may not."
What irony... (Score:4, Funny)
Can I order an Interocitor? (Score:2)
mind while assembling. Use only genuine interocitor parts.
Anti-gravity rocket (Score:2)
On a side note, check out the lame-ass shifter and the headlight mounted on the bike. All I can say is that I sure hope the rocket worked, or that dude must have gotten beat up a lot.
Place an order (Score:3, Funny)
Plenty of Radioactive items... (Score:3, Informative)
All of those items are radioactive. In fact, the Orange Fiesta Wear is about 25,000-50,000 cpm of beta radiation.
Beta radiation cannot penetrate through your clothes. Alpha radiation cannot penetrate through the dead skin cells covering most of your body (but avoid getting it near your eyes). Gamma's will go through you no matter what, but unless they are in high doses they do little damage. As for neutrons, you should never have a reason to encounter a neutron source...but if you do, you are likely screwed.
NNPS - Class 9204!!
Re:Plenty of Radioactive items... (Score:4, Informative)
So that bunch of bananas sitting on your kitchen counter is bombarding you with about 130,000 beta particles each second. Natural uranium has an activity level of 0.7 pCi/g, so a kilogram of uranium sitting on your counter would be spitting 26,000 alphas at you in that time frame. And, of course, organic matter has a natural activity of 6 pCi/g due to carbon-14, so you yourself are releasing, oh, about 15 million disintegrations per second (3.7E10 disintegrations per second per curie * 1E-9 curies per picocurie * 6 pCi per gram * 70,000 grams per average adult male).
Just for comparison's sake.
Darwin's theory of natural selection beckons.... (Score:5, Funny)
History of the name "United Nuclear" (Score:2, Informative)
I think the original company is gone, and someone else has adopted their name.
The original company used to also own property in Uncasville, Connecticut. That property was later b
the sad, 'safe' future (Score:2)
The site got suspended?!? (Score:2)
Great job on the /.'ing guys... (Score:3, Funny)
Please contact the billing/support department as soon as possible.
Way to go, nothing like kicking a cool website off the web.
SealBeater
Boy Scout Who Built A Breeder Reactor In His Shed (Score:3, Interesting)
But if you want to read a really good (and factual) article about a boy scout who built a breeder reactor in his back yard out of radioactive paint and old smoke detectors check out the Harper's magazine story here. [findarticles.com]
It's a long article but a great read.
Terrorist Honeytoken? (Score:4, Interesting)
Just throw up some page on the web that says it sells unrefined uranium ore as a novelty or bulk amounts of chemicals used in making a conventional bomb or chemical weapon - no questions asked - and see who it is who's interested in buying these things.
If it we me, I'd create a site called ScienceSalvage.com. Sell a bunch of legit science junk, but then occasionally throw in that you just found a lot of powdered cyanide or an old cesium powered radiation treatment machine and see who's willing to shell out a fair chunk of change for something like that. If they eventually order you can just say sorry we already had another buyer and hadn't bothered to update the site. The next day white vans appear infront of the would be buyer's house.
Re:WMD? (Score:3, Funny)
Dont tell the British! (Score:2)
and dont try this at home if your home is in iraq.
Re:not bad... (Score:2)
working with radioactive material
Ah. That explains...
Re:Bush Administration (Score:2, Funny)
No, that goes by the name "United Nookyuler"
GOOGLE CACHE OF ROCKET BIKE PAGE HERE (Score:2)
dangerous products [216.239.57.104]