Most Radioactive Men Ever

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  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
  • ► MY HAT mrslavs-hideout.creator-sprin... 🌎 Get Exclusive NordVPN deal here ➡️ nordvpn.com/mrslav It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee!☝️
    These men have experienced insane radiation doses. But have you heard about them?
    Source:
    web.archive.org/web/202106151...
    --------------------
    ► Discord / discord
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    0:00 - intro
    0:11 - They are not the most radioactive
    2:54 - Louis Slotin
    4:56 - Aleksandr Lelechenko
    5:57 - Cecil Keley
    7:31 - Boris Korchilov
    9:23 - Vasilev
    11:05 - Robert Peabody
    #mrslav #radioactive #scary

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @MRSLAV
    @MRSLAV  Před rokem +477

    🌎 Get Exclusive NordVPN deal here ➡ nordvpn.com/mrslav It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee!☝

  • @mr.mysterious9605
    @mr.mysterious9605 Před rokem +5638

    top things humans should not see : blue flash in a nuclear powerplant

    • @yamiru3417
      @yamiru3417 Před rokem +252

      now imagine how radiated a super nova is

    • @kaspartambur
      @kaspartambur Před rokem +294

      To think - if you saw a blue flash... it's over. Crazy. Think of the psychological effects on the team. In a way - it makes you more serious, but at the same time - the stress must have life-lasting implications.

    • @yamiru3417
      @yamiru3417 Před rokem +74

      @@ProtiumPower i think its much worse then that lmao

    • @oneboredfool9578
      @oneboredfool9578 Před rokem +54

      @@yamiru3417 Basically it would take our planet and vaporize it.

    • @yamiru3417
      @yamiru3417 Před rokem +12

      @@oneboredfool9578 exact numbers? because thats common knowledge

  • @FarokhBulsara4065
    @FarokhBulsara4065 Před rokem +7962

    >Stopped other colleagues to enter the radioactive room
    >Went back and forth into the room himself 3 times
    >Prevented a big explosion that could make the disaster even worse
    >Took 25 Sieverts home and had dinner with lovely wife and called it a day
    >Went back to work the next day
    >Refused to elaborate and fucking died
    Aleksandr Lelechenko, the man, the myth, the legend.

    • @Darknitw
      @Darknitw Před rokem +678

      Bro, just imagining somebody that is that badass is just insane

    • @TheHoodAmbassador
      @TheHoodAmbassador Před rokem +255

      i wonder what happened to the wife lol

    • @anwarhazeke8099
      @anwarhazeke8099 Před rokem +92

      Damn he was a fxking madlad...respect..💯

    • @0suLover
      @0suLover Před rokem +234

      @@TheHoodAmbassador
      Dead, it's been like some decades so she prolly died of old age idk if smthg happened to her I doubt tho

    • @TheHoodAmbassador
      @TheHoodAmbassador Před rokem +139

      @@0suLover the wife prob died from radiation poisoning since her husband that was just probably in front of her across the table or maybe even beside her, and remember her husband got 25 sieverts of radiation and the amounts that were considered a "death penalty"/fatal amounts were 10, so yeah the wife prob died of radiation poisoning too

  • @suckersupreme4380
    @suckersupreme4380 Před rokem +1216

    Lelechenko deserves so much more recognition than he gets, he sacrificed himself to keep his coworkers - and a massive amount of Europe - as safe as they could be. As dark as it is, I’m glad he was able to have dinner with his wife.

    • @damikey18
      @damikey18 Před 3 měsíci +20

      Nearly all of Europe would have went bye bye if it wasn’t for those brave men

    • @trentdawg2832
      @trentdawg2832 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Sad story…..i sure hope his family was set for life considering what that man did for the people!!!

    • @defaultuser00000
      @defaultuser00000 Před 3 měsíci

      @@trentdawg2832im sure they were lmao its not like the russian government tried to pretend like nothing happened.

    • @jordanwardle11
      @jordanwardle11 Před měsícem +2

      @@trentdawg2832 its was chernobyl, they probably were threatened into staying quiet

  • @drinkyourtea
    @drinkyourtea Před 9 měsíci +625

    Hisashi Ouchi still had by far the most painful death I've EVER heard of it's truly horrifying what he went through.

    • @steelymanfan7276
      @steelymanfan7276 Před 9 měsíci +40

      That wasn't the point of the vid tbf, its just regarding their people who have taken more radiation. Not a competition for who suffered the most regarding radiation.

    • @DemonSliime
      @DemonSliime Před 5 měsíci +6

      My grandmother died peacefully in her sleep. Which is way more painful than a little acute radiation syndrome. All Hisashi needed was a bandaid.

    • @DemonSliime
      @DemonSliime Před 5 měsíci

      ⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠​⁠@@SMGJohn_SecondaryAren’t you that child that pretends to be part of a long defunct, failed communist secret police force on Quora…?
      The same kid that makes comments as stupid as “Is it only the Communists that can eliminate the drug traffickers and gangs in Mexico?”
      And
      “In what aspects was life better in the USSR than in current Russia?
      Ask yourself this, would you rather have free access to basic human rights, such as healthcare, education, housing, drinking water, necessities, transportation, safety even at night, a stable future, always a job and peace?
      Then my friend, you are a Socialist.”???
      Damn jealousy makes children say the darnedest things.
      There are no human rights under communism, as we have seen with every implementation of communism. Not to mention the healthcare and education??? LMAO. “Housing”? 😂😂😂 You ate up all that propaganda and washed it down misinformation. You live in a capitalist world and would have starved to death under the regimes you worship.
      Every communist state suffered until capitalism intervened to save their starving.
      Those jobs you pretend existed were just forced labor in exchange for shit you didn’t need.
      The healthcare you talk about, was literally some of the worst in the world, and every communist leader sent their family a way to get medical treatment in the United States. Weird.
      The education you pretend existed, was quite literally just force-feeding children propaganda that the rest of the world knows isn’t true. And every communist leader had their children, family, and military/gov’t officials sent to the west for education and training.
      The necessities you speak about just did not exist, and when they did, they were worse quality counterfeits of western technology, but were somehow *STILL* more expensive than the west.
      No one was ever safe. But women were especially vulnerable. Rape, sex crimes, and violence against women, along with blatant 19th century sexist ideals are grotesquely overly common under communist governments.
      “A STABLE FUTURE” has to be the most comical statement though. Like what? How is completely collapsing into non-existence every time is attempted considered “stable”?
      If you love communism so much but you want to experience it, then just stop eating until you starve, have somebody who is already extremely rich, come and take all your money and belongings, and then force you to work for nothing in exchange, then get someone to sexually assault every female in your family, and then be killed by a secret police force of terrorists because your neighbor got annoyed with you and reported you as a western sympathizer. And you will feel 1/1,000,000th the suffering of everyone who ever lived under the genocidal dictators you worship.
      Stop trying to be edgy on the internet kid. Your entire life revolves around capitalism. You wouldn’t survive communism.

    • @Titanium-Fury06
      @Titanium-Fury06 Před 5 měsíci +14

      @@SMGJohn_Secondary thats not nice to say :(

    • @thepurpleperson101
      @thepurpleperson101 Před 5 měsíci +49

      ​@@DemonSliimeif he put a band aid then chunks of his skin would come off after he would take off the band aid.

  • @sacriptex5870
    @sacriptex5870 Před rokem +3071

    a guy in Brazil took 12 sv and survived... died later of alcoholism

    • @gamerpopz9277
      @gamerpopz9277 Před rokem +1267

      Average Brazilian

    • @Dushmann_
      @Dushmann_ Před rokem +513

      The alcohol probably helped with the radiation a little bit actually.

    • @quan-uo5ws
      @quan-uo5ws Před rokem +296

      the alchohol probably saved him

    • @weilaiyvn
      @weilaiyvn Před rokem +118

      It's from that incident with Cesium in Goiás? Because in November this year they found another person in Goiás with radioactive core scrap medical stuff, before it was oppened.

    • @YoutuberBack
      @YoutuberBack Před rokem

      Not even radiation can kill a brazilian

  • @breezetix
    @breezetix Před rokem +1919

    the fact that Vasilev only got flashed by radiation for just a few ms (correction 0.2ms) and still received 60 sieverts, that's insane. radiation is scary

    • @harleyme3163
      @harleyme3163 Před rokem +39

      depends.. I went through a lot for brain tumour... the light display when ya close your eyes though... frigging cool

    • @breezetix
      @breezetix Před rokem +38

      @harleyme3163 I wonder what he saw exactly when he got flashed with radiation, in his eyes from those flashes of light. You heard of the astronaut flashes of light?

    • @Noooo23523
      @Noooo23523 Před rokem +56

      0.0002 miliseconds your eyes and brain dont see it fast enough probably

    • @axehead45
      @axehead45 Před rokem +68

      Radiation is angry energy and is fucking terrifying

    • @Noooo23523
      @Noooo23523 Před rokem +6

      @@axehead45 tru

  • @onbored9627
    @onbored9627 Před rokem +319

    It was the family's call to keep him alive. The second they finally agreed to sign a DNR the doctors stopped resuscitating him. The whole 'evil scientists expermient on ouchi' thing is kind of an urban legend.

    • @citizenspaghetti
      @citizenspaghetti Před 3 měsíci

      There was also a narrative saying that the guy "wanted" to stay alive so that he could be studied since the opportunity to evaluate a person exposed to such high levels of radiation is a rare chance. I'd believe the evil scientists nonsense long before I would believe this version lmao.

    • @Rombuss
      @Rombuss Před 2 měsíci +2

      I’m sure he also gave consent to the doctors as well

    • @thisdude9363
      @thisdude9363 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@RombussHe did not.

    • @AnAdorableWombat1
      @AnAdorableWombat1 Před 24 dny +3

      Thank you for saying this! His family made him suffer. Not the doctors

    • @lordchadthe69thofsussex72
      @lordchadthe69thofsussex72 Před 14 dny

      @@AnAdorableWombat1 the idea of the evil scientists and the selfish family isn't true

  • @RJ.the.artist
    @RJ.the.artist Před rokem +2406

    Problem is that Slotin brought his demise upon him self. He used a screwdriver instead of the spacers that were provided to ensure that full sealing was impossible. He played the game of f*ck around, and he found out.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před rokem +387

      The scientists themselves referred to it as "tickling the dragons tail" - they knew it was dangerous but machismo ran high among a certain segment of the science crew at the Manhattan Project and they felt compelled to do stupid shit.

    • @theALTF4
      @theALTF4 Před rokem

      play stupid games... win stupid prizes.
      play carelessly with a demon's hearth... die painfully because radiation effects

    • @blehh_mae
      @blehh_mae Před rokem +40

      he did it many times before and it was fine somehow

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před rokem +103

      @@blehh_mae He didn't butterfinger the component with the screwdriver in the earlier instances. As long as the screwdriver held the two components apart it was fine, once they touched - game over.

    • @Acheron666
      @Acheron666 Před rokem

      He liked to show off to students and other scientists.

  • @BuiHieuDong
    @BuiHieuDong Před rokem +7838

    These people are still not as toxic as the entire of the Twitter community.

  • @foggyj4474
    @foggyj4474 Před rokem +162

    The way he casually says “a nearby city, Moscow” shook me. A panic that large could destroy the capital in an instant, no wonder it was kept secret

  • @MONi_LALA
    @MONi_LALA Před rokem +261

    Correction: Ouchi was not kept alive by mad scientists. And his family didn't just tell them to revive him. There are many small hopes during Ouchi's stay that suggest he's getting better. The medical team did question themselves and the ethics of keeping this man alive, but they were just doing their jobs, which to try their best to keep him breathing. When they knew that the machine and drugs were the only thing keeping him alive, they immediately let the family know and suggested not to revive him when he went under again. The family complied with what the medical team suggested, both the decision of keeping him alive and letting him go was described to the family in detail. There are some videos that went into depth that there is no strong evidence of malice from the medical team or the family. It's just a rare events that nobody knows what the right answer was. So stop labeling them as selfish and mad scientists. His son is likely 28 years old. I felt bad for his son to hear that some internet ppl described his father's cruel death and his family accused as being selfish and the doctors that tried their hardest as being mad.

    • @defaultbrownie
      @defaultbrownie Před rokem

      Bruh u sound so selfish. Obviously he shouldve died as fast as possible because the radiation exposure was torturing his soul. The doctors and scientists were selfish playing God with him keeping him alive

    • @alt-rightguy3020
      @alt-rightguy3020 Před 8 měsíci

      Sciencists are usually inhumane with some freaking fetish for so called science and seing humans experiencing the worst

    • @HarvestStudios_38
      @HarvestStudios_38 Před 7 měsíci +21

      I'll be honest, I believed the "evil doctor" and "evil family" myths until the wendigoon video

    • @BruceCarbonLakeriver
      @BruceCarbonLakeriver Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@HarvestStudios_38The family insists on keeping him alive that's true. But after the second heart attack the leading doctor could get the family to accept her loss.

    • @arshiaaghaei
      @arshiaaghaei Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@HarvestStudios_38 Wendigoon's vid was the most detailed and thought of one

  • @coal_edxts
    @coal_edxts Před rokem +4532

    For people wondering, The blue flash is called the Cherenkov Radiation. It happens when ionized particles travel faster than light through a medium

  • @vasilediana9268
    @vasilediana9268 Před rokem +1206

    In regards to Ouchi's case, he was not kept alive for the sake of science, but because of the family's despair. Since euthanasia in Japan is pretty much prohibited, it was a huge possibility for the doctors and nurses to lose their jobs. That was until dr. Maekawa convinced the family to sign the DNR contract, in order to let Ouchi die.

    • @advithbhaviya5712
      @advithbhaviya5712 Před rokem +37

      He did say his family wanted him alive.

    • @robertotrevino9125
      @robertotrevino9125 Před rokem

      You are so wrong, that never happened, don't be a sensationalist moron and research better.

    • @mayTK
      @mayTK Před 10 měsíci +139

      @@advithbhaviya5712 yea but he did also say that he was kept alive for sake of science which was wrong.

    • @mrdojob
      @mrdojob Před 10 měsíci +72

      ​@@mayTKi heard he was kept alive but with good intentions. He had cutting edge medical treatment.

    • @--027
      @--027 Před 9 měsíci +72

      @@mrdojob he very much did have cutting edge treatment. Practically the best of Japan kept him alive for those 83 days, where towards the end, practically the entirety of his body was automated via modern medicine. Dialysis to clean his blood, chemicals to keep his heart pumping, and so many other interventions. At least for the time he was alive, he claimed to want to keep living for his family. I believe that he would've agreed to go through if he could speak through all of it.

  • @ElectricRose9001
    @ElectricRose9001 Před rokem +281

    I think the scariest part of Louis's story is that once everyone in the room realize what happened, they started to run out of the room, but he screamed at them all to come back as quickly as possible, and get back in place, because it was going to be the only way they were going to be able to calculate the amount of radiation everyone had just been subjected to.

    • @-danR
      @-danR Před rokem +31

      What _didn't_ happen was the supposed carelessness of Slotin, or the screwdriver 'slip'. Slotin did everything well; he only missed one thing: the effect of the changeable geometry of his thumb, by bending or insertion-depth, as a neutron reflector.
      This is one more video in the chain-reaction perpetuating the myth of the screwdriver.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Před rokem +20

      @@-danR explain what you are talking about. changeable geometry of his thumb ??????

    • @banani14
      @banani14 Před rokem +15

      @@-danR could you elaborate, please? What does changeable geometry of his thumb mean?

    • @Henning_S.
      @Henning_S. Před rokem +25

      ​@@banani14 it just means that you can move your thumb and bend it which changes it's geometry... i think it wasn't mentioned in the video that there was a hole in the top of the sphere to prevent this from happening, from what I've read, he did this a few times before and put his thumb in the hole to hold the sphere, but when the accident occurred he had his thumb deeper in the hole as usual or in a different position which changed the way the neutrons got reflected back into the sphere

    • @SpenzOT
      @SpenzOT Před rokem +3

      @@Henning_S. Truly a 'butterfly flapping its wings' moment. Chaos theory at its finest.

  • @JorgeForge
    @JorgeForge Před rokem +65

    It's hard to put those 100 Sv into perspective. The fact that Peobody didn't reach the shack after exposure means the radiation made a minced meat out of his cells.

  • @mayTK
    @mayTK Před 10 měsíci +201

    Ouchi's medical team wanted to let him go. But he was kept alive at family's wishes. Ouchi survived after 3CPR as there is no DNR record. His doctors let the family saw him every day to understand how serious it was. Ouchi by himself was asking whether he will get leukemia on Day1, not knowing how serious this situation is. After surviving CPR and skin sloughing off, the family finally signed DNR after many counselling. It is the family who could not let him go. They want him to live with every challenges and suffering he was facing. There is a documentary with his medical team in Japanese. You have to watch it first before u blame doctors. If there is no DNR documents, doctors must keep trying him alive till the last beat of his heart or else they would be at fault by not following health care proxy wishes and doctors can be legally sued and charged. So stop blaming doctors.

    • @numbersstationsarchive194
      @numbersstationsarchive194 Před 10 měsíci +44

      I'm so glad the myths and sensationalism surrounding Ouchi have finally started to be debunked. I knew of his story before it became common knowledge, and saw from the beginning how badly skewed it was for the sake of sensationalism. All of this can be traced back to a single poorly-researched pop-science article.

    • @alt-rightguy3020
      @alt-rightguy3020 Před 8 měsíci

      Not the First time doctors would put patient through serious pain and horror for fkin science. Yeah sciance rocks. Bunch of inhuman bullshit

    • @waxhead1228
      @waxhead1228 Před 2 měsíci

      yes, fuck the shit outtta Ouchi's family for wanting him to live. On a positive note, nice job trying to be a warrior and stick up for the doctors while doing the exact same thing you're trying to persuade others not to do and shitting on people who lost a loved one in the worst way possible.

    • @HerbeyStudies
      @HerbeyStudies Před měsícem

      Yeah from my knowledge, the idea of scientists using him as a ‘guinea pig’ likely was spun from the fact that they called in scientists all over the world to do their best to treat him. They were pulling all the stops, doing everything in their power to save him or at least make his pain lessen, they weren’t using him to test him like a goddamn lab rat, they were trying to figure out what happened to him for his and his family’s sake.

  • @ahwass4989
    @ahwass4989 Před rokem +531

    I can't imagine the conversation between Lelechenko and his wife the night after his exposure at Chernobyl. "Hi honey, today I took the equivalent of 250k X rays to the face"

    • @UltraNyan
      @UltraNyan Před rokem +93

      Wife: "LMAO fuck outa here"

    • @Punk_Hazard_
      @Punk_Hazard_ Před rokem +11

      💀

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 Před rokem +29

      In Soviet Union that is called monday...😅

    • @marykatereinagel8325
      @marykatereinagel8325 Před rokem +22

      Wife: “the food you’re eating right now is glowing blue, same with your fork.”
      Lelechenko: “Oh it’s fine just some radiation-“
      Wife: “Get the hell out.”

    • @mysteriumvitae5338
      @mysteriumvitae5338 Před rokem +15

      Wife: And what does it mean?
      Lelechenko: This means I now have a severe sunburn throughout the body, several blood diseases, AIDS and dysentery. I will have bloody diarrhea and agonising pains for another week or two before I die.

  • @trentplunk4409
    @trentplunk4409 Před rokem +1021

    These people would be great co-workers. They just radiate pure energy.

    • @miekewidjaja2954
      @miekewidjaja2954 Před rokem +29

      that was a good one

    • @megatrn9976
      @megatrn9976 Před rokem +23

      Typical old soviet mentality...

    • @williamfiore7545
      @williamfiore7545 Před rokem

      i get the joke but i think if you worked with them you'd probably be dead 💀

    • @harleyme3163
      @harleyme3163 Před rokem

      lol how bought light.. you know.. lasers ah but will it cut LOL

    • @nskaries
      @nskaries Před rokem +7

      That is a very insensitive comment and I am surprised to see so many likes on this comment.

  • @uhum1051
    @uhum1051 Před rokem +88

    Ouchi's story is so misunderstood. he was not kept alive for science and his family wasn't evil only once he said that he didn't want to stay alive, but he decided he wanted to do it for his family.

  • @TheBub26
    @TheBub26 Před rokem +87

    all the doctors and nurses treating Hisashi were traumatized and filled with guilt. almost 3 months of torture he endured. they even brought him back from a heart attack to endure a few weeks more

    • @maryfreebed9886
      @maryfreebed9886 Před rokem +20

      Nowadays what they would probably do is a 'slow code,' meaning that they go through the motions, but at such a deliberately slow and gentle pace that their efforts would not work. This satisfies the legal requirements they are under, spares the feelings of the loved ones, and does not additionally torment the soon-to-be-deceased. That is as it should be.

  • @ZombieSler123
    @ZombieSler123 Před rokem +534

    Bro, that last one didn't deserve it. He didn't know the label fell off and it was an honest mistake *that you can only make once.*

    • @ZombieSler123
      @ZombieSler123 Před rokem +15

      @@user-vv6kq3xr8k He didn't know it did, you might've done the same thing

    • @pronglebot
      @pronglebot Před rokem +1

      Actions have consequences

    • @cursedfetus8129
      @cursedfetus8129 Před rokem +123

      @@pronglebot that's.. not really how it works when it comes to accidents

    • @chalked9815
      @chalked9815 Před rokem

      I wouldn't say any of them deserved it - slotin was certainly a fool for becoming complacent with his experiments but I still wouldn't say he deserved his painful end.

    • @Gundplanatics00
      @Gundplanatics00 Před rokem

      @@cursedfetus8129 All actions have consequences

  • @ellusiv5121
    @ellusiv5121 Před rokem +727

    Ouchi is “most radioactive” in a sense that even if 17 sieverts is lower than any of the people in the video, he experienced those effects for 83 days instead of just dying.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +118

      One could say he was dying for 83 days

    • @advithbhaviya5712
      @advithbhaviya5712 Před rokem +44

      But still they had several times more radiation so he isn't really most radioactive, that's a wrong title to give him while there is was man who was more than 5 times more radioactive. And also much easier to keep someone alive with 17 sieverts of radiation as compared to 50 or 100.

    • @gpt-jcommentbot4759
      @gpt-jcommentbot4759 Před rokem

      @@advithbhaviya5712 You're still 100% dead even with 17 sieverts

    • @advithbhaviya5712
      @advithbhaviya5712 Před rokem +5

      @@gpt-jcommentbot4759 You didn't get my point

    • @gpt-jcommentbot4759
      @gpt-jcommentbot4759 Před rokem

      @@advithbhaviya5712 No I do but either way you are still dead

  • @jayailein
    @jayailein Před rokem +26

    As someone who sometimes has trouble hearing, I appreciate you taking the time to add in captions into your videos so I don't have to use the automatic captions (because the automatic captions are usually inaccurate)

  • @SalviAlmighty
    @SalviAlmighty Před 11 měsíci +16

    The K-19 incident gives me shivers.... It's so surreal to think "I have to do anything to prevent this. I know I'm already dead, but I need to keep going."
    Note: Hisashi Ouchi's case is so polarizing because he definitely shouldn't have survived that long. His story is a deeply tragic one, but we need to remember that he personally agreed to continue treatment very far into his hospital stay, at the request of his family. Out of all of this pain and suffering, the medical field did make ground breaking advancements in radiation treatments...

  • @i_love_anarchy
    @i_love_anarchy Před rokem +524

    who the hell decided that a screwdriver should be the only thing keeping a sphere of plutonium from going super critical? they’re as smart as a koala

    • @itsbeyondme5560
      @itsbeyondme5560 Před rokem

      He saw his best friend got burned by the blue light before. Slovin is a dumbazz.

    • @samwansitdabet6630
      @samwansitdabet6630 Před rokem +150

      slotin, he was given appropriate spacers to make sure the core didn't completely close but he kept using a screwdriver

    • @blehh_mae
      @blehh_mae Před rokem +34

      it worked entirely fine untill that one time and it wasnt even used all the time for that

    • @sithikananayakkare3162
      @sithikananayakkare3162 Před rokem +82

      "Fuck around and find out "

    • @Judge_0f_Everything
      @Judge_0f_Everything Před rokem

      Go ask ur mom lol 😆😂

  • @YourGodStalin
    @YourGodStalin Před rokem +69

    Hisashi Ouchi experienced the pain of literally melting from the inside out...for roughly 70 more days than it normally takes for the human body to melt from the inside out due to radiation...

  • @Dorahellmon666
    @Dorahellmon666 Před rokem +33

    I love this guy.
    Straight to the point.
    Another CZcamsr may take 15-20 minute just to explaining 1 case.

  • @BinarySpaced
    @BinarySpaced Před rokem +9

    Thank you for adding captions on your videos. I have APD and I struggle to understand people even speaking in my home country, but accents are a whole other challenge. I love your videos and I'm so glad I'm able to watch them!!

  • @stalkerentertainment3671
    @stalkerentertainment3671 Před rokem +164

    Lelechenko had balls to go into a heavily radiated section only to spare the young ones from going through what he eventually had to go through. At least he could spend some time with his family before passing.

    • @MRSLAV
      @MRSLAV  Před rokem +4

      At least 7 sieverts, but probably 10000 rads or 100 sieverts, you can look here, ctrl+f ''Wood River Junction''
      web.archive.org/web/20210615151005if_/www.orau.org/ptp/Library/accidents/la-13638.pdf

    • @MRSLAV
      @MRSLAV  Před rokem +5

      You can look at url at the description, it shows 10000 rads for peabody

    • @user-fy9kj2sp8y
      @user-fy9kj2sp8y Před 4 měsíci

      Lelechenko he save world

  • @brickshotted
    @brickshotted Před rokem +151

    "That'll do it."
    First words spoken right after the incident by Louis Slotin

    • @somedudethatripsplanetinha4221
      @somedudethatripsplanetinha4221 Před rokem +26

      *_loud noise of death_*
      "That will do it"
      "WHAT THE HELL!"
      "WH-"
      *chaos*

    • @eXecu7or
      @eXecu7or Před rokem +14

      "Well guys, I guess that's it"

    • @slimdangerous1928
      @slimdangerous1928 Před rokem +4

      He also calculated when everyone exposed to it would die, including himself :)
      Edit: Don't know where I heard that, did a quick goog and couldn't find anything to back that up because nobody else died immediately from it and he was immediately rushed to a hospital via ambulance.

    • @Rickil96trollencio
      @Rickil96trollencio Před 4 měsíci +1

      "That's all, see you guys"

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Před 3 měsíci

      @slimdangerous1928 He didn’t calculate when they would die, he told them all to mark where they were standing when it happened so he could estimate the exposure for each of them.

  • @hhairball9
    @hhairball9 Před 10 měsíci +4

    I can't thank you enough for this video! I've been trying to tell some family members about these incidents and here you have them all together(with some extras) with better details than I could tell them.
    Thank you!

  • @jagmarc
    @jagmarc Před 9 měsíci +12

    and I had a radiation dose of just 0.2 Sv during my last cancer scan , for 48 hours I had to keep away from pregnant women and children and flush toilet twice each time

    • @alexmartin3143
      @alexmartin3143 Před 23 dny +1

      Is that really true?

    • @jagmarc
      @jagmarc Před 23 dny

      @@alexmartin3143 yes. Look up radiation dose 18FDG PET

    • @jagmarc
      @jagmarc Před 23 dny

      @@alexmartin3143 oh. my reply saying more was censored by youtuube

    • @jagmarc
      @jagmarc Před 23 dny

      @@alexmartin3143 oh. the reply of me memtioning the previous reply a few minutes ago which said more about it was censored by youtiube has also dissapeared but this wasnt censored. Sorry youtube censors it I can t tell you any more

    • @jagmarc
      @jagmarc Před 23 dny +1

      @@alexmartin3143 sorry youtube keeps censoring comments I make mentioning how youtube censors comments I make about it censoring comments, after having censored the original content to verify your question which I've now forgotten anyway because of continual youtube comment censorship

  • @ChrisPtoes27
    @ChrisPtoes27 Před rokem +86

    Crazy how these people can survive with such high amounts of radiation. Even just 49 hours is crazy for having been exposed to 100 sieverts. Those 49 hours must’ve been pure hell though

    • @p0llenp0ny
      @p0llenp0ny Před rokem +15

      He wasn't exposed to 100 Sieverts though. Slav has it wrong.

    • @advithbhaviya5712
      @advithbhaviya5712 Před rokem +2

      @@p0llenp0ny Can you give some proof of what you are saying because probably did a lot of research before making this video.

    • @kadarak1
      @kadarak1 Před rokem +28

      @@advithbhaviya5712" This criticality exposed the 37-year-old Peabody to a fatal radiation dose of "more than 700 rem",[2] which is 7 Sv. He died 49 hours after the incident."- Wikipedia

    • @aaron5809
      @aaron5809 Před rokem +26

      The 100 sv are a comically high number and it almost seems like a click bait strategy. There is no way to accidentally create a 100 sv critically event just by mixing the wrong liquids the way it’s mentioned in the video. These solutions don’t contain a lot of uranium compared to fuel rods for example.

    • @thegreatestpepe
      @thegreatestpepe Před rokem +4

      @@kadarak1 Reminder once again that there is a reason Wikipedia is not permitted to use as a source for anything remotely academic. It's a terrible site for research. A random youtuber is unironically a better source than Wikipedia.
      That said, I'm not saying 100 sieverts is correct either. I'm not sure where Slav got that info. Just letting you know never to source Wikipedia unless you want to be laughed at.

  • @ghxsty8993
    @ghxsty8993 Před rokem +70

    I think slotin definitely saved a few peoples lives that day because he was fast to react and remove the top although he still suffered

    • @isuckatguitarandbass4256
      @isuckatguitarandbass4256 Před rokem +20

      he famously said "dont move,i need to mark your positions to calculate your chance of survival"

    • @HyperboreanJihad
      @HyperboreanJihad Před rokem +26

      Slotin knew he was fucked regardless
      If I remember correctly after he smacked the top back off the core he even said “Well, that does it” before telling them to mark their locations

    • @obituarybug
      @obituarybug Před rokem +14

      Not really, he's the reason they were ever in danger in the first place - he took off the safety mechanisms that would've 100% prevented the reaction

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Před 3 měsíci

      He wasn’t really thinking about saving them, it was about saving himself and minimizing the damage. He did save them, but he also put them in danger in the first place.

  • @arthur_p_dent
    @arthur_p_dent Před rokem +5

    The list omits the case of Anatoli Bugorski, who survived an accident with a particle accelerator despite a radiation exposure of more than 2000 Sieverts. The accident happened in 1978 and he is still alive.
    He was apparently lucky that he was exposed to pure and very localized radiation - which ended up paralyzing the left half of his face, but didn't damage the rest of his body, so contrary to expectations he recovered.

  • @debbiechan8657
    @debbiechan8657 Před rokem +10

    Interesting to learn about these incidents. I knew some of them, but had no idea about the more severe ones. I actually heard of a man in the Soviet Union who stumbled in the way of a particle from a synchrotron. He was exposed to 2,000-3,000 grays of radiation but was lucky enough to survive due to the particle conveniently missing vital parts of his brain.

  • @MJK-GC
    @MJK-GC Před rokem +126

    Another person who I believe deserves a mention is Anatoli Burgorski, who had put his head into a particle accelerator, he suffered 200,000R on entry and 300,000 which is about 33 (entry) to 50 sieverts (exit) (math might be shakey because the converter I used had roetgen in hours and seiverts in seconds), Kyle Hill did a great video on it. Anatoli also survived this exposure

    • @themorningguy906
      @themorningguy906 Před rokem +3

      His head didn't, lol
      Sorry

    • @themorningguy906
      @themorningguy906 Před rokem +23

      @@MJK-GC yes, but that was mostly unreactive alpha particles(high energy helium atoms)/ positrons . Radioactive materials release gamma rays(high energy neutron)

    • @themorningguy906
      @themorningguy906 Před rokem

      @@MJK-GC yup . God knows how he survived
      Anyway, happy holidays

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +9

      I think I heard of that one. The only reason he survived so well afterwards is because a human head isn't hick enough for alpha particles to do their peak effect.

    • @michaellastname4922
      @michaellastname4922 Před rokem +2

      @@HappyBeezerStudios So it helps to be thick-headed?

  • @GlitchyPSI
    @GlitchyPSI Před rokem +514

    Slav, I think it would be a good idea to post the sources of the information you find in places such as the description so it is easy for other people to also look at what you saw and read in more detail if they want to.

    • @kaspartambur
      @kaspartambur Před rokem +27

      I agree - if the sources are ok with a flood of enthusiasts :)

    • @ASocialistTransGirl
      @ASocialistTransGirl Před rokem +41

      @SunnyNight no, copy paste the wikipedia sources. wikipedia is extremely reliable, however is not a source itself; but a collection of sources

    • @p0llenp0ny
      @p0llenp0ny Před rokem

      @SunnyNight Even the Wikipedia article on the incident that killed Robert Peabody says he was exposed to 7 Sieverts. Not 100 Sieverts like Slav claims.

    • @vibespidersstudios8895
      @vibespidersstudios8895 Před rokem

      I agree to that the Cecil Keley story wasn’t the end of what the doctors did to him. It is a lot more scary when you read it they used his body for research and spreader parts around the US and his brain in a jar of mayonnaise. They use his own cells to inject into other people to see what radiation can do to a person without telling them. It made the story of the body snatchers of los almos and it is a great read of what someone can do and get away with it.

    • @kpaasial
      @kpaasial Před rokem +1

      Sometimes you have to take wikipedia with a grain of salt but the information on nuclear technology in it is actually quite well covered and accurate. Almost as if it has been written by people with inside information about the subject, hmmm...

  • @jont2576
    @jont2576 Před rokem +8

    That berrilyium ball was basically the nuclear ball version of a Chernobyl,where instead of operating on naturally occurring principles where a rapid increase in criticality would create a situation that dampens and stalls and kills the nuclear reaction,and thus preventing a runaway from occuring, it accelerated the reaction greater and greater until a new neutron star is born.

  • @aaaa9489
    @aaaa9489 Před 10 měsíci +9

    Hisashi was kept alive with his permission and the permission of his family. They could’ve kept his body alive for longer even after he began showing brain death symptoms if they really wanted to, but his wife agreed to let his next heart attack finally put his body to rest. He understood full well that he was an exceptional case and that it would be beneficial if he agreed to be kept alive despite being in agonizing pain, if not only for his wife.

  • @iknowurrobloxpassword1973
    @iknowurrobloxpassword1973 Před rokem +179

    Anatoli Petrovich Bugorski hit by 1866 to 2799 sievert. Approx 200,000 to 300,000 Roentgen. He was hit in the head by a partial accelerator and lived after a beam of protons going near light speed went through him. He is still alive at the age of 80.

    • @markbrix9385
      @markbrix9385 Před rokem +64

      I guess he was lucky to get hit by protons. In criticality events like this, you get hit with high doses of neutrons and gamma radiation. Much more deadly.

    • @jakejakedowntwo6613
      @jakejakedowntwo6613 Před rokem +34

      At least he was hit by a beam the damage was localized so I assume that's the reason he survived. It's different from all the criticality exposures where the entire body is exposed to radiation.

    • @epschway
      @epschway Před 10 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/mD4J5VUwiAs/video.html
      A video by Kyle Hill about him

    • @rafarequeni822
      @rafarequeni822 Před 10 měsíci +29

      He was hit with 1900-2800 *gray*. A sievert and a gray are equivalent, and equal to 1 Joule per Kilogram. The difference is that a gray is the amount of radiation produced, and a sievert is the amount of radiation absorved by biological tissue. Petrovich was hit in the head by a stream of protons of a radius of tens of a micron. No matter how much radiation the stream carried, there was not a kilo of tissue to being affected by it. The total amount of sieverts must have been below 0.1, and pretty localized.

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Před 3 měsíci

      He probably survived because the beam was so narrow

  • @lucaslavayen6811
    @lucaslavayen6811 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for the video man!

  • @TakoTrucker
    @TakoTrucker Před 10 měsíci +6

    i hate people painting oushi’s story as his family and scientists torturing him over and over, he wanted to see his family again and his family wanted to see him again. there was no malice, it’s just his family wanting him to survive and scientists listening to them and wanting to see what he would be like if he survived.

    • @numbersstationsarchive194
      @numbersstationsarchive194 Před 10 měsíci +3

      I'm so glad the myths and sensationalism surrounding Ouchi have finally started to be debunked. I knew of his story before it became common knowledge, and saw from the beginning how badly skewed it was for the sake of sensationalism. All of this can be traced back to a single poorly-researched pop-science article.

  • @lauracrawford8723
    @lauracrawford8723 Před rokem +50

    i’ve seen many things on Ouchi, but i didn’t know there were others who got EVEN MORE radiation poisoning then him

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Před rokem

      Some are still hidden in the public eye in China and Russia to this day. Majak incident in the 1950's was kept in secret for so long. A catastrophe nuclear disaster only bettered by the Chernobyl disaster and Fukushima disaster.

    • @samuelff4127
      @samuelff4127 Před 5 měsíci

      No ouchi got more radiation
      Ouchi got 17000
      Other two man got 10000 and 3000

    • @moneyinroblox2763
      @moneyinroblox2763 Před 5 měsíci

      @@samuelff4127what

    • @moneyinroblox2763
      @moneyinroblox2763 Před 5 měsíci

      ⁠@@samuelff4127no peabody got 100000

    • @JakeyBro69
      @JakeyBro69 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Some people got way more radiation but he definitely suffered the most. He was kept alive for 83 whole days while he basically melted from the inside out

  • @alexbones0001
    @alexbones0001 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Ouchi's case is particulary significant due to the fact that nobody had been exposed to that many sieverts and lived for that long

  • @sumantamandal5723
    @sumantamandal5723 Před 10 měsíci

    I appreciate this video; I've been searching for it.

  • @Rap_0687
    @Rap_0687 Před rokem +35

    i heard of louis slotin but never knew his radioactive does was that high

    • @dingbat19
      @dingbat19 Před 9 měsíci +1

      That is the highest estimate, not the most likely, with doses there is an error range, the range for slot in was 11-21 sieverts.

  • @oversteer_9339
    @oversteer_9339 Před rokem +258

    I know he suffered an unimaginable pain but.... Thats definitely an Ouchi

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před rokem +6

      Once the pain receptors have died off there is no pain.

    • @silent_stalker3687
      @silent_stalker3687 Před rokem +24

      @@HappyBeezerStudios yes, but once the pain receptors turn Ghoul they can live for hundreds of years

    • @trippymoredd3016
      @trippymoredd3016 Před rokem +4

      💀💀

    • @TheMonkeCEO
      @TheMonkeCEO Před rokem +3

      BRUH I JUST GOT IT 💀

    • @nuss6910
      @nuss6910 Před rokem +1

      @@HappyBeezerStudios It’s not exactly sure whether or not his nerve system failed

  • @unstablenuclearreactorinmyhome
    @unstablenuclearreactorinmyhome Před 5 měsíci +2

    Holy crap! I can’t believe the thing from The Thing (1982)’s movie poster is a real person involved in a nuclear accident!!

  • @WhattheactuL
    @WhattheactuL Před 4 měsíci

    Loved this , really well done and spoken.

  • @Phildo8
    @Phildo8 Před rokem +43

    As someone who’s always been interested in nuclear physics this was a very well explained, very detailed quick and entertaining video!

  • @Spudcore
    @Spudcore Před rokem +3

    Another excellent video! Hats off to you Mr Slav, you are teaching us so much.

  • @damiqdeshhuqify
    @damiqdeshhuqify Před 9 měsíci

    Another great video, thanks!

  • @The_Huddle.
    @The_Huddle. Před 10 měsíci +2

    Ah yes, put uranium in the same canisters that store trichloroethylene, what could go wrong?

  • @battlefields2mine
    @battlefields2mine Před rokem +29

    10:54 The pace and the writing have a massive improve here. I totally got chilled by the words. You did awesome job as always

    • @abrupta
      @abrupta Před rokem +4

      MOSCOW *vine boom sound effect*

    • @battlefields2mine
      @battlefields2mine Před rokem

      @@abrupta Exactly. IT felt like it boom inside me.

    • @ultimaxkom8728
      @ultimaxkom8728 Před rokem

      @@battlefields2mine Deep inside of you?

  • @marcel0367
    @marcel0367 Před rokem +8

    this new template is pretty good, it doesnt use those suspense separate parts, it still really good video
    Also how you slided the sponsor was really good tho

  • @fjoergyn
    @fjoergyn Před rokem

    AWESOME WORK Brat, rly. Every man was a brave man!
    Vichnaya pamyat

  • @ivy.learnskorean
    @ivy.learnskorean Před rokem +2

    Good short overview. I watched a few videos about Slotin and the demon core, as well as a good one on Ouchi and knew of Kelley, but the other victims of criticality incidents were new to me. Thanks, balaclava-ed cousin, will subscribe.

  • @Zola_RSN
    @Zola_RSN Před rokem +34

    I love how you just end the video. You give us the info and that's it.

  • @unknown-ql1fk
    @unknown-ql1fk Před rokem +9

    The plutonium sphere accident is actually kinda even worse than it initially sounded. Tests done recently, like 2015 or later, showed that his hand was actually part of the accident. If the hand were not there the core would klikely not have gone critical...sad

  • @Mulligun007
    @Mulligun007 Před 9 měsíci +3

    The most mystery for me is how Skłodowska Cuire was able to work with radioactive materials for YEARS still living...

  • @cancel1913
    @cancel1913 Před 4 měsíci

    Very good video. Also the stories of these poor men are extremely scary indeed!

  • @johnny_luuq
    @johnny_luuq Před rokem +24

    Yay Mr Slav came out a good video.

  • @dvrk6140
    @dvrk6140 Před rokem +12

    ive been watching a lot of nuclear stories and your channel for random videos for the past few weeks. what a coincidence you just uploaded one about nuclear incidents! great video man thank you

  • @airamona
    @airamona Před rokem +11

    10:28 Again, the infamous blue flash. One technician, Vasiliev, was irradiated with 60 sieverts. He died next day later from heart attack.

  • @66kbm
    @66kbm Před rokem

    WOW....What more can one say. Great vid, thanks for posting.

  • @Elvy1337
    @Elvy1337 Před rokem +23

    Mr Slav keep going with ur videos man,all the information you bring is so entertaining and fun to listen to,your voice is great,success on your channel!

  • @AwareGhostface
    @AwareGhostface Před rokem +7

    Is that an image from The Thing that was used for the thumbnail?

  • @chance7727
    @chance7727 Před 5 měsíci

    Just found your channel bro. Great content, even better personality. Keep doin what you’re doin bro you’ll crack a million in no time!

  • @ganrimmonim
    @ganrimmonim Před 10 měsíci +1

    What I find amazing about these stories is that doses of radiation are normally measured in millisieverts to come across doses this high is just mind blowing.

  • @retardedmanliness1969
    @retardedmanliness1969 Před rokem +4

    THIS IS MORE ENTERTAING I AM GLAD with the change of video format

  • @olliski2802
    @olliski2802 Před rokem +13

    This guy is a real life glowing one.

  • @jkaiser169
    @jkaiser169 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video.
    I live 5 minutes down the road from the Wood River nuclear accident where Robert Peabody was exposed to the high radiation. My next door neighbor father was the fire chief at that time and was first on the scene of the incident. Still to this day, it's big news in my small rural town. The United Nuclear building was so high in radiation that they demolished the building and closed off the area until a couple of years ago. The government said its all cleaned up and the town claimed the land and made a wildlife management area out of it with hiking trails. There are sign all over the place saying please stay on trails. I recently purchased a geiger counter and am going to walk around and check for myself that it's actually cleaned up.

    • @jaerdalas
      @jaerdalas Před 4 měsíci

      Would love to read about your reports in the area!

  • @MajorCosmos.
    @MajorCosmos. Před 10 dny +1

    I like how Hisashi was constantly used as a reference point in this vid as if he didn’t suffer the most painful death in history

  • @sheepsrock22
    @sheepsrock22 Před rokem +7

    imagine the confusion after digging up a grave and finding an ambulance

  • @xminusone1
    @xminusone1 Před rokem +5

    Imagine dieing from the most painful way possible and being called "Outchi"...

  • @rom0860
    @rom0860 Před 27 dny

    Very good video! Not too long, essential info.

  • @styrfry
    @styrfry Před rokem +15

    The Japanese scientists and doctors were not the ones who kept Hisashi Ouchi alive 'against his will', it was because of Hisashi's wife and her insistence on resuscitation, she had wanted her husband to live until at least the first day of 2000 since he had been so excited about it when he was still conscious.

  • @ulvinheim2720
    @ulvinheim2720 Před rokem +3

    I haven't seen a mr slav video in a long time, it's nice to hear you for the first time.

  • @cress5580
    @cress5580 Před rokem +44

    I've been a viewer since 2019, Your channel has come a long way. The amount of research you do on these topics is phenomenal, you deserve more recognition for sure.

    • @Friendlyfire97
      @Friendlyfire97 Před rokem

      I could do one wiki search and Get all that research in a click and more

  • @hauntedflame6923
    @hauntedflame6923 Před rokem

    I’m going to have to watch this later, when it’s not about 4 in the morning, since your videos are giving me some scary vibes

  • @TRODDEN666
    @TRODDEN666 Před rokem

    Really good bro keep them coming

  • @umakemerandy3669
    @umakemerandy3669 Před rokem +6

    I appreciate your video format, you know, sticking to the point.
    You dont start the video off by talking about your dog, and what you did on vacation. And you dont end the video with nonsense.
    Thank you, and prosper.

    • @FeralRat
      @FeralRat Před rokem +1

      And he doesn't start off each story with "so and so was born in..." and then 20 minutes of the person's entire life story.

  • @kujojotarostandoceanman2641

    Human life confused me alot, at one hand, you could die just from 1 Sv, on the other hand, bro tank 54 Sv and can still live for 6 days

  • @Philfluffer
    @Philfluffer Před 10 měsíci +2

    Just a quick note the beryllium covers over the demon core at los alamos were reflectors, not shields. Neutron shields are alloys or elements that can absorb neutrons preventing a criticality accident, which is what happened when the two beryllium cores snapped shut.

  • @dymytryruban4324
    @dymytryruban4324 Před rokem +3

    Lelechenko actually received his dose in two fractions. First time it was in the night of accident. Then he received intravenous solution and felt some improvement so he came back to NPP. That's when his overall dose exceeded 20 Sv.
    Boris Korchilov spent most of the time in reactor room: over an hour. His absorbed dose wasn't even the highest: 9.6 Gy. His colleague Yury Ordochkin received 9.9 Gy but "only" 30 Sv.

    • @elric5371
      @elric5371 Před rokem

      Korchilov received 54Gy.

    • @dymytryruban4324
      @dymytryruban4324 Před rokem

      @@elric5371 No. He received 54 Sv, not Gy. 1 Gy of fast neutrons does more biological damage than 1 Gy of slow neutrons. Slow neutrons in their turn are considerably more damaging than gamma.

    • @elric5371
      @elric5371 Před rokem

      @@dymytryruban4324 yeah but when equating doses between Gy and Sv gamma is equal, so therefore 1Sv of gamma rays is equivalent to 1Gy of gamma rays this is the same for converting between roentgen too.

  • @BlazeRhodon
    @BlazeRhodon Před rokem +7

    Wow, this video is very informative. I've heard about Cecil Keley, Louis Slotin and Robert Peabody (may they all rest in peace, death by irradiation is horrendous), but I did not heard about Boris Korchilov and Vasilev critically accidents, although I've heard about other critically accidents like Chazma Bay in Vladivostok where reactor in Soviet submarine K-431 malfunctioned (similar accident as in Boris Korchilov case but exact data of irriadiation are not commonly known) or Alexandr Zakharov in Sarov (this guy received 48 sieverts). Thanks for this video, today I've learned something new.

  • @TheyHe_V
    @TheyHe_V Před rokem +8

    Louis Slotin basically was just an example of a failed grip check

  • @mattropolis7857
    @mattropolis7857 Před 5 měsíci +2

    By the time of Chernobyl, the Russians were already adept at treating people with high radiation exposures. Only now are we learning how. They had multiple Chernobyl-level events like Lake Karachay and the Kyshtym Disaster. One wonders how many horrific nuclear deaths were covered up in those early days when there were no safety measures taken and everything was kept top secret.

  • @JensenSarpy
    @JensenSarpy Před rokem

    Excellent video. Well done!!

  • @xanatitan8103
    @xanatitan8103 Před rokem +3

    Thanks for the video, I LOVE THIS NEW VIDEOS! And we all like to see a dude talking to us! TYY

  • @madameghostie
    @madameghostie Před rokem +10

    Shoutouts to all my Radium Girls

  • @yuris.3167
    @yuris.3167 Před rokem +3

    It seems that Peabody's exposure in Sieverts have been converted from a claim that he received "10.000 rads". However, this claim seems to come from nowhere, and all I could find was an article claiming he actually received 700 rems. For Slotin, there are a lot of different calculations, and apparently most of them place the dosage much lower than suggested in the video. It would be good to see sources for the claims in the video, because it appears to be very sensationalized, with little information about the cases.

    • @elric5371
      @elric5371 Před rokem

      Everything in the vid is true and correct, apart from Slotin as he received 11.1 Sieverts, Peabody received 88 Sieverts, not 700, the article that states it was 700 is full of misinformation and comes from the ring he was wearing, other more eligible sources like looking at unscear reports of affects of ARS, are more eligible, plus 700 rem is not going to kill someone in 49 hours, more like 49 days. The symptoms Peabody experienced are also neruovascular based which occur with doses greater than 5000 rem.

    • @dingbat19
      @dingbat19 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The dose for Peabody from the official report on the incident has a highest estimate of 190 sieverts, he definitely received over 100mi can link it to you if u like.

  • @dactel
    @dactel Před 9 měsíci +12

    Ouchi’s family were the ones forcing the doctors to keep him alive, the doctors were doing their jobs, eventually the lead doctor brought the family into a room around 80 days in and said “nah fam kill this mf” and they agreed

    • @h4sanbf
      @h4sanbf Před 8 měsíci +3

      Lmfao 💀💀💀💀

  • @xfxox
    @xfxox Před rokem +10

    There is more: 900 sv were received by crew of 10 submarine sailors in Chazhma bay on 10 of August 1985 during refueling (Soviet submarine K-431 accident)

    • @p0llenp0ny
      @p0llenp0ny Před rokem +1

      Source?

    • @dingbat19
      @dingbat19 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Wrong, those 10 were killed by the blast, the highest dose from that accident was 2.2Gy, (220 rad). Half a lethal dose.

    • @xfxox
      @xfxox Před 8 měsíci

      @@dingbat19 correct

  • @campbell2009
    @campbell2009 Před 11 měsíci +4

    1:12 is kinda false information, varying sources say that it wasnt for scientific research. Most ive seen have said that either he chose or his family chose to keep him alive.

    • @Mikg-ks9xg
      @Mikg-ks9xg Před 8 dny

      It's true.. many people will say that the scientists and doctors were evil, and just wanted to keep him alive to do research on him. Or that the family was selfish for keeping him alive so long. When that's not the case at all.. and I do agree that he went through excruciating pain, longer than what he should have had to. But he wanted to keep going for his family.. and the doctors and scientists and his family thought that if there was just a slight chance that he would make it and get through this, They would do everything in their power to keep that man alive.. and his family essentially lived in the first floor waiting room, so they could be updated on him everyday at any point in time.. not to mention a lot of the doctors and nurses that were working on him would live at the hospital just to make sure he would have adequate care and be as comfortable as possible.. and it's sad to see people twist the story of this man and the doctors and nurses and scientists and his family, and make it seem as though nobody cared about him and all they wanted was just to do research on him. When that's not the case at all.

  • @jbstepchild
    @jbstepchild Před rokem

    I've watched alot of Mr Slav videos this is the first ive seen that has talking I like it plz keep doing these amazing videos

  • @Jermo7899
    @Jermo7899 Před 5 měsíci

    Great work. You got a new subscriber!

  • @handsomeivan1980
    @handsomeivan1980 Před rokem +5

    Radiation is just spicy air