01 August 2011, Tokyo Electric Power Company reporting that they’ve recorded the highest radiation levels yet at their damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
A pipe located between reactors 1 and 2, is emitting more than ten sieverts (not millisieverts but the larger measurement of sieverts) per hour of radiation!
Most measurements have been given in the much smaller millisieverts range. One millisievert equals 0.001 sievert. One microsievert equals 0.000001 sievert. So you can see a reading of ten sieverts is huge! It is so huge, that the Geiger counters used to take the measurements max out at ten sieverts, which means the level of radiation being emitted could be higher.
As usual, TEPCo officials don’t understand why they’re getting such high radiation readings! TEPCo sent workers to inspect the pipe, after a gamma camera detected extreme radiation. The workers could not stay long, leaving after being exposed to 4 millisieverts per hour of radiation. TEPCo says the area around the pipe is now a No Go area.