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HackingThroughLife
@hnnhstphnz
There’s no way we didn’t buy that enriched uranium right? @kaufman I feel like I’d love your POV on my conspiracy
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Alexander C. Kaufman
@kaufman
what's the conspiracy
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HackingThroughLife
@hnnhstphnz
🤡🫩😆
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Alexander C. Kaufman pfp
Alexander C. Kaufman
@kaufman
you mean the missing Iranian U?
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HackingThroughLife
@hnnhstphnz
This is showing my ignorance. Can that be used for nuclear reactors for energy? Thats the angle I’m seeing. For data centers
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Alexander C. Kaufman pfp
Alexander C. Kaufman
@kaufman
Most nuclear reactors run on low enriched uranium which is enriched up to 5%. Some newer next-gen reactors that use coolants other than water use high enriched low assay uranium, or HALEU, which is enriched up to 20%. No reactors run on the higher-enriched stuff that is used in bombs, which goes from like 60-90%. But you can take that stuff apart and recycle it into fuel. That's actually a big reason why domestic enrichment capacity went away in the U.S. In the 1990s, Bill Clinton did a deal with Russia called "megatons to megawatts," where we bought any nuclear fuel that Moscow made through disassembled weapons. That material ended up being so cheap and plentiful at a time when nuclear power was on the decline anyway that the domestic enrichers largely went out of business.
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