2024-03-07 23:00:00
Page 1 to 5: Start pages | Page 7 to 22: Paul Reuss – Update on | Page 24 to 25: Paul Reuss – 1. What is an atom? | Page 26 to 27: Paul Reuss – 2. Nuclear fusion and fission: what is the difference? | Page 28 to 29: Paul Reuss – 3. What is radioactivity? | Page 30 to 31: Paul Reuss – 4. How does a nuclear reactor work? | Page 32 to 33: Paul Reuss – 5. How does a power plant produce electricity? | Page 34 to 35: Paul Reuss – 6. What are the different types of nuclear reactors? | Page 36 to 37: Paul Reuss – 7. What is the world’s nuclear fleet? | Page 38 to 39: Paul Reuss – 8. What fuel do we burn in nuclear power plants? | Page 40 to 41: Paul Reuss – 9. What happens to spent fuel? | Page 42 to 43: Paul Reuss – 10. How much does a power plant cost and produce? | Page 44 to 45: Paul Reuss – 11. Is electricity expensive in France? | Page 46 to 47: Paul Reuss – 12. Dismantle a power plant, how and at what cost? | Page 48 to 49: Paul Reuss – 13. Who are the main players in nuclear power? | Page 50 to 51: Paul Reuss – 14. Who trains and provides information on nuclear power? | Page 52 to 53: Paul Reuss – 15. Primary and final energies: what is the difference? | Page 54 to 55: Paul Reuss – 16. What is the importance of fossil fuels today? | Page 56 to 57: Paul Reuss – 17. Renewable energies: an alternative to nuclear power? | Page 58 to 59: Paul Reuss – 18. Nuclear power, a solution to global warming? | Page 60 to 61: Paul Reuss – 19. What are the risks of an accident on a nuclear reactor? | Page 62 to 63: Paul Reuss – 20. Before Fukushima, what were the main accidents? | Page 64 to 65: Paul Reuss – 21. Who controls, who informs? | Page 66 to 67: Paul Reuss – 22. How is reactor safety ensured? | Page 68 to 69: Paul Reuss – 23. Resistant and safe power plants? | Page 70 to 71: Paul Reuss – 24. Chernobyl, is it possible in France? | Page 72 to 73: Paul Reuss – 25. What are the different types of nuclear waste? | Page 74 to 75: Paul Reuss – 26. What do we do with nuclear waste? | Page 76 to 77: Paul Reuss – 27. What does a breeder reactor consist of? | Page 78 to 79: Paul Reuss – 28. What are fourth generation reactors? | Page 80 to 81: Paul Reuss – 29. Fusion, the nuclear power of the future? | Page 82 to 83: Paul Reuss – 30. Is a nuclear phase-out still possible? | Page 86 to 87: Paul Reuss – Key figures | Page 88 to 91: Paul Reuss – Keywords | Page 92 to 94: Library | Page 95: End pages.
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#Lets #talk #nuclear #power #questions #Documentation #française #Doc #pocket
March 14, 2024
Exploring the Mayan Train: Claudia Sheinbaum Tours the Southeast
2024-03-14 21:30:00
The candidate of Let’s Continue Making History tours the southeast aboard the Mayan train Credit: X @Claudiashein
Claudia Sheinbaum visited the Yucatan Peninsula this Thursday, where she held public events with citizens as part of her campaign for the Presidency of the Republic, an occasion she took advantage of to travel for the first time aboard the ‘rolling Jaguar’, the Mayan Train.
During her tour of the Yucatan Peninsula, which began on Wednesday, March 13 in Quintana Roo and is expected to end this Friday in Campeche, Claudia Sheinbaum was seen excited regarding boarding the Mayan Train, one of the government’s infrastructure megaprojects. by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.
It was following leading events on Wednesday in Playa del Carmen and Cancún, Quintana Roo, that the presidential candidate from Let’s Continue Making History, made up of Morena, the Labor Party and the Green Party, boarded the Maya Train to travel to the state of Yucatan.
“Today we traveled on the Mayan Train from Cancún, Quintana Roo to Valladolid, Yucatán. “It is a great project that is promoting economic and tourist growth in the southeast,” said Sheinbaum Pardo on his social networks, in a photo in which he can be seen carrying his backpack before boarding.
The candidate for the Presidency of the Republic for Morena boarded the Mayan Train for the first time. (X/Claudiashein)
Subsequently, she released a video in which her boarding the Mayan Train is observed in more detail and how citizens traveling on board cheered her: “President, President!”, users can be heard shouting.
This was the first time that Claudia Sheinbaum got on the Mayan Train, a work that was inaugurated last December by President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and for whose trip, from Cancún, Quintana Roo, to Valladolid, Yucatán, the Morenista might have paid between 355 and 600 pesos.
According to the official page for purchasing tickets to travel aboard the Mayan Train, the trip that leaves at 07:00 a.m. from Cancun Airport to Valladolid has a cost of 355 pesos in tourist class.
Claudia Sheinbaum will finish her tour of the Yucatan Peninsula this Friday in Campeche (X/@Claudiashei)
While in the case of the trip in Premier class, the cost of the ticket is 566.50 pesos.
If the former head of Government of Mexico City had decided to make the complete trip, from Cancún Airport to Palenque, the cost of the ticket would change radically.
In tourist class the cost would be 2,123.50 pesos, while the ticket in premier class would have a price of 3,391 pesos, according to the official website.
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#Claudia #Sheinbaums #trip #Mayan #Train #cost #presidential #candidate #paid #Cancún #Valladolid
Russian Presidential Election 2022: Elections, Candidates, and Controversies
2024-03-14 21:28:00
File photograph showing a man participating in a Russian election. EFE/EPA/MAXIM SHIPENKOV
Voting offices opened in the Russian Far East, kicking off a presidential election that will last three days, in which Vladimir Putin, in power for 24 years, seeks a new mandate.
The elections began on Friday at 8:00 a.m. (20 GMT on Thursday) in the Kamchatka peninsula and in Chukotka, in the far east of Russia, and will conclude on Sunday at 8:00 p.m. (18 GMT) in Kaliningrad, a Russian enclave. in the middle of countries of the European Union.
The elections are being held once morest the backdrop of relentless repression that has paralyzed independent media and prominent rights groups and given Putin complete control of the political system.
They also come as Moscow’s war in Ukraine enters its third year. Russia has an advantage on the battlefield, where it is making small, if slow, advances. Ukraine, meanwhile, has made Moscow appear vulnerable behind the front line: long-range drone strikes have struck deep inside Russia, while high-tech drones have put its Sea fleet Black on defense.
Voters will cast their ballots from Friday to Sunday at polling stations in all 11 time zones of the vast country, as well as in illegally annexed regions of Ukraine.
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalni and his wife Yulia in April 2015 (REUTERS/Tatyana Makeyeva)
The elections have little uncertainty, as Putin, 71, is running for his fifth term virtually unopposed. His political opponents are in jail or exiled abroad, and the fiercest of them, Alexei Navalny, recently died in a remote Arctic penal colony. The other three candidates on the ballot are low-profile politicians from token opposition parties who toe the Kremlin line.
Only registered candidates or state-backed advisory bodies can assign observers to polling stations, reducing the possibility of independent monitors. With three days of voting in almost 100,000 polling stations in the country, it is difficult to have true control. Only registered candidates or state-backed advisory bodies can assign observers to polling stations, reducing the likelihood of independent observers. With voting lasting three days in nearly 100,000 polling stations in the country, any real control is difficult anyway.
Ukraine and the West have also condemned Russia for holding the vote in Ukrainian regions that Moscow’s forces have seized and occupied.
The Kremlin excluded from the vote two politicians who sought to run on an anti-war program and who had genuine, though not overwhelming, support, thus depriving voters of any choice on the “main issue on Russia’s political agenda,” he said. political analyst Abbas Gallyamov, who used to work as Putin’s speechwriter.
The scattered Russian opposition has urged those dissatisfied with Putin or the war to go to the polls on Sunday at noon, the last day of voting, in protest. The strategy was endorsed by Navalny shortly before his death.
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#Elections #Russia #elections #began #east #country
Sport & Menopause: The Importance of Exercise for Women’s Health
2024-03-14 16:01:00
Sport is an integral part of many women’s lives. But when menopause occurs and the body changes, many people lack energy. A study by the North American Menopause Society (NAMS) has determined why it is still important to exercise. The researchers also found out what type of… Sport for women during the Menopause is particularly suitable.
Sport & menopause: That’s why they belong together
During menopause, a woman goes through different phases. Before menopause, the production of the hormones estrogen and progesterone begins to fluctuate until periods and ovulation finally stop. One year following your last menstrual period you are in the postmenopause, the final phase of menopause.
Although menopause is now over, many women continue to experience the typical symptoms of estrogen deficiency: hair falls out, skin becomes dry, and bone and joint pain occurs. Luckily you can do this Partially counteract symptoms with a healthy lifestyle – an important part of this is movement.
Regular exercise during and following menopause helps to stimulate the changed metabolism, also strengthens the bones and can even prevent psychological problems, e.g. B. counteract depressive moods.
Continue reading: Why women become depressed more often during menopause
According to the study, this sport is particularly effective
One Study, which was published in the journal Menopause, shows: One sport is particularly good for women during the menopause – dancing! The researchers came to this conclusion following evaluating data from 36 women with an average age of 57 – i.e. postmenopause. The test subjects left Dance three times a week for 90 minutes for four months. Before and following the four months, the participants were checked for body composition, cholesterol levels and other health measures.
The result: the women have more coordination, were more agile and their aerobic ability had increased. Her self-esteem and self-image had also improved. In addition, the level of HDL in the blood, also known as “good cholesterol”, changed within four months. This made it possible to reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases.
Sport & menopause: The main thing is exercise
Since the study is very small with only 36 test subjects, it cannot be viewed as representative. However, one thing is certain: exercise is good – even during menopause. Every woman has to decide whether dancing or a sport is more suitable decide for yourself. Gentle forms of exercise such as yoga, Pilates or aqua fitness are also particularly recommended for women past menopause.
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#Sport #Menopause #form #exercise #good #women