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Showing papers on "Blackout published in 1985"


Patent
28 Oct 1985
TL;DR: In this paper, each unit has a memory for storage of a designated code representative of its location and a storage memory for the storage of the blackout tier indication, which is transmitted along with the program to be blacked out.
Abstract: Television programs are broadcast to a plurality of receiver units in various geographic areas. Each unit has a memory for storage of a designation code representative of its location and a memory for the storage of a blackout tier indication. Prior to the transmission of the program to be blacked out, each unit is separately addressed and provided with a message including a designation code for storage. Then, a globally addressed message provides all receiver units having a selected designation code with a blackout tier indication for storage. A program tier indication is transmitted along with the program to be blacked out. Each unit, upon receiving the transmitted program, compares the transmitted program tier indication and the blackout tier indication in its memory. All receiver units having a stored blackout tier indication which matches the program tier indication are simultaneously prevented from displaying the program to be blacked out.

180 citations


01 Jan 1985
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the results of calculations performed with the ORNL SASA code suite for the Station Blackout Severe Accident Sequence at Browns Ferry, where the accident is initiated by a loss of offsite power combined with failure of all onsite emergency diesel generators to start and load.
Abstract: This paper presents the results of calculations performed with the ORNL SASA code suite for the Station Blackout Severe Accident Sequence at Browns Ferry. The accident is initiated by a loss of offsite power combined with failure of all onsite emergency diesel generators to start and load. The Station Blackout is assumed to persist beyond the point of battery exhaustion (at six hours) and without DC power, cooling water could no longer be injected into the reactor vessel. Calculations are continued through the period of core degradation and melting, reactor vessel failure, and the subsequent containment failure. An estimate of the magnitude and timing of the concomitant fission product releases is also provided.

2 citations