Monday, May 04, 2026

Big Picture Science for May. 04, Shadow of Chernobyl

Abandoned bumper cars in an overgrown amusement park. Several small bumper cars sit on a cracked, weed-covered concrete surface, with faded and peeling paint in dull yellow, green, and red. Plants and moss are growing around and inside the cars, and a small tree branch leans into the foreground. In the background are more bumper cars scattered around, also decayed and surrounded by dense trees and bushes. Above them is a rusted metal framework of what used to be a roof or canopy structure, now empty and partly covered by vegetation.








Big Picture Science: Shadow of Chernobyl

Forty years later, the exclusion zone surrounding the infamous Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant remains uninhabited by humans. But among the radioactive remnants, wildlife is flourishing, including endangered species. In the second of our two-part series, we look at the state of the disaster site today, consider what lessons we’ve learned during clean up efforts, hear about a strange story about radioactive shellfish, and consider whether small modular reactors could reinvigorate dreams of a nuclear-powered future and bring nuclear energy out of Chernobyl’s shadow.

Guests:

  • Steven Biegalski – Chair of Nuclear and Radiological Engineering and Medical Physics program at Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Tom Scott – Professor of Nuclear Materials and Devices at the University of Bristol
  • Jacopo Buongiorno – Professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering at MIT, Director of the Center for Advanced Nuclear Energy Systems (CANES), and Director of Science and Technology of the MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory

Download podcast at - https://bigpicturescience.org/episodes/shadow-of-chernobyl

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