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A specially-designed robot has become stranded after capturing the first grainy images from inside one of the melted reactors at Japan's doomed Fukushima nuclear plant.
It withstood the deadly radioactive environment but then became stuck two-thirds of the way through its mission and had to be abandoned.
Pictures lit by a lamp on the robot showed steam wafting around the chamber and debris that looked like small rocks and metal parts.
The video also showed numerous white spots believed to be caused by gamma rays.
Despite the glitch, officials said the images were a success and showed it was possible to send in more sophisticated robots as they embark on a 40-year mission to make the plant safe.
1/7
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Gallery: Robot's Pictures Inside Fukushima
A still image of a video taken by a small cord-controlled robot shows inside the reactor vessel of the No. 1 reactor building at Tokyo Electric Power Co's tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant
The robot was used to film inside one of the reactors that melted down at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant last week, but the robot itself lost control and become disconnected
The 60cm Hitachi robot entered the disaster zone through a pipe and then morphed into a crawler device, collecting radiation and temperature data as it crept along. Continue through for more pictures
The robot also picked up lower than expected radiation readings, according to Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), possibly paving the way for wireless devices to explore the site.
However, radiation levels inside the plant are still far too dangerous for humans.
The 60cm Hitachi robot entered the disaster zone through a pipe and then morphed into a crawler device, collecting radiation and temperature data as it crept along.
TEPCO spokesman Teruaki Kobayashi said its journey had been halted possibly after one of its tyres got stuck in a grating.
A different amphibious robot is set to enter the site next year for more tests.
Large volumes of cooling water continue to leak from the damaged reactors, causing contamination and hampering the cleanup process.
1/16
-
Gallery: Archive: Timeline Of Events
March 11. Cooling problems at the nuclear plant emerged. The government declared state of emergency
March 12. Plant owners TEPCO said pressure was rising in some of the reactors and could not be controlled
A £1.8bn ice wall extending down 1,500 metres is hoping to freeze the earth around the wrecked plant and stop contaminated water leaching into the sea.
The nuclear meltdown in March 2011 was the worst since Chernobyl and happened after a magnitude 9 earthquake hit the area and triggered a deadly tsunami.
Three reactors at the plant went into meltdown and hundreds of thousands had to be evacuated.
1/9
-
Gallery: Images Of A Nuclear No-Go Zone
A boat lies stranded on the ground after the powerful tsunami two years ago.
One of the Google Street View camera cars drives through the deserted Namie streets.
So far, more than 1,600 people have died from health complications brought on by the disaster.
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We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.
A specially-designed robot has become stranded after capturing the first grainy images from inside one of the melted reactors at Japan's doomed Fukushima nuclear plant.
It withstood the deadly radioactive environment but then became stuck two-thirds of the way through its mission and had to be abandoned.
Pictures lit by a lamp on the robot showed steam wafting around the chamber and debris that looked like small rocks and metal parts.
The video also showed numerous white spots believed to be caused by gamma rays.
Despite the glitch, officials said the images were a success and showed it was possible to send in more sophisticated robots as they embark on a 40-year mission to make the plant safe.
1/7
-
Gallery: Robot's Pictures Inside Fukushima
A still image of a video taken by a small cord-controlled robot shows inside the reactor vessel of the No. 1 reactor building at Tokyo Electric Power Co's tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant
The robot was used to film inside one of the reactors that melted down at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant last week, but the robot itself lost control and become disconnected
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The 60cm Hitachi robot entered the disaster zone through a pipe and then morphed into a crawler device, collecting radiation and temperature data as it crept along. Continue through for more pictures
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The robot also picked up lower than expected radiation readings, according to Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), possibly paving the way for wireless devices to explore the site.
However, radiation levels inside the plant are still far too dangerous for humans.
The 60cm Hitachi robot entered the disaster zone through a pipe and then morphed into a crawler device, collecting radiation and temperature data as it crept along.
TEPCO spokesman Teruaki Kobayashi said its journey had been halted possibly after one of its tyres got stuck in a grating.
A different amphibious robot is set to enter the site next year for more tests.
Large volumes of cooling water continue to leak from the damaged reactors, causing contamination and hampering the cleanup process.
1/16
-
Gallery: Archive: Timeline Of Events
March 11. Cooling problems at the nuclear plant emerged. The government declared state of emergency
March 12. Plant owners TEPCO said pressure was rising in some of the reactors and could not be controlled
A £1.8bn ice wall extending down 1,500 metres is hoping to freeze the earth around the wrecked plant and stop contaminated water leaching into the sea.
The nuclear meltdown in March 2011 was the worst since Chernobyl and happened after a magnitude 9 earthquake hit the area and triggered a deadly tsunami.
Three reactors at the plant went into meltdown and hundreds of thousands had to be evacuated.
1/9
-
Gallery: Images Of A Nuclear No-Go Zone
A boat lies stranded on the ground after the powerful tsunami two years ago.
One of the Google Street View camera cars drives through the deserted Namie streets.
So far, more than 1,600 people have died from health complications brought on by the disaster.
Top Stories
- PM Promises 'Good Life' For 'Working People'
- Right To Buy: What Is It And How Does It Work?
- Greens Vow To Roll Back NHS Privatisation
- Missing Glasgow Student: Man In CCTV Traced
- Man Charged With Syrian Preacher's Murder
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