By: HISTORY.com Editors

1986

Test triggers nuclear disaster at Chernobyl

Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Published: February 09, 2010Last Updated: May 28, 2025

On April 26, 1986, the world’s worst nuclear power plant accident occurs at the Chernobyl nuclear power station in the Soviet Union. Thirty-two people died and dozens more suffered radiation burns in the opening days of the crisis, but only after Swedish authorities reported the fallout did Soviet authorities reluctantly admit that an accident had occurred.

The Chernobyl station was situated at the settlement of Pripyat, about 65 miles north of Kiev in the Ukraine. Built in the late 1970s on the banks of the Pripyat River, Chernobyl had four reactors, each capable of producing 1,000 megawatts of electric power. On the evening of April 25, 1986, a group of engineers began an electrical-engineering experiment on the Number 4 reactor. The engineers, who had little knowledge of reactor physics, wanted to see if the reactor’s turbine could run emergency water pumps on inertial power.

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As part of their poorly designed experiment, the engineers disconnected the reactor’s emergency safety systems and its power-regulating system. Next, they compounded this recklessness with a series of mistakes: They ran the reactor at a power level so low that the reaction became unstable, and then removed too many of the reactor’s control rods in an attempt to power it up again. The reactor’s output rose to more than 200 megawatts but was proving increasingly difficult to control. Nevertheless, at 1:23 a.m. on April 26, the engineers continued with their experiment and shut down the turbine generator to see if its inertial spinning would power the reactor’s water pumps. In fact, it did not adequately power the water pumps, and without cooling water the power level in the reactor surged.

To prevent meltdown, the operators reinserted all the 200-some control rods into the reactor at once. The control rods were meant to reduce the reaction but had a design flaw: graphite tips. So, before the control rod’s five meters of absorbent material could penetrate the core, 200 graphite tips simultaneously entered, thus facilitating the reaction and causing an explosion that blew off the heavy steel and concrete lid of the reactor. It was not a nuclear explosion, as nuclear power plants are incapable of producing such a reaction, but was chemical, driven by the ignition of gases and steam that were generated by the runaway reaction. In the explosion and ensuing fire, more than 50 tons of radioactive material were released into the atmosphere, where it was carried by air currents.

A view of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant three days after the explosion. Despite cleanup, the area around the plant remains so contaminated that it’s officially closed off to human habitation.

Hone/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

The Elephant’s Foot, shown in reactor No. 4’s basement immediately after the meltdown, is a solid mass of melted nuclear fuel mixed with concrete, sand and core sealing material that the fuel had melted through.

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images

A technician in one of the reactors of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant tests for high levels of radiation in May 1986 after the accident.

Sovfoto/UIG/Getty Images

Under the sarcophagus, some 130 feet below ground, at the epicenter of the explosion, liquidator and Chernobyl engineer Georgi Reichtmann measures radiation levels in 1990.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

In 206 days, crews erected a steel and cement sarcophagus to entomb the damaged reactor. Here, an employee stands in front of a radiation sign at the sarcophagus a few years after its construction.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

The evacuation of 47,000 inhabitants of Pripyat in over a thousand buses only took a few hours. Locals were told they would return soon, but most never would.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

A man scans his produce for radioactivity after the Chernobyl accident in May 1986 in Strasbourg, France.

Dominique Gutekunst/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images

In this 2016 aerial view, a Soviet-era hammer and sickle stands on top of an abandoned apartment building in the ghost town of Pripyat not far from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The ruins of an auditorium in abandoned School Number 3 in Pripyat, Ukraine, on September 30, 2015. The city, only a couple miles from Chernobyl, was built to house plant workers and their families.

Getty Images / Sean Gallup

Bumper cars rust away in Pripyat. The ghost town lies in the inner exclusion zone around Chernobyl where persistently high levels of radiation make it uninhabitable for thousands of years to come.

Igor Kostin/Sygma/Getty Images

On April 27, Soviet authorities began an evacuation of the 30,000 inhabitants of Pripyat. A cover-up was attempted, but on April 28 Swedish radiation monitoring stations, more than 800 miles to the northwest of Chernobyl, reported radiation levels 40 percent higher than normal. Later that day, the Soviet news agency acknowledged that a major nuclear accident had occurred at Chernobyl.

In the opening days of the crisis, 32 people died at Chernobyl and dozens more suffered radiation burns. The radiation that escaped into the atmosphere, which was several times that produced by the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, was spread by the wind over Northern and Eastern Europe, contaminating millions of acres of forest and farmland. An estimated 5,000 Soviet citizens eventually died from cancer and other radiation-induced illnesses caused by their exposure to the Chernobyl radiation, and millions more had their health adversely affected. In 2000, the last working reactors at Chernobyl were shut down and the plant was officially closed.

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Citation Information

Article Title
Test triggers nuclear disaster at Chernobyl
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
May 13, 2026
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
May 28, 2025
Original Published Date
February 09, 2010