safety shutdown - meaning and definition. What is safety shutdown
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What (who) is safety shutdown - definition

EMERGENCY SHUTDOWN OF A NUCLEAR REACTOR
Scram switch; SCRAM; Scramming; Trip, reactor; Safety Cut Rope Ax Man; АЗ-5; A3-5; AZ5 button; Reactor scram
  • Control rod and SCRAM circuitry for the Chicago Pile-1
  • Experimental Breeder Reactor I]] in Idaho, USA. Sometimes the switch will have a flip cover to prevent inadvertent operation.
  • NS ''Savannah'']]
  • [[Norman Hilberry]] (left) and [[Leó Szilárd]] at Stagg Field, site of the first self-sustaining nuclear chain-reaction.

scram         
to drag your fingernails across someone's skin (usually their face) in an effort to inflict pain and at least leave thick pink weals. not quite the same as to scratch. tended to be a schoolkid thing.
miss miss! tell her, she scrammed me!
Scram         
A scram or SCRAM is an emergency shutdown of a nuclear reactor effected by immediately terminating the fission reaction. It is also the name that is given to the manually operated kill switch that initiates the shutdown.
scram switch         
<jargon> (From the nuclear power industry) An emergency power-off switch (see Big Red Switch), especially one positioned to be easily hit by evacuating personnel. In general, this is *not* something you frob lightly; these often initiate expensive events (such as Halon dumps) and are installed in a dinosaur pen for use in case of electrical fire or in case some luckless field servoid should put 120 volts across himself while Easter egging. SCRAM stands for Safety Control Rod Ax Man. In the early days of nuclear power, boron moderator rods were raised and lowered on ropes. In the event of a runaway chain reaction, a man with an axe would chop the rope and drop the rods into the nuclear pile to stop the reaction. See also molly-guard, TMRC. [Jargon File] (2003-05-17)

Wikipedia

Scram

A scram or SCRAM is an emergency shutdown of a nuclear reactor effected by immediately terminating the fission reaction. It is also the name that is given to the manually operated kill switch that initiates the shutdown. In commercial reactor operations, this type of shutdown is often referred to as a "scram" at boiling water reactors (BWR), a "reactor trip" at pressurized water reactors and at a CANDU reactor. In many cases, a scram is part of the routine shutdown procedure, which serves to test the emergency shutdown system.

The etymology of the term is a matter of debate. United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission historian Tom Wellock notes that scram is English-language slang for leaving quickly and urgently, and cites this as the original and most likely accurate basis for the use of scram in the technical context. A persistent alternative explanation posits that scram is an acronym for "safety control rod axe man", which was supposedly coined by Enrico Fermi when the world's first nuclear reactor was built under the spectator seating at the University of Chicago's Stagg Field. That reactor had an actual control rod tied to a rope, with a man with an axe standing next to it. It could also stand for "safety control rods activation mechanism" or "safety control rod actuator mechanism", but both of these are probably backronyms from the original, non-technical usage.

The Russian name, AZ-5 (АЗ-5, in Cyrillic), is an abbreviation for аварийная защита 5-й категории (avariynaya zashchita 5-y kategorii), which translates to "emergency protection of the 5th category" in English.