any of this? >> yeah. it's a great question. and you're right to ask it. well, when the weather is in your favor, the wind will blow any effluent, any of the vapor, anything that's vented or escapes from the plant, could blow it out to sea. if it blows east. but if it blows west, it could blow it back on to japanese territory or further on into east asia. and disburse it. now, if it rains, that's a good news/bad news situation. the rain will cleanse some of that material, radioactive material out of the atmosphere. so it will fall to the ground. it won't travel as far. but where it does fall, it will be more concentrated. so there's a bit of a tradeoff there. >> and further contaminate. and you said blowing east, still a possibility? >> exactly. >> do you see that possibly blowing very far east, thousands of miles that it would in any way impact the west coast of the u.s.? >> you know, i think that's highly unlikely. we saw during chernobyl, when