Title: Introduction to Nuclear Weapons
1Introduction to Nuclear Weapons
2I. Nuclear Physics
- Key Concepts
- The atom Nucleus surrounded by electrons
(a.k.a. beta particles)
32. The Nucleus Protons and Neutrons
- Electro-magnetism holds electrons in orbit
(electrons are negatively charges, protons are
positive) - Strong nuclear force holds protons and neutrons
together (137 times as strong as
electro-magnetism)
43. Elements
- Definition Elements are atoms with the same of
protons in nuclei (their atomic number) - Change protons change element
- Atomic weight protons neutrons electrons
(trivial weight) - Change neutrons but not protons same element
but different atomic weight ? isotope (Carbon-12,
Carbon-13, Carbon 14, etc.)
54. The novelty of nuclear weapons
- Chemistry Elements are combined into compounds
(atoms become molecules), which can release
electro-magnetic energy as heat, light, etc. ALL
weapons before 1945 use chemistry explosives,
napalm, toxins, etc. - Nuclear weapons use the strong nuclear force for
destruction ? inherently more powerful than any
possible chemical reaction (by weight)
6B. Fission Splitting a Nucleus
- Heavy nuclei are unstable Put too many protons
together and they repel each other. Too many (or
too few) neutrons can increase this repulsion. - Spontaneous fission Unstable heavy nuclei can
randomly fission break into two smaller nuclei
(different elements).
73. Induced fission
- Throw a neutron at an unstable nucleus and
- It might escape (pass by without being captured
by nucleus) - Be absorbed into the nucleus
- Trigger fission of the nucleus into two nuclei
(shown)
84. The Fission Chain Reaction
- More energy is required to hold one heavy nucleus
together than two moderate-sized nuclei. - Therefore, splitting a heavy nucleus releases a
great deal of energy (strong nuclear force). - If neutrons cause fission, and fission creates
more neutrons, a chain reaction may ensue. Small
initial energy (a few neutrons) cascades to
trillions of split nuclei. - Uncontrolled chain reaction fission explosion.
Requires Critical Mass (enough nuclei close
together for neutrons to be more likely to hit
nuclei than fly out of the mass without hitting
anything) - Critical mass varies by element, isotope, shape
(spheres work best), and density (so compressing
sub-critical mass can make it go critical and
explode)
9Example Chain Reaction in U-235
10C. Fusion Combining Nuclei
- It takes more energy to hold two light nuclei
together than a single moderate-sized nucleus. - Therefore, forcing two light nuclei together into
one nucleus generates energy. - In general, fusion produces more energy than
fission (which means bigger bombs)
11Curve of Binding Energy Note energy increase in
fusion (light elements) compared to fission
(heavy elements)
124. The problem of fusion
- Fission is easy just throw some neutrons at
inherently-unstable nuclei and they split - Fusion is hard Hydrogen doesnt just randomly
slam into itself with the energy level of the
suns core. About 100 million degrees required
to overcome strong nuclear force. - All efforts to create controlled fusion use more
energy to force the nuclei together than they
extract from fusion - BUT we do have one tool to generate huge amounts
of uncontrolled energy a fission chain
reaction! (Even this just barely provides enough
energy limiting fusion weapons to very light
elements like hydrogen)
13II. Weapon Design
- The most basic fission weapon (aka atomic bomb)
The U-235 weapon - U-235 is fissile Only low-energy neutrons are
needed to split the nucleus. Other types of
uranium (U-238, the most common type) require
very high-energy neutrons for fission ( nearly
impossible to create a chain reaction) - Critical mass of U-235 50 kg (about 110 pounds)
in a sphere.
14Advantage of U-235 over U-238
153. The gun-type nuclear weapon
- Principle Quickly mash two sub-critical pieces
of U-235 together into one piece above critical
mass. Detonation ensues. - Simplified design
164. Barriers to building a gun-type weapon
- Getting the U-235
- 99.3 of Uranium is U-238. Must enrich uranium
to increase of U-235 - Combine uranium with fluorine to make uranium
hexafluoride gas (hex). Then put hex in a
container surrounded by a membrane. Slightly
more U-235 will diffuse out than U-238. Also
useful
17Gas Centrifuges
- Since U-235 is lighter than U-238, spinning hex
rapidly pulls the U-238 to the edge and leaves
more U-235 in the middle - US cascade of centrifuges ?
18b. The danger of fizzle
- Difficult to eliminate the last U-238 from the
U-235 (Hiroshima bomb was 80 U-235 / 20 U-238) - U-238 spontaneously fissions, generating neutrons
- Danger chance that U-238 will start a partial
chain reaction just before critical mass is
reached. Blows U-235 apart before most of it has
a chance to fission. Result small explosion. - Solution assemble critical mass so quickly that
U-238 is unlikely to spontaneously fission at the
wrong moment (we now know Hiroshima bomb had just
under a 10 chance of fizzle the U-238 in the
weapon spontaneously fissioned about 70
times/second) - Similar problem makes U-233 gun-type bombs
difficult to build (contaminated with U-232,
which fissions too rapidly) and Pu-239 ones
impossible (contaminated with Pu-240) - More complex designs reduce but do not
eliminate chance of fizzle. DPRK test probably
fizzled (very small blast)
19c. Safety problems
- Accident-prone Two subcritical masses kept in
close proximity to explosives - Accidental moderation Seawater moderates
(slows) neutrons, and slower neutrons are more
likely to cause fission before escaping the core.
Result drop bomb in seawater potential
detonation! - Terrorists dream Easy to use U-235 to improvise
a nuclear device
20B. The Basic Implosion-Type Fission Weapon
- Why bother?
- Desire to use Pu-239 (can be made using nuclear
reactors, so no separation necessary) - Compressing material takes 1/10 the time of
slamming it together (helps prevent fizzle) - Less fissile material is required if it can be
compressed - Much safer accidental detonation can be made
impossible - Allows flexibility some or all charges can be
detonated, compressing material to different
degrees
21Advantage of Pu-239 ?
222. The basic components
- Subcritical mass of Plutonium (any isotope),
U-233 (rarely), U-235, Np-237 (similar to U-235
but easier to obtain), or Am-241 (theoretically)
surrounded by explosives ? nearly all designs use
Pu-239 or U-235 - Explosives are shaped, layered, and timed to
generate a spherical shock wave - Neutron initiator supplies neutrons to begin
fission at right moment too soon causes fizzle,
but so does too late (material rebounds after
compression) - Tamper between explosives and Pu-239 helps to
reflect neutrons and hold compression for a
moment or two to maximize yield
23Simplified Implosion Design
243. Maximizing Efficiency (Proportion of material
that fissions before the whole thing blows itself
apart into sub-critical pieces)
- Neutron reflector Surrounds fissile material
below tamper to bounce stray neutrons back into
the core - Levitating core Empty space between tamper and
core to allow tamper to build up momentum
(standard in todays weapons) - External neutron trigger (particle accelerator
outside the sphere) also useful if you want to
put something else in the center of the core.
25C. Boosted Fission Weapons Using Fusion to
Increase Power
- Problem Most fissile material wasted (only
1-20 fission before it blows itself apart
Hiroshima bomb was 1.4 efficient). More
neutrons needed! - Solution fill core with isotopes of H that fuse
easily Deuterium (D or H-2 -- 1 proton, 1
neutron) and Tritium (T or H-3 -- 1 proton, 2
neutrons) can fuse into He-4 (2 protons, 2
neutrons), creating energy and 1 extra neutron.
Fusion energy generated is trivial in these
weapons, but - The boost Extra neutrons hit the fissile
material and cause more of it to fission before
blowing itself apart. Result much larger
explosion (about double the explosive power). - Advantages Higher yield for equal mass which
also means weapons can be miniaturized (up to a
point), dial-a-yield through control of D/T
injected into center.
26Schematic of Primary Part of Boosted Fission
Weapon
Hollow core, where D (H-2) and T (H-3) are
injected for boosting.
Fissile material (U-235 or Pu-239)
Beryllium reflector (2 cm)
Tamper (tungsten or uranium) (3 cm)
High explosive (10 cm)
Aluminum case (1 cm)
27C. Boosted Fission Weapons Using Fusion to
Increase Power
- Problem Most fissile material wasted (only
1-20 fission before it blows itself apart
Hiroshima bomb was 1.4 efficient). More
neutrons needed! - Solution fill core with isotopes of H that fuse
easily Deuterium (D or H-2 -- 1 proton, 1
neutron) and Tritium (T or H-3 -- 1 proton, 2
neutrons) can fuse into He-4 (2 protons, 2
neutrons), creating energy and 1 extra neutron.
Fusion energy generated is trivial in these
weapons, but - The boost Extra neutrons hit the fissile
material and cause more of it to fission before
blowing itself apart. Result much larger
explosion (about double the explosive power). - Advantages Higher yield for equal mass which
also means weapons can be miniaturized (up to a
point), dial-a-yield through control of D/T
injected into center.
28D. Staged Fusion Weapons The Thermonuclear or
Hydrogen Bomb
- Parts
- The primary stage A fission device
- The secondary stage designed to fuse when
bombarded with radiation - The casing Usually made of U-238
292. Inside the Secondary
- Radiation channels filled with polystyrene foam
surround the capsule - The capsule walls are made of U-238
- Spark plug of plutonium boosts fusion
303. Radiation Implosion
- Primary ignites ? high-energy X-Rays
- X-Rays fill the radiation channels, turn
polystyrene to plasma - Tamper is heated ? outside ablates (vaporizes
think of an inside-out rocket). Ablation
compresses the nuclear fuel. - Plasma helps keep the tamper from blocking the
radiation channels, increasing duration of
compression
314. The fusion explosion
- Compressed fuel must still be heated
- Plutonium spark plug in center of fusion fuel
is compressed, becomes super-critical and
fissions (raises temperature inside case) - Result huge pressures and temperatures produce
fusion, which releases far more energy than
fission PLUS fast fission of spark plug from
fusion-produced neutrons
325. The fuel
- Early designs (first US test) used deuterium and
tritium but this required cryogenic machinery
(D and T are gases at room temperature) - Modern designs use solid Lithium Deuteride
instead. Enriched fuel (lots of Li-6) much more
effective. - The fusion process Neutrons from fission turn
some D into T, which then fuse together,
generating more neutrons. Some D and T also
fuses with Lithium (but this generates less
energy).
33E. Enhanced Fusion Weapons
- Fission-Fusion-Fission designs Make the bomb
case out of U-238 or even U-235 and it will
detonate when neutrons from the fusion capsule
hit it, greatly enhancing yield (doubling power
is easy) - Multi-stage weapons Use the secondary stage to
compress a tertiary stage, and so forth. Each
stage can be 10-100 times larger than previous
stage ( unlimited explosive potential)
34III. Detonation Parameters
- Yield A measure of explosive power
- Expressed as kt or Mt of TNT
- Measures power not weight 20 kt weapon is
equivalent to detonating 20,000 TONS of TNT all
at once. 1 Mt means the equivalent of a million
tons of TNT detonating at once.
35Examples Tiny to Huge
- Oklahoma City non-nuclear bomb (.002 Kt)
- Davy Crockett nuclear rifle (.01 kt)
- British tactical nuclear weapon (1.5 kt)
- The nuclear cannon (15 kt)
- Hiroshima (15 kt) and Nagasaki (20 kt)
- Max pure fission Orange Herald (720 kt)
- Chinese (3 Mt) and British (1.8 Mt) H-Bombs
- Largest deployed weapon (25 Mt)
- Tsar Bomba, the largest bomb tested (58 Mt)
36Comparative fireballs by yield
37B. Height Air-Burst vs. Ground-Burst
- Zones of destruction (1 Mt weapon)
- Groundburst (energy concentrated at ground zero)
- Airburst (energy distributed over wider area)
38IV. Effects of Nuclear Weapons
- Prompt effects
- Thermal and visible radiation (heat and light)
- Initial pulse 1/10 second (too quick for eyes
to react). Few killed, but many blinded - Second pulse most heat damage, lasts up to 20
seconds for large weapons
39c. Biological effects
- i. Flash burns Most prominent on exposed
areas (i.e. dark areas of kimono worn by this
victim)
40Burns 1.5 miles from hypocenter in Nagasaki
41Add 20 for 1st degree burn range, subtract 20
for 3rd degree burn range
42ii. Blindness Most far-reaching prompt effect
- Flash blindness (temporary) and retinal burns
(permanent) from light focused on retina
43iii. Fire Storms
- Heat ignites flammable materials
- If large enough area burns, it creates its own
wind system, sucking in oxygen to feed the flames - Natural example in Peshtigo, WI (1871) A wall
of flame, a mile high, five miles (8 km) wide,
traveling 90 to 100 miles (200 km) an hour,
hotter than a crematorium, turning sand into
glass. - Firestorms in Hiroshima (but not Nagasaki),
Dresden, Tokyo in World War II. - Result Large numbers of people not burned by
nuclear detonation will be burned by subsequent
firestorms sweeping through city
442. Blast damage
- Heat of fireball causes air to expand rapidly,
generating a shock wave - Shock wave hits and damages buildings, and is
followed by - Low-pressure area follows and sucks everything
backwards (blast wind)
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47Note the Mach Front
481 Mt
49d. Biological Effects
- Few likely to die from blast wave itself, but
flying debris may kill many - Lung damage occurs at about 70 KPa (double the
pressure needed to shatter concrete walls) - Ear damage begins at 22 KPa (as brick walls
shatter) - In general, heat will kill anyone close enough to
experience primary blast damage. Crushed
buildings will kill many outside this zone.
503. Ionizing Radiation
- For most weapons, immediate radiation (gamma rays
and neutrons) will only kill those very close to
the explosion - More on biological effects later
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52Hiroshima Health Dept Estimates
534. Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP)
- High-altitude nuclear bursts generate magnetic
fields over large areas (induces current in
transistors and integrated circuits) ? fried
electronics
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55B. Fallout
- Definition Radioactive particles fall to earth
(fission products, contaminated soil and debris
sucked up by explosion)
562. Dangers of Ionizing Radiation
- Alpha radiation
- Composed of Helium nuclei (2 protons, 2 neutrons)
- Little danger unless inhaled or ingested
stopped by a piece of paper (or skin) - Very destructive if inhaled or ingested (only
known example Alexander Litvinenko, poisoned
with alpha-emitter Po-210)
57b. Beta radiation
- Consists of electrons emitted by radioactive
atoms - Can burn exposed skin stopped by clothing,
skin, and goggles - Effective range is only a few feet, so exposure
to radioactive dust is most likely source of
damage (no known fatalities from beta exposure at
Hiroshima or Nagasaki)
58c. Gamma radiation
- Extremely high energy photons emitted by the
detonation and fallout - Penetrating power is high. Needed to reduce
exposure by half
59d. Neutron radiation
- Produced by blast itself, insignificant in
fallout - Induces radioactivity (alpha, beta, gamma) in
materials it encounters - Shielding requires light elements (hydrogen,
lithium) - Enhanced-Radiation Weapons, aka Neutron Bombs
-- permit fusion-produced neutrons to escape,
killing people even in armored vehicles
(explosions still level civilian structures)
60e. Measures of Radiation
- Measurements of exposure 100 rad 1 gray
- Relative biological effectiveness (RBE) alpha
up to 20, neutron varies, beta/gamma/X-Rays 1 - Measures of effect rad RBE rem, gray RBE
sievert - Since gamma exposure is likely to be source of
most radiation poisoning, rad usually rem and
gray usually sievert
61f. Radiation Poisoning (Acute Radiation Syndrome)
- Triggered by cumulative exposure hourly dose
hours exposed
62 63g. Danger of Internal Absorption
- Strontium-90 is chemically similar to Calcium ?
incorporated into bones - Iodine 131 is absorbed by the thyroid
- Cesium 137 is chemically similar to potassium and
absorbed throughout the body
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653. Distribution of Fallout
- Fallout point-source pollutant (exposure
almost always decreases with distance) - Key variables speed and direction of wind.
- Closer to source usually more dangerous but
downwind hot spots are possible
661 Mt Surface Burst Cumulative and Hourly
Radiation Exposure
67Hot Spots from Castle Bravo Test
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69b. US-USSR Predictions
70Fallout (1977 estimates)
71Fallout (1990 Estimate)
72Fallout (USSR Estimate)
734. Half-Life
- Definition Time for 50 of a radioactive
substance to decay - Short half-life These isotopes are very
radioactive but dont last long - Long half-life These are less radioactive but
also long-lived
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76Example 100 KT Surface Blast, Fort Hood Main Gate
- 100 KT larger than ordinary fission bomb,
smaller than largest Russian weapons
7715 psi Virtually all dead 5 psi 50 dead, 45
injured 2 psi 5 dead, 45 injured) 1 psi 25
injured
78Compare 1 MT Surface Blast
79Compare 20KT Surface Blast
80100 KT Surface Fallout
1 hour Lethal
2 hours Lethal
3 hours Lethal
4 hours Lethal and 50 Lethal
5 hours Lethal and 50 Lethal
Possible Zone of Sickness
81C. Nuclear Winter
- Theory that nuclear war would cause global
cooling ? bigger nuclear wars more and longer
cooling - Mechanism Soot and smoke from urban firestorms
and forest fires rises to stratosphere, carried
around globe, remains for prolonged time, blocks
sunlight
82Nuclear Holocaust
833. Technical Issues (See Pry)
- Initial TTAPS study (dramatized here) was poor
- Models assume carbon lofted into stratosphere
but this process is only confirmed for very small
particles (diesel soot) - Models assume urban/forest targeting bases may
be more logical targets - Standard objections to climate modeling (no
global climate models are perfect)
844. Political Issues Why Hard-Liners (such as
Pry) Opposed the Theory
- Theory undermines conventional deterrence if
nuclear winter is believed by policymakers, the
world is safe for conventional war - Theory undermines nuclear deterrence Irrational
to retaliate if doing so makes nuclear winter
worse for everyone (including ones own people) - Theory undermines rationale for nuclear arms
race more weapons threaten human extinction if
used (early studies come from left-wing
scientists and environmentalists)
855. Scientific Analysis
- Cold War studies Better science generally found
smaller nuclear winter effects - (note that most studies were excluded from Prys
chart on p. 203 which was taken from the
conservative National Review)
86b. Post-Cold War Studies
- Almost no studies 1990-2005 Why?
- 2006 study 100 Hiroshima-sized bombs on 100
subtropical cities (obviously talking about India
and Pakistan)
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88b. Post-Cold War Studies
- Almost no studies 1990-2005 Why?
- 2006 study 100 Hiroshima-sized bombs on 100
subtropical cities (obviously talking about India
and Pakistan) - Predicts that some tropospheric soot (which
usually rains out quickly) would be heated by the
sun and enter the stratosphere (where no rain
occurs) - Predicts reduced cooling but lasts longer (up to
10 years)
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91Chief danger Food Supply
- Summer wont turn to winter but it may turn to
autumn, with repeated freezes threatening crops
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93Chief danger Food Supply
- Summer wont turn to winter but it may turn to
autumn, with repeated freezes threatening crops - Besides temperature, ozone depletion, changes in
precipitation, and reduced sunlight all reduce
productivity
942008 Study A SORT War
- Imagines 2012 global nuclear war using arsenals
which have been reduced by (existing) arms
control agreements
95- SORT war scenario open to question
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97Comparison Regional (5 Tg) vs. SORT (150 Tg or
more)
98D. Popular Perceptions and Propaganda
- 1. Examples of anti-nuclear research and culture
- Nuclear Winter Theory popularized by Carl Sagan
before academic publication (PARADE Magazine) - Film treatments dramatize dangers in 1980s
- The Day After
- Threads
- When the Wind Blows
99Soviet Propaganda Examples
- Two worlds - two goals. We are planning new
life. They are planning death.
100Soviet Propaganda Examples
- A Christmas present for the people
101Soviet Propaganda Examples
102Soviet Propaganda Examples
103D. Popular Perceptions and Propaganda
- 1. Examples of anti-nuclear research and culture
- Nuclear Winter Theory popularized by Carl Sagan
before academic publication (PARADE Magazine) - Film treatments dramatize dangers in 1980s
- The Day After
- Threads
- When the Wind Blows
- Soviet Propaganda
- Responses
- Indictments of the TTAPS study (long after others
have moved on) - Pry, Societal Survival (Assigned)
- Most responses focused on elites, not public (no
counter-films, for example). Why?