Nuclear Weapons.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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Regardless of the method used to attain a supercritical assembly, the chain reaction proceeds for about a millionth of a second, liberating vast amounts of heat energy.The extremely fast release of a very large amount of energy in a relatively small volume causes the temperature to rise to tens of millions of degrees.
The resultingrapid expansion and vaporization of the bomb material causes a powerful explosion.
VI PRODUCTION OF FISSILE MATERIAL
Much experimentation was necessary to make the production of fissile material practical.
A Separation of Uranium Isotopes
The fissile isotope uranium-235 accounts for only 0.7 percent of natural uranium; the remainder is composed of the heavier uranium-238.
No chemical methods sufficeto separate uranium-235 from ordinary uranium, because both uranium isotopes are chemically identical.
A number of techniques were devised to separate the two, allof which depend in principle on the slight difference in weight between the two types of uranium atoms.
A huge gaseous-diffusion plant was built during World War II in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
This plant was enlarged after the war, and two similar plants were built nearPaducah, Kentucky, and Portsmouth, Ohio.
The feed material for this type of plant consists of extremely corrosive uranium hexafluoride gas.
The gas is pumped againstbarriers that have many millions of tiny holes, through which the lighter molecules, which contain uranium-235 atoms, diffuse at a slightly greater rate than the heaviermolecules, containing uranium-238 ( see Diffusion).
After the gas has been cycled through thousands of barriers, known as stages, it is highly enriched in the lighter isotope of uranium.
The final product is weapon-grade uranium, containing more than 90 percent uranium-235.
B Producing Plutonium
Although the heavy uranium isotope uranium-238 will not sustain a chain reaction, it can be converted into a fissile material by bombarding it with neutrons andtransforming it into a new species of element.
When the uranium-238 atom captures a neutron in its nucleus, it is transformed into the heavier isotope uranium-239.This nuclear species quickly disintegrates to form neptunium-239, an isotope of element 93 ( see Neptunium).
Another disintegration transmutes this isotope into an isotope of element 94, called plutonium-239.
Plutonium-239, like uranium-235, undergoes fission after the absorption of a neutron and can be used as a bomb material.Producing plutonium-239 in large quantities requires an intense source of neutrons; the source is provided by the controlled chain reaction in a nuclear reactor.
See Nuclear Chemistry; Nuclear Energy.
During World War II nuclear reactors were designed to provide neutrons to produce plutonium.
Reactors capable of manufacturing large quantities of plutonium wereestablished in Hanford, Washington, and near Aiken, South Carolina.
VII THERMONUCLEAR, OR FUSION, WEAPONS
Even before the first atomic bomb was developed, scientists realized that a type of nuclear reaction different from the fission process was theoretically possible as asource of nuclear energy.
Instead of using the energy released as a result of a chain reaction in fissile material, nuclear weapons could use the energy liberated in thefusion of light elements.
This process is the opposite of fission, since it involves the fusing together of the nuclei of isotopes of light atoms such as hydrogen.
It is for thisreason that the weapons based on nuclear-fusion reactions are often called hydrogen bombs, or H-bombs.
Of the three isotopes of hydrogen the two heaviest species,deuterium and tritium, combine most readily to form helium.
Although the energy release in the fusion process is less per nuclear reaction than in fission, 0.5 kg (1.1 lb)of the lighter material contains many more atoms; thus, the energy liberated from 0.5 kg (1.1 lb) of hydrogen-isotope fuel is equivalent to that of about 29 kilotons ofTNT, or almost three times as much as from uranium.
This estimate, however, is based on complete fusion of all hydrogen atoms.
Fusion reactions occur only attemperatures of several millions of degrees, the rate increasing enormously with increasing temperature; such reactions consequently are known as thermonuclear(heat-induced) reactions.
Strictly speaking, the term thermonuclear implies that the nuclei have a range (or distribution) of energies characteristic of the temperature. This plays an important role in making rapid fusion reactions possible by an increase in temperature.
Development of the hydrogen bomb was impossible before the perfection of A-bombs, for only the latter could yield that tremendous heat necessary to achieve fusionof hydrogen atoms.
Atomic scientists regarded the A-bomb as the trigger of the projected thermonuclear device.
A Thermonuclear Tests
Following developmental tests in the spring of 1951 at the U.S.
Enewetak Proving Grounds in the Marshall Islands during Operation Greenhouse, a full-scale, successfulexperiment was conducted on November 1, 1952, with a fusion-type device.
This test, called Mike, which was part of Operation Ivy, produced an explosion with powerequivalent to several million tons of TNT (that is, several megatons).
The Soviet Union detonated a thermonuclear weapon in the megaton range in August 1953.
OnMarch 1, 1954, the United States exploded a fusion bomb with a power of 15 megatons.
It created a glowing fireball, more than 4.8 km (more than 3 mi) in diameter,and a huge mushroom cloud, which quickly rose into the stratosphere.
The March 1954 explosion led to worldwide recognition of the nature of radioactive fallout.
The fallout of radioactive debris from the huge bomb cloud also revealedmuch about the nature of the thermonuclear bomb.
Had the bomb been a weapon consisting of an A-bomb trigger and a core of hydrogen isotopes, the only persistentradioactivity from the explosion would have been the result of the fission debris from the trigger and from the radioactivity induced by neutrons in coral and seawater.Some of the radioactive debris, however, fell on the Lucky Dragon, a Japanese vessel engaged in tuna fishing about 160 km (about 100 mi) from the test site.
This radioactive dust was later analyzed by Japanese scientists.
The results demonstrated that the bomb that dusted the Lucky Dragon with fallout was more than just an H- bomb.
VIII FISSION-FUSION-FISSION BOMB
The thermonuclear bomb exploded in 1954 was a three-stage weapon.
The first stage consisted of a big A-bomb, which acted as a trigger.
The second stage was the H-bomb phase resulting from the fusion of deuterium and tritium within the bomb.
In the process helium and high-energy neutrons were formed.
The third stage resultedfrom the impact of these high-speed neutrons on the outer jacket of the bomb, which consisted of natural uranium, or uranium-238.
No chain reaction was produced,but the fusion neutrons had sufficient energy to cause fission of the uranium nuclei and thus added to the explosive yield and also to the radioactivity of the bombresidues.
IX EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
The effects of nuclear weapons were carefully observed, both after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and after many test explosions in the 1950s and early.
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