A nuclear weapon derives its
destructive force from nuclear reactions of fusion or fission. As a result, even
a nuclear weapon with a small yield is significantly more powerful than the
largest conventional explosives, and a single weapon is capable of destroying an
entire city.
Little
Boy and Fat Man Replicas
National
Atomic Energy Museum, Albuquerque, New Mexico
In the history of warfare, two
nuclear weapons have been detonated - both by the United States, during the
closing days of World War II. The first was detonated on the morning of 6 August
1945, when the United States dropped a uranium gun-type device code-named
"Little Boy" on the Japanese city of Hiroshima.
Aerial
view of Hiroshima Bombing
Atomic
Bomb Damage of Hiroshima
Distance
from
Ground Zero (km)
Killed
Injured
Population
0
-1.0
86%
10%
31,200
1.0
- 2.5
27%
37%
144,800
2.5
- 5.0
2%
25%
80,300
Total
27%
30%
256,300
The second was detonated three
days later when the United States dropped a plutonium implosion-type device
code-named "Fat Man" on the city of Nagasaki.
Fireball
and Mushroom Cloud Over Nagasaki
Atomic
Bomb Damage of Nagasaki
Distance
from
Ground Zero (km)
Killed
Injured
Population
0
- 1.0
88%
6%
30,900
1.0
- 2.5
34%
29%
27,700
2.5
- 5.0
11%
10%
115,200
Total
22%
12%
173,800
These bombings resulted in the
immediate deaths of around 120,000 people from injuries sustained from the
explosion and acute radiation sickness, and even more deaths over time from
long-term effects of radiation.
Since the Hiroshima and Nagasaki
bombings, nuclear weapons have been detonated on over two thousand occasions for
testing purposes and demonstration purposes. The only countries known to have
detonated such weapons are (chronologically) the United States, the Soviet
Union, the United Kingdom, France, the People's Republic of China, India,
Pakistan, and North Korea.
Various other countries may hold
nuclear weapons but have never publicly admitted possession, or their claims to
possession have not been verified. For example, Israel has modern airborne
delivery systems and appears to have an extensive nuclear program with hundreds
of warheads (see Israel and weapons of mass destruction), though it officially
maintains a policy of "ambiguity" with respect to its actual
possession of nuclear weapons. According to some estimates, it possesses as many
as 200 nuclear warheads. Iran currently stands accused by the United Nations of
attempting to develop nuclear capabilities, though its government claims that
its acknowledged nuclear activities, such as uranium enrichment, are for
peaceful purposes, i.e., for nuclear power. South Africa also secretly developed
a small nuclear arsenal, but disassembled it in the early 1990s.
There are two basic types of
nuclear weapons. The first are weapons which produce their explosive energy
through nuclear fission reactions alone. These are known colloquially as atomic
bombs, A-bombs, or fission bombs. In fission weapons, a mass of fissile material
(enriched uranium or plutonium) is assembled into a supercritical mass - the
amount of material needed to start an exponentially growing nuclear chain
reaction - either by shooting one piece of sub-critical material into another
(the "gun" method), or by compressing a sub-critical sphere of
material using chemical explosives to many times its original density (the
"implosion" method). The latter approach is considered more
sophisticated than the former, and only the latter approach can be used if
plutonium is the fissile material used.
Credit
"Wikimedia Commons"
A major challenge in all nuclear
weapon designs is to ensure that a significant fraction of the fuel is consumed
before the weapon destroys itself. The amount of energy released by fission
bombs can range between the equivalent of less than a ton of TNT upwards to
around 500,000 tons (500 kilotons) of TNT.
The second basic type of nuclear
weapon produces a large amount of its energy through nuclear fusion reactions,
and can be over a thousand times more powerful than fission bombs as fusion
reactions release much more energy per unit of mass than fission reactions.
These are known as hydrogen bombs, H-bombs, thermonuclear bombs, or fusion
bombs. Only six countries - United States, Russia, United Kingdom, People's
Republic of China, France, and India - have detonated hydrogen bombs.
Hydrogen bombs work by using the
energy of a fission bomb in order to compress and heat fusion fuel. In the
Teller-Ulam design, which accounts for all multi-megaton yield hydrogen bombs,
this is accomplished by placing a fission bomb and fusion fuel (tritium,
deuterium, or lithium deuteride) in proximity within a special,
radiation-reflecting container. When the fission bomb is detonated, gamma and
X-rays emitted at the speed of light first compress the fusion fuel, and then
heat it to thermonuclear temperatures. The ensuing fusion reaction creates
enormous numbers of high-speed neutrons, which then can induce fission in
materials which normally are not prone to it, such as depleted uranium. Each of
these component is known as a "stage," with the fission bomb as the
"primary" and the fusion capsule as the "secondary." In
large hydrogen bombs, about half of the yield, and much of the resulting nuclear
fallout, comes from the final fissioning of depleted uranium. [8] By chaining
together numerous stages with increasing amounts of fusion fuel, thermonuclear
weapons can be made to an almost arbitrary yield; the largest ever detonated
(the Tsar Bomba of the USSR) released an energy equivalent to over 50 million
tons (megatons) of TNT. Most hydrogen bombs are considerably smaller than this,
though, due to constraints in fitting them into the space and weight
requirements of missile warheads
Nuclear
holocaust
Nuclear
holocaust refers to the complete or nearly complete eradication of
human civilization by nuclear warfare.
Operation
Upshot-Knothole, BADGER Event was a 23-kiloton tower event
detonated on 18 April 1953, at the Nevada Test Site
photo courtesy
of National Nuclear Security Administration / Nevada Site Office
The word "holocaust"
is defined as "great destruction resulting in the extensive
loss of life, especially by fire." It is derived from the
Greek term "holokaustos" meaning "burnt
whole".
Nuclear, or atomic warfare, is a
war in which nuclear weapons are used. In the history of nuclear
weapons, they have only ever been used twice in a state of war the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Nuclear Bomb
Effects
The energy released from a
nuclear weapon comes in four primary categories:
Blast - 40-60%
of total energy
Thermal
radiation - 30-50%
of total energy
Ionizing
radiation - 5% of
total energy
Residual
radiation - 5-10% of
total energy
A fireball
is immediately formed as the gamma rays from the explosion
superheat nearby air and/or other material . For an explosion in
the atmosphere, the fireball will quickly expand to a maximum
size, then continue cooling as it rises through the surrounding
cooler air. This becomes the characteristic mushroom cloud.
Flash
is the intense light and other thermal radiation given off by the
fireball. With a temperature of thousands of degrees, the fireball
radiates visible light, infrared light, and ultraviolet light. At
close ranges, this light can cause heating and/or ignition of
combustible materials and cause burn injuries to people. The
damaging quantities of flash energy are released over a period of
time that is longer for larger weapons, ranging from a fraction of
a second for smaller weapons to a fraction of a minute for the
largest weapons.
Ground
or water shock will result from explosions on (or near) the
surface of the ground or water. This ground shock can damage or
destroy hardened underground structures. In water this shock will
be damaging to nearby vessels and may also produce a surface wave
to limited ranges. A crater is formed by an explosion at (or near)
the ground surface. The size of the crater depends on the type of
ground material and how close to the ground surface the explosion
occurs.
Summary
of effects is based on a 20-megaton ground-burst nuclear
detonation above a city with a population of 2.8 million during
the day when many people from outlying areas would be in the city
working or shopping.
Blast
is the shock wave traveling through the atmosphere. This shock
wave separates from the expanding fireball and briefly travels
faster than sound, but then slows to the speed of sound. The
arrival of the blast includes a sudden overpressure and high
winds--winds initially outward, then reversing direction briefly
before subsiding. At close ranges the blast will damage or destroy
buildings and other structures and blow objects through the air.
The blast corresponds to the "noise" of a nuclear
explosion: until the blast arrives, which is generally after the
flash effects, there is no direct noise from the explosion through
the air.
Prompt radiation
includes neutron radiation and gamma radiation released in the
first few seconds of the detonation. These radiations are absorbed
by the atmosphere, so they are only important close to the
detonation. Prompt radiation is ionizing radiation and causes
biological injury at the cellular level and molecular level. For
doses over 1000 rem, death is virtually certain within days to
weeks from failure of the digestive system or the central nervous
system. From 100 rem to 1000 rem, the symptoms known as radiation
sickness include injury to the tissues that produce blood.
Symptoms may not appear for a few days; if death results, it will
occur within one to eight weeks.
Smaller radiation doses may
produce genetic defects in reproductive cells (potentially
producing birth defects in offspring) or increased risk of cancer
(and related diseases) developing years to decades later. The
risks in both cases, however, are not dramatically different from
(normal) background rates--at least for doses small enough not to
cause immediate death.
Electromagnetic pulse
(EMP)
is important only for high altitude bursts. For such detonations,
ionization of the upper atmosphere can produce a brief intense
pulse of radio frequency radiation which can damage or disrupt
electronic devices. For explosions above most of the atmosphere,
EMP can affect large areas.
Ionization of the atmosphere
from explosions in the atmosphere can interfere with radar and
radio communications for short periods.
Charged particles
produced by explosions above the Earth's atmosphere can be
captured by the Earth's magnetic field, temporarily creating
radiation belts that can damage spacecraft or injure
astronauts/cosmonauts in orbit.
Fallout
or delayed radiation is ionizing radiation from radioactive
byproducts of the detonation. If these radioactive atoms are
combined with debris from the ground or water droplets in the air,
they will slowly settle to the ground downwind. This occurs with
surface (or near surface) bursts. Local fallout is that material
settling from the troposphere, within hours to a few days. For
explosions high enough that the fireball does not touch the
ground, the radioactive atoms tend to disperse sufficiently that
local fallout is relatively insignificant.
Material lifted into the
stratosphere may be dispersed far more widely and is called global
fallout, settling to the ground over weeks and months. Global
fallout is far less intense due to this dispersion and because the
delay in reaching the ground reduces the radioactivity. Basically,
global fallout is only important for large numbers of explosions
(hundreds or thousands).
Since fallout is deposited by
the wind, if and where it falls is very weather dependent. Once
the radioactive fallout has been deposited on the ground, it
continues giving off radiation. The rate of radiation decays in
general by a factor of ten for every factor of seven increase in
time after the explosion. Thus, fallout on the ground may be
dangerous for days, weeks, or months depending on how much was
present initially and whether any is moved (by erosion, for
example).
The biological effects of
radiation doses from fallout are the same as those for prompt
radiation, with some differences. Because the radiation comes from
particles, these particles can be inhaled and/or ingested
(directly or from contaminated food), causing radiation injury to
specific body organs. Radioactive particles on the skin can
produce radiation burns to the skin. The biological effects cited
for prompt radiation are diminished if the radiation is absorbed
over periods of time of more than a week--with the exception of
long-term effects such as production of cancer. Because radiation
from fallout may be delivered over a longer period of time, these
long-term effects may be non-negligible.
A nuclear explosion adjacent to
highly radioactive material (such as spent fuel from a nuclear
reactor) will vaporize the material and absorb this into the
fireball. As a result, the fallout will be more severe and
significantly more long lasting (hazardous for months or years,
depending on intensity).
Changes in trace
stratospheric gases can
result for detonations in the atmosphere if the fireball rises
into the stratosphere. In this case, the high temperatures of the
fireball destroy ozone and create various oxides of nitrogen. For
large numbers (hundreds or thousands) of high yield detonations,
these changes can exceed natural variations. Such depletion of
ozone would increase solar ultraviolet reaching the Earth's
surface. Nitrogen oxides tend to produce a global cooling effect.
Both consequences would return to normal over periods of years.
Nuclear winter or nuclear
autumn is associated
with large numbers of explosions (hundreds or thousands) over
cities or other sources of combustible material. If smoke (and/or
dust) from such explosions reach the stratosphere in large
quantities, this material can take months or years to settle out
of the atmosphere. By blocking sunlight from reaching the surface
and lower atmosphere, this smoke can reduce sunlight and
temperatures at the surface. Current understanding is that this
phenomenon could have some effect on agricultural outputs but
would not cause unnaturally cold temperatures or total crop
failures.
The following summary of
effects is based on a 20-megaton ground-burst nuclear detonation
above a city with a population of 2.8 million during the day when
many people from outlying areas would be in the city working or
shopping.
Ground Zero to Two Miles
Within 1/1000th of a second, a
fireball would form, enveloping downtown and reaching out for two
miles in every direction from the point where the bomb went off,
commonly known as ground zero. Temperatures would rise to 20
million degrees Fahrenheit, and everything--buildings, trees,
cars, and people--would be vaporized.
Two Miles to Four Miles from
Ground Zero:
Out to a distance of 4 miles,
the blast would produce pressures of 25 pounds per square inch and
winds in excess of 650 miles per hour. These titanic forces would
rip buildings apart and level everything, including reinforced
concrete and steel structures. Even deep underground bomb shelters
would be crushed.
Four Miles to Ten Miles from
Ground Zero:
As far as six miles from the
center of the explosion, the heat would vaporize automobile sheet
metal. Glass would melt. Out to a distance of ten miles in all
directions, the heat would still be intense enough to melt sheet
metal. At this distance, the blast wave would create pressures of
7 to 10 pounds per square inch and winds of 200 miles per hour.
Reinforced concrete buildings would be heavily damaged and all
other buildings--masonry and wood frame--would be leveled.
Sixteen Miles from Ground
Zero:
At a distance of 16 miles from
the center, the heat would ignite all easily flammable materials
(houses, paper, cloth, leaves, gasoline, heating fuel) - and start
hundreds of thousands of fires. Fanned by blast winds still in
excess of 100 miles per hour, these fires would merge into a giant
firestorm more than 30 miles across and covering 800 square miles.
Flames would consume everything within this entire area.
Temperatures would rise to 1400 degrees Fahrenheit. The death rate
would approach 100%.
Firestorms of this type, though
on a smaller scale, developed in Hamburg, Dresden, and in parts of
Tokyo after conventional bombing attacks during World War II. The
information gained from these experiences has particular relevance
to the question of fallout shelters. In these earlier firestorms
only those who left their bomb shelters had any chance of
surviving. Those who remained in underground shelters were killed,
roasted as their bunkers were turned into ovens and suffocated as
the fires consumed all of the oxygen in the air.
Beyond Sixteen Miles:
At 21 miles from ground zero,
the blast would still produce pressures of two pounds per square
inch, enough to shatter glass windows and turn each of them into
hundreds of lethal missiles flying outward from the center at 100
miles per hour. At 29 miles away from the center the heat would be
so intense that all exposed skin, not protected by clothing, would
suffer third degree burns. To a distance of 32 miles second degree
burns. Even as far as 40 miles from ground zero anyone who turned
to gaze at the sudden flash of light would be blinded by burns on
the retina at the back of their eyes.
Major Injuries
Caused by a Nuclear Explosion:
Casualties
Within minutes after the bomb
exploded 1,000,000 people would die. Among the 1,800,000 survivors
more than 1,100,000 would be fatally injured. Another 500,000
would have major injuries from which they might recover if they
received adequate medical care. Less than 200,000 people would
remain without injuries.
Burn
Wounds
In the immediate post attack
period, burns would constitute the most common and serious medical
problem. Hundreds of thousands of people would have sustained
major second and third degree burns, some from the direct effects
of the heat flash on exposed skin, others injured in the thousands
of fires that would rage on the periphery of the great firestorm.
These people would need urgent and intensive medical therapy. It
would not be available.
Facilities for Treating Burn
Wounds
In the entire United
States, there are only 2000 special beds for burn patients. In
most major metropolitan areas there are only 100 burn beds and
most of these would have been destroyed by the bomb. At best, a
tiny fraction of the hundreds of thousands of burn patients would
receive appropriate medical care. The rest would die.
Other Types of Injuries
In addition to these
burn patients there would be many thousands of other injuries.
People blinded by the blast flash or deafened when the pressure
wave ruptured their ear drums. People with lungs collapsed by the
tremendous pressures. People with stab wounds of the head chest
and abdomen who had been struck by flying debris. People with
bones broken when they had been hurled through the air by the
hurricane force winds or trapped under collapsing buildings.
The Effects of
Radiation Sickness
The Effects of Fall-Out
Shortly after the explosion,
there would be added to this list of casualties tens of thousands
of others suffering from a unique form of injury: radiation
sickness. The precise extent of radiation injuries would depend to
a great deal on weather conditions; particularly the direction and
speed of the wind at the time of the explosion. These factors
would determine how far, and in what direction, the fallout would
spread.
Effects of High Doses of
Radiation Sickness
People who were
exposed to very high doses of radiation, 4000 to 5000 Rads, would
suffer what is known as the central nervous system syndrome. Their
brain tissue, damaged by the radiation, would swell, causing
nausea, vomiting, explosive diarrhea, and progressive difficulty
walking talking and thinking clearly. They would develop
convulsions and pass into a coma and die, usually within the first
day or two after the bomb. Once someone had been exposed to doses
in this range, there would be no effective treatment.
Effects of Medium Doses of
Radiation Sickness
People exposed to lesser
doses of radiation, down to about 400 to 600 Rads, would suffer a
gastrointestinal form of radiation sickness. They would experience
nausea, vomiting and diarrhea soon after exposure which would last
for several days and then seem to improve. But, after a few days
to a week, the symptoms would return and become worse. The
diarrhea and vomit would become bloody as the lining of their
stomachs and intestines, damaged by the radiation, began to shed.
The majority of these patients would also die, despite the most
intensive medical therapy.
Effects of Low Doses of
Radiation Sickness
People with even smaller
radiation exposure, in the 100 to 300 Rad range, would suffer from
the hematologic radiation syndrome. They also would suffer nausea,
vomiting and diarrhea for a few days, but these symptoms would
resolve. About three weeks after exposure, their bone marrow would
stop producing normal numbers of blood cells. As their white blood
cell count fell, they would become prey to infection. Sores would
form in their mouths. Burns and other wounds suffered in the
initial attack would become infected and fail to heal. They would
also have a fall in the number of platelets, the cell fragments
that help blood to clot. They would hemorrhage into their skin,
and new bleeding would begin in the intestines and stomach.
Chances For Survival From
Radiation Sickness
Those who had received doses
in the lower end of this range would have a very great chance of
surviving if they received adequate care. Those at the upper end
of the exposure scale would have a much worse prognosis, even if
they received intensive therapy. Unfortunately it would be
impossible to tell how much radiation a given patient had
received. Except at the very highest doses, the initial symptoms
would be the same. The already overwhelming problem of caring for
the wounded would be complicated by an inability to decide who
might benefit from therapy and should receive whatever resources
might be available.
Effects on the
Atmosphere and Climate
Harm to the
Ozone Layer
The high temperatures of the
nuclear fireball, followed by rapid expansion and cooling, cause
large amounts of nitrogen oxides to form from the oxygen and
nitrogen in the atmosphere (very similar to what happens in
combustion engines). Each megaton of yield will produce some 5000
tons of nitrogen oxides. The rising fireball of a high kiloton or
megaton range warhead will carry these nitric oxides well up into
the stratosphere, where they can reach the ozone layer. A series
of large atmospheric explosions could significantly deplete the
ozone layer.
Nuclear Winter
A potential "nuclear
winter" is another possible occurrence. This effect is caused
by the absorption of sunlight when large amounts of soot are
injected into the atmosphere by the widespread burning of cities
and petroleum stocks destroyed in a nuclear attack. Similar events
have been observed naturally when large volcanic eruptions have
injected large amounts of dust into the atmosphere.
Nations with
nuclear weapons
Country
Warheads active/total
Year of first test
United States
5,735/9,960
1945
Russia
5,830/16,000
1949
United Kingdom
200
1952
France
350
1960
China
130
1964
India
70-120
1974
Pakistan
30-52
1998
North Korea
1-10
2006
Undeclared nuclear
weapons states
Israel
75-200
none or unknown or 1979
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Credit:Wikipedia, The New England Journal of
Medicine, The Board of Directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists, DOE , The Atomic Archive