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Fusion: History

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Title: Fusion: History


1
Fusion History
By Mark A. Prelas University of Missouri
2
Introduction
  • History of the Thermonuclear Weapons Program A
    Different Viewpoint
  • Brief History of Other Nuclear Powers
  • Dealing with Proliferation in the Context of
    History

3
Locations of Obninsk and Arzamas-16
  • Obninsk is located in the Kaluga region, 107 km
    to the South-West of Moscow on the bank of the
    Protva-river of the Oka tributary.
  • Arzamas-16 The nuclear center was founded in the
    Sarov area, in a former factory settlement.

4
Location of Chelyabisnk-70
  • Chelyabinsk-70 is located between the cities
    Yekaterinburg and Chelyabinsk

5
Location of Almaty and Semipalatynsk-21
  • Almaty is located on the ancient silk road.
  • Semipalatynsk-21 is located about 150 km east of
    Semi.

6
Obninsk
  • Obnisnk is the home of the Institute of Physics
    and Power Engineering (IPPE).
  • IPPEs mission was to take nuclear reactors from
    the test phase to the production phase.
  • Achievements Channel type nuclear reactors,
    TOPAZ, breeder reactors.

7
Group Picture
8
Arzamas-16
  • The site, designated as N 550 in 1939, was a
    defense facility. When Russia entered World War
    II, the facility started production of artillery
    shells for the "Katyusha" rocket launchers.
  • A decision was made by the State Defense
    Committee in 1943 to establish an atomic program.
    As a result, Sarov was designated as the
    Instrumentation Laboratory N 2 of the Soviet
    Academy of Sciences.
  • A decision was made on April 9, 1946 to focus
    on nuclear Weapons RD. A decree was issued by
    the Government on July 4, 1946 to establish the
    Design Bureau 11 at Sarov. Today the site is know
    as the Institute for Experimental Physics (IEP)
    or Arzamas-16.

9
Arzamas-16
10
Greeting at Arzamas-16
11
Academician Yuly Khariton
Khariton
12
(No Transcript)
13
Chelyabinsk-70
Institute for Technical Physics (IEP)
14
Kurchatov Statue
Kurchatov
15
Lake Chelyabinsk
16
Shrine of the Tiger at Chelyabinsk-70
17
Almaty, Kazakhstan
18
Director General Batyrbekov
19
10 MW Reactor at the General Physics Institute
20
Semipalatynsk-21
21
Hydrogen Bomb? (Russians claim to be first)
  • Soviet Test No. 4 or "Joe-4" The Sloika ("Layer
    Cake") Design First tested on August 12, 1953 at
    the Semipalatynsk test range had a 400 kt yield
    (15-20 of energy fusion, and 80-85 directly or
    indirectly fission)

22
"Joe-4" Semipalatynsk-21, Aug. 12, 1953
23
Crater Lake from "Joe-4"
24
Russian Nuclear Weapons Program
  • Early work on fission in the Soviet Union was
    performed by Yakov Zel'dovich and Yuli Khariton
    who published a series of papers in 1939-41 that
    laid the groundwork for later Soviet atomic
    Weapons development.
  • In 1943 during World War II, physicist Igor
    Vasilievich Kurchatov personally convinced Stalin
    to begin the Soviet weapons program. Under
    Kurchatov, the program began modestly by sifting
    through reports collected by Soviet intelligence
    about the Manhattan Project in the U.S.
  • Immediately after the surrender of Japan,
    Lavrenti Beria was appointed to head the entire
    project, with Kurchatov remaining as scientific
    director. Using the detailed data available on
    the American program, and the detailed design
    description of the Fat Man bomb provided by Fuchs
    in June 1945, the Soviet program achieved its
    first test by 1949.

25
  • The first Soviet nuclear reactor went critical on
    Dec. 25, 1946, at 6 p.m. at the Kurchatov
    Institute in Moscow. The graphite moderated F-1
    (for "Physics-1") reactor was probably based on
    the design of the Hanford 305 reactor and
    originally operated at a power level of 10 watts.
    The F1 concept was scaled up and larger graphite
    moderated plutonium production reactors were
    built and provided the fissile material for the
    first Soviet atomic bombs.
  • The first Soviet nuclear test, "First Lightning",
    detonated a plutonium bomb, the RDS-1 at 7 am
    Aug. 29, 1949. Despite the reservations of the
    program scientists, Beria insisted that this
    device be an exact copy of the U.S. Fat Man.

26
Differences that Academician Khariton has with
Historians
  • Historians claim that the data obtained through
    intelligence accelerated the Russian Program.
  • Khariton claimed that most of data obtained by
    intelligence was unreliable and took more time to
    verify than it was worth. Thus he did not rely on
    western data.

27
History of Thermonuclear Bomb
  • US Program
  • 9/41 Fermi discusses idea of using atomic bomb to
    drive a fusion bomb with Teller.
  • 7/42 Teller proposes a deuterium superbomb
  • 5/46 Klaus Fuchs and John von Neumann propose a
    two core bomb. A fission core igniting a D-T
    fusion core by radiation. Write patent.
  • 8/46 Teller proposes the Alarm Clock design-
    Spherical shells of fission and D-T fusion fuels
    like layers of onion.
  • 9/47 Teller proposes that LiD be used as fusion
    fuel.
  • USSR Program
  • 9/47 Fuchs and KGB agent Feklisov first meet and
    talk about superbomb.

28
  • 12/47 Zeldovich develops theory for thermonuclear
    device with liquid D and LiD.
  • 3/48 Fuchs gives Feklisov the Fuchs-von Neumann
    patent.
  • 10/48 Sakharov proposes Sloika- similar to
    Tellers Alarm Clock.
  • 1/49 Sakharov has preliminary design of a two
    stage thermonuclear device.
  • 3/49 Ginzburg proposes use of 6LiD in Sloika
    design.
  • 1/51 Teller and Ulam propose two stage system.
    Fission core separated from fusion core. Uses
    lensing.
  • 6/51 Teller and De Hoffmann suggest using 6LiD as
    fusion fuel.

29
  • 8/53 Sloika using 6LiD works. Actual yield is
    within 30 of theory.
  • 1/54 Zeldovich and Sakharov develop 2-stage
    design. Uses gases from atomic explosion to
    compress fusion core.
  • 4/54 Sakharov proposes compression of fusion core
    by radiation energy from primary core.
  • 11/55 RDS-37 uses two stage design with 6LiD.
    Device was dropped from an airplane.
  • 11/52 Ivy Mike uses cryogenic D-T and
    Teller-Ulam design.
  • 3/54 Bravo uses LiD with 40 6Li and
    Teller-Ulam design.
  • 5/56 Cherokee uses 6LiD and Teller-Ulamdesign.
    Device was dropped from an airplane.

30
Achievements
  • US
  • 1952 First to demonstrate thermonuclear
    detonation. Theory was off by more than a factor
    of 2.
  • 1954 used Teller-Ulam design with LiD. Theory was
    off by more than a factor of 2.
  • USSR
  • 1953 First to use 6LiD. Theory was off by 30
  • 1955 First to air drop. Theory was within 10.

31
Test dates and achievements
Ivy Mike
  • Used Teller-Ulam principle of separate staging.
    Used fission bomb as the primary stage, and
    liquid deuterium fusion fuel stored in a
    cylindrical Dewar (thermos) flask as secondary
    stage (10.4 megaton--8 fission, 2.4 fusion).
  • Layer Cake design using lithium deuteride (320 kt
    fission, 80 kt fusion).
  • First "dry" or solid fuel (lithium deuteride
    fueled) H-Bomb tested by the U.S., and the first
    solid fuel 2-stage device ever tested (10 Mt
    fission, 5 Mt fusion).
  • A two-stage radiation implosion Sakharov's
    radiation implosion and Teller-Ulam two stage
    design. This was also the world's first
    air-dropped fusion bomb test. (Unanticipated
    collateral damage, killing three people from a
    building collapse)
  • US Ivy Mike, Nov. 1, 1952, 10.4 Mt
  • Soviet Joe 4, August 12, 1953, 0.4 Mt
  • US Castle Bravo, March 1, 1954, 15 Mt
  • Soviet RDS-37, Nov. 22, 1955, 1.6 Mt

32
British Nuclear Weapons Program
  • On January 8, 1947 a committee of six Ministers
    (headed by P.M. Attlee) decided to proceed with
    the development of atomic weapons.
  • William G. Penney led effort. He was part of a
    British team sent to Los Alamos during the war to
    assist in the Manhattan project.
  • First reactor went critical at Windscale (now
    Sellafield) in October 1950.
  • First atomic bomb test, Hurricane, October 3,
    1952
  • First hydrogen bomb test, Grapple 1 or Short
    Granite, May 15, 1957.

Penney
Hurricane
33
French Nuclear Weapons Program
  • The French had an active group of nuclear
    physicists prior to World War II.
  • After WWII, France had to reestablish its nuclear
    expertise without US or British help.
  • On Feb 13 1960, the French test their first
    fission bomb at Reganne,Algeria.
  • On Aug 24 1968, the French test their first
    thermonuclear bomb at Fangataufa

Moruroa II
34
Chinas Nuclear Weapons Program
  • Chinas first atomic bomb test 596, October 16,
    1964 (U-235 bomb) at Lop Nur Test Ground.
  • Chinas first hydrogen bomb Test No. 6, June
    17, 1967 at Lop Nur Test Ground.

Lop Nur Test Ground
Test No. 6
35
South Africa Nuclear Weapons Program
  • Developed a U-235 enrichment technology called
    UCOR during the 1960s and 70s. Research on
    weapons started in 1971. (The South Africans
    decided to use the gun design.)
  • The Y Plant" was built at Valindaba, next to the
    Pelindaba Research Center 25 km west of Pretoria.
    It is capable of enriching 60 kg of 90 U-235 a
    year.
  • In 1991 South Africa signed the Non Proliferation
    Treaty.
  • In a March 24, 1993 speech, Pres. De Klerk
    announced that South Africa had produced nuclear
    weapons and that they had destroyed their arsenal
    before July 10, 1991, when South Africa joined
    the NPT.

36
Israels Nuclear Weapons Program
  • Israel has never admitted to having a nuclear
    weapons program.
  • Israels Dimona facility is believed to be the
    center of their nuclear weapons activity.
  • Ernst David Bergmann headed the Weizmann
    Institute of Sciences chemistry program in 1949
    with nuclear focus.
  • In the 1950s and 60s Israel and France
    cooperated in their nuclear science programs.
  • Israels program took shape Oct. 1956 during the
    Suez Canal Crisis. Due to close collaboration
    between Israel and France, France agreed to build
    an EL-3 type reactor, along with plutonium
    separation technology at the Dimona Facility.
    Ground was broken in 1958.
  • Norway sold Israel 20 tons of heavy water in
    1959. In 1961 the heavy water was loaded in the
    Dimona reactor.
  • The Dimona reactor went critical in 1962.
  • The French completed the plutonium facility in
    1964.
  • According to the Israeli paper Ha'aretz on
    SundayApril 20, 1997. Israel assisted South
    Africa in developing nuclear weapons in the early
    1980s.

Dimona facility
37
Indias Nuclear Weapons Program
  • Due to border tensions with China, India begins
    Nuclear Weapons program.
  • A plutonium separation facility was built at
    Trombay near Bombay in the 1950s. It began
    operation in 1964.
  • Plutonium probably came from a Canadian Reactor
    at the Bhabha Atomic Research Center (BARC) the
    40 MW CIR (Canadian-Indian Reactor) heavy water
    research reactor (also called Cirus).
  • The first atomic bomb was the Smiling Buddha
    detonated on May 18, 1974 at Pokhran, Rajasthan
    Desert, India.
  • India has several CANDU reactors in addition to
    the Cirus.

Test crater
38
Pakistan Nuclear Weapons Program
  • Due to worries about Indias nuclear program,
    Pakistan began the Engineering Research
    Laboratories (ERL) in 1976.
  • The Pakistani program is based on a home made
    centrifuge uranium enrichment plant, using
    technology misappropriated from the European
    uranium centrifuge consortium URENCO (Britain,
    Germany, and the Netherlands are the
    participants).
  • Dr. Abdul Qader Khan, who worked for
    Ultra-Centrifuge Nederland (UCN) the Dutch
    partner of URENCO, led the Pakistan program.
  • In 1992 Foreign Minister Shahryrar stated that
    Pakistan had components to assemble nuclear
    weapons.
  • Pakistan has a Chinese built power reactor. It
    has a self engineered 50 MWe heavy water
    moderated reactor now under construction.

Khan
39
Declared Nuclear Countries
  • USA
  • Russia
  • Britain
  • France
  • China
  • India
  • Pakistan

40
Countries that possess nuclear technology but
have signed NPT
  • Advanced Abilities
  • Germany
  • Japan
  • Ukraine
  • Canada
  • Sweden
  • Moderate Abilities
  • Taiwan
  • Netherlands
  • Switzerland
  • South Korea
  • Australia
  • Kazakhstan
  • Argentina
  • Brazil
  • Belarus
  • Algeria

Ranked in approximate order of level of technology
41
Countries working on Nuclear Weapons
  • North Korea
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Libya (NPT signatory Qaddafi declared intention
    to develop nuclear weapons)

42
Conclusions
  • Many Countries have nuclear weapons
  • Many Countries have the technology to develop
    weapons quickly
  • Many Countries desire nuclear weapons
  • There is a clear need for world wide arms control
    and disarmament.
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