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Nuclear weapon

A nuclear weapon[a] is an explosive device that derives its destructive force from nuclear reactions, either fission (fission bomb) or a combination of fission and fusion reactions (thermonuclear bomb), producing a nuclear explosion. Both bomb types release large quantities of energy from relatively small amounts of matter.

The first test of a fission ("atomic") bomb released an amount of energy approximately equal to 20,000 tons of TNT (84 TJ).[1] The first thermonuclear ("hydrogen") bomb test released energy approximately equal to 10 million tons of TNT (42 PJ). Nuclear bombs have had yields between 10 tons TNT (the W54) and 50 megatons for the Tsar Bomba (see TNT equivalent). A thermonuclear weapon weighing as little as 600 pounds (270 kg) can release energy equal to more than 1.2 megatonnes of TNT (5.0 PJ).[2]

A nuclear device no larger than a conventional bomb can devastate an entire city by blast, fire, and radiation. Since they are weapons of mass destruction, the proliferation of nuclear weapons is a focus of international relations policy. Nuclear weapons have been deployed twice in war, by the United States against the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 during World War II.

Testing and deployment

Nuclear weapons have only twice been used in war, both times by the United States against Japan near the end of World War II. On August 6, 1945, the U.S. Army Air Forces detonated a uranium gun-type fission bomb nicknamed "Little Boy" over the Japanese city of Hiroshima; three days later, on August 9, the U.S. Army Air Forces detonated a plutonium implosion-type fission bomb nicknamed "Fat Man" over the Japanese city of Nagasaki. These bombings caused injuries that resulted in the deaths of approximately 200,000 civilians and military personnel.[3] The ethics of these bombings and their role in Japan's surrender are subjects of debate.

Since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, nuclear weapons have been detonated over 2,000 times for testing and demonstration. Only a few nations possess such weapons or are suspected of seeking them. The only countries known to have detonated nuclear weapons—and acknowledge possessing them—are (chronologically by date of first test) the United States, the Soviet Union (succeeded as a nuclear power by Russia), the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, and North Korea. Israel is believed to possess nuclear weapons, though, in a policy of deliberate ambiguity, it does not acknowledge having them. Germany, Italy, Turkey, Belgium and the Netherlands are nuclear weapons sharing states.[4][5][6] South Africa is the only country to have independently developed and then renounced and dismantled its nuclear weapons.[7]

The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons aims to reduce the spread of nuclear weapons, but its effectiveness has been questioned. Modernisation of weapons continues to this day.[8]

Types

 
The Trinity test of the Manhattan Project was the first detonation of a nuclear weapon, which led J. Robert Oppenheimer to recall verses from the Hindu scripture Bhagavad Gita: "If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky, that would be like the splendor of the mighty one "... "I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds".[9]
 
Robert Oppenheimer, principal leader of the Manhattan Project, often referred to as the "father of the atomic bomb".

There are two basic types of nuclear weapons: those that derive the majority of their energy from nuclear fission reactions alone, and those that use fission reactions to begin nuclear fusion reactions that produce a large amount of the total energy output.[10]

Fission weapons

 
The two basic fission weapon designs

All existing nuclear weapons derive some of their explosive energy from nuclear fission reactions. Weapons whose explosive output is exclusively from fission reactions are commonly referred to as atomic bombs or atom bombs (abbreviated as A-bombs). This has long been noted as something of a misnomer, as their energy comes from the nucleus of the atom, just as it does with fusion weapons.

In fission weapons, a mass of fissile material (enriched uranium or plutonium) is forced into supercriticality—allowing an exponential growth of nuclear chain reactions—either by shooting one piece of sub-critical material into another (the "gun" method) or by compression of a sub-critical sphere or cylinder of fissile material using chemically fueled explosive lenses. The latter approach, the "implosion" method, is more sophisticated and more efficient (smaller, less massive, and requiring less of the expensive fissile fuel) than the former.

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 from the equivalent of just under a ton to upwards of 500,000 tons (500 kilotons) of TNT (4.2 to 2.1×106 GJ).[11]

All fission reactions generate fission products, the remains of the split atomic nuclei. Many fission products are either highly radioactive (but short-lived) or moderately radioactive (but long-lived), and as such, they are a serious form of radioactive contamination. Fission products are the principal radioactive component of nuclear fallout. Another source of radioactivity is the burst of free neutrons produced by the weapon. When they collide with other nuclei in the surrounding material, the neutrons transmute those nuclei into other isotopes, altering their stability and making them radioactive.

The most commonly used fissile materials for nuclear weapons applications have been uranium-235 and plutonium-239. Less commonly used has been uranium-233. Neptunium-237 and some isotopes of americium may be usable for nuclear explosives as well, but it is not clear that this has ever been implemented, and their plausible use in nuclear weapons is a matter of dispute.[12]

Fusion weapons

 
The basics of the Teller–Ulam design for a hydrogen bomb: a fission bomb uses radiation to compress and heat a separate section of fusion fuel.

The other basic type of nuclear weapon produces a large proportion of its energy in nuclear fusion reactions. Such fusion weapons are generally referred to as thermonuclear weapons or more colloquially as hydrogen bombs (abbreviated as H-bombs), as they rely on fusion reactions between isotopes of hydrogen (deuterium and tritium). All such weapons derive a significant portion of their energy from fission reactions used to "trigger" fusion reactions, and fusion reactions can themselves trigger additional fission reactions.[13]

Only six countries—United States, Russia, United Kingdom, China, France, and India—have conducted thermonuclear weapon tests. Whether India has detonated a "true" multi-staged thermonuclear weapon is controversial.[14] North Korea claims to have tested a fusion weapon as of January 2016, though this claim is disputed.[15] Thermonuclear weapons are considered much more difficult to successfully design and execute than primitive fission weapons. Almost all of the nuclear weapons deployed today use the thermonuclear design because it is more efficient.[16]

Thermonuclear bombs work by using the energy of a fission bomb 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 rays and X-rays emitted first compress the fusion fuel, then heat it to thermonuclear temperatures. The ensuing fusion reaction creates enormous numbers of high-speed neutrons, which can then induce fission in materials not normally prone to it, such as depleted uranium. Each of these components is known as a "stage", with the fission bomb as the "primary" and the fusion capsule as the "secondary". In large, megaton-range hydrogen bombs, about half of the yield comes from the final fissioning of depleted uranium.[11]

Virtually all thermonuclear weapons deployed today use the "two-stage" design described above, but it is possible to add additional fusion stages—each stage igniting a larger amount of fusion fuel in the next stage. This technique can be used to construct thermonuclear weapons of arbitrarily large yield. This is in contrast to fission bombs, which are limited in their explosive power due to criticality danger (premature nuclear chain reaction caused by too-large amounts of pre-assembled fissile fuel). The largest nuclear weapon ever detonated, the Tsar Bomba of the USSR, which released an energy equivalent of over 50 megatons of TNT (210 PJ), was a three-stage weapon. Most thermonuclear weapons are considerably smaller than this, due to practical constraints from missile warhead space and weight requirements.[17]

 
Edward Teller, often referred to as the "father of the hydrogen bomb"

Fusion reactions do not create fission products, and thus contribute far less to the creation of nuclear fallout than fission reactions, but because all thermonuclear weapons contain at least one fission stage, and many high-yield thermonuclear devices have a final fission stage, thermonuclear weapons can generate at least as much nuclear fallout as fission-only weapons. Furthermore, high yield thermonuclear explosions (most dangerously ground bursts) have the force to lift radioactive debris upwards past the tropopause into the stratosphere, where the calm non-turbulent winds permit the debris to travel great distances from the burst, eventually settling and unpredictably contaminating areas far removed from the target of the explosion.

Other types

There are other types of nuclear weapons as well. For example, a boosted fission weapon is a fission bomb that increases its explosive yield through a small number of fusion reactions, but it is not a fusion bomb. In the boosted bomb, the neutrons produced by the fusion reactions serve primarily to increase the efficiency of the fission bomb. There are two types of boosted fission bomb: internally boosted, in which a deuterium-tritium mixture is injected into the bomb core, and externally boosted, in which concentric shells of lithium-deuteride and depleted uranium are layered on the outside of the fission bomb core. The external method of boosting enabled the USSR to field the first partially-thermonuclear weapons, but it is now obsolete because it demands a spherical bomb geometry, which was adequate during the 1950s arms race when bomber aircraft were the only available delivery vehicles.

The detonation of any nuclear weapon is accompanied by a blast of neutron radiation. Surrounding a nuclear weapon with suitable materials (such as cobalt or gold) creates a weapon known as a salted bomb. This device can produce exceptionally large quantities of long-lived radioactive contamination. It has been conjectured that such a device could serve as a "doomsday weapon" because such a large quantity of radioactivities with half-lives of decades, lifted into the stratosphere where winds would distribute it around the globe, would make all life on the planet extinct.

In connection with the Strategic Defense Initiative, research into the nuclear pumped laser was conducted under the DOD program Project Excalibur but this did not result in a working weapon. The concept involves the tapping of the energy of an exploding nuclear bomb to power a single-shot laser that is directed at a distant target.

During the Starfish Prime high-altitude nuclear test in 1962, an unexpected effect was produced which is called a nuclear electromagnetic pulse. This is an intense flash of electromagnetic energy produced by a rain of high-energy electrons which in turn are produced by a nuclear bomb's gamma rays. This flash of energy can permanently destroy or disrupt electronic equipment if insufficiently shielded. It has been proposed to use this effect to disable an enemy's military and civilian infrastructure as an adjunct to other nuclear or conventional military operations. By itself it could as well be useful to terrorists for crippling a nation's economic electronics-based infrastructure. Because the effect is most effectively produced by high altitude nuclear detonations (by military weapons delivered by air, though ground bursts also produce EMP effects over a localized area), it can produce damage to electronics over a wide, even continental, geographical area.

Research has been done into the possibility of pure fusion bombs: nuclear weapons that consist of fusion reactions without requiring a fission bomb to initiate them. Such a device might provide a simpler path to thermonuclear weapons than one that required the development of fission weapons first, and pure fusion weapons would create significantly less nuclear fallout than other thermonuclear weapons because they would not disperse fission products. In 1998, the United States Department of Energy divulged that the United States had, "...made a substantial investment" in the past to develop pure fusion weapons, but that, "The U.S. does not have and is not developing a pure fusion weapon", and that, "No credible design for a pure fusion weapon resulted from the DOE investment".[18]

Nuclear isomers provide a possible pathway to fissionless fusion bombs. These are naturally occurring isotopes (178m2Hf being a prominent example) which exist in an elevated energy state. Mechanisms to release this energy as bursts of gamma radiation (as in the hafnium controversy) have been proposed as possible triggers for conventional thermonuclear reactions.

Antimatter, which consists of particles resembling ordinary matter particles in most of their properties but having opposite electric charge, has been considered as a trigger mechanism for nuclear weapons.[19][20][21] A major obstacle is the difficulty of producing antimatter in large enough quantities, and there is no evidence that it is feasible beyond the military domain.[22] However, the U.S. Air Force funded studies of the physics of antimatter in the Cold War, and began considering its possible use in weapons, not just as a trigger, but as the explosive itself.[23] A fourth generation nuclear weapon design[19] is related to, and relies upon, the same principle as antimatter-catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion.[24]

Most variation in nuclear weapon design is for the purpose of achieving different yields for different situations, and in manipulating design elements to attempt to minimize weapon size,[11] radiation hardness or requirements for special materials, especially fissile fuel or tritium.

Tactical nuclear weapons

Some nuclear weapons are designed for special purposes; most of these are for non-strategic (decisively war-winning) purposes and are referred to as tactical nuclear weapons.

The neutron bomb purportedly conceived by Sam Cohen is a thermonuclear weapon that yields a relatively small explosion but a relatively large amount of neutron radiation. Such a weapon could, according to tacticians, be used to cause massive biological casualties while leaving inanimate infrastructure mostly intact and creating minimal fallout. Because high energy neutrons are capable of penetrating dense matter, such as tank armor, neutron warheads were procured in the 1980s (though not deployed in Europe, as intended, over the objections of NATO allies) for use as tactical payloads for US Army artillery shells (200 mm W79 and 155 mm W82) and short range missile forces. Soviet authorities announced similar intentions for neutron warhead deployment in Europe; indeed claimed to have originally invented the neutron bomb, but their deployment on USSR tactical nuclear forces is unverifiable.[citation needed]

A type of nuclear explosive most suitable for use by ground special forces was the Special Atomic Demolition Munition, or SADM, sometimes popularly known as a suitcase nuke. This is a nuclear bomb that is man-portable, or at least truck-portable, and though of a relatively small yield (one or two kilotons) is sufficient to destroy important tactical targets such as bridges, dams, tunnels, important military or commercial installations, etc. either behind enemy lines or pre-emptively on friendly territory soon to be overtaken by invading enemy forces. These weapons require plutonium fuel and are particularly "dirty". Obviously they also demand especially stringent security precautions in their storage and deployment.[citation needed]

Small "tactical" nuclear weapons were deployed for use as antiaircraft weapons. Examples include the USAF AIR-2 Genie, the AIM-26 Falcon and US Army Nike Hercules. Missile interceptors such as the Sprint and the Spartan also used small nuclear warheads (optimized to produce neutron or X-ray flux) but were for use against enemy strategic warheads.[citation needed]

Other small, or tactical, nuclear weapons were deployed by naval forces for use primarily as antisubmarine weapons. These included nuclear depth bombs or nuclear armed torpedoes. Nuclear mines for use on land or at sea are also possibilities.[citation needed]

Weapons delivery

 
The first nuclear weapons were gravity bombs, such as this "Fat Man" weapon dropped on Nagasaki, Japan. They were large and could only be delivered by heavy bomber aircraft
 
A demilitarized, commercial launch of the Russian Strategic Rocket Forces R-36 ICBM; also known by the NATO reporting name: SS-18 Satan. Upon its first fielding in the late 1960s, the SS-18 remains the single highest throw weight missile delivery system ever built.

The system used to deliver a nuclear weapon to its target is an important factor affecting both nuclear weapon design and nuclear strategy. The design, development, and maintenance of delivery systems are among the most expensive parts of a nuclear weapons program; they account, for example, for 57% of the financial resources spent by the United States on nuclear weapons projects since 1940.[25]

The simplest method for delivering a nuclear weapon is a gravity bomb dropped from aircraft; this was the method used by the United States against Japan. This method places few restrictions on the size of the weapon. It does, however, limit attack range, response time to an impending attack, and the number of weapons that a country can field at the same time. With miniaturization, nuclear bombs can be delivered by both strategic bombers and tactical fighter-bombers. This method is the primary means of nuclear weapons delivery; the majority of U.S. nuclear warheads, for example, are free-fall gravity bombs, namely the B61.[11][needs update]

 
Montage of an inert test of a United States Trident SLBM (submarine launched ballistic missile), from submerged to the terminal, or re-entry phase, of the multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles

Preferable from a strategic point of view is a nuclear weapon mounted on a missile, which can use a ballistic trajectory to deliver the warhead over the horizon. Although even short-range missiles allow for a faster and less vulnerable attack, the development of long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) has given some nations the ability to plausibly deliver missiles anywhere on the globe with a high likelihood of success.

More advanced systems, such as multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs), can launch multiple warheads at different targets from one missile, reducing the chance of a successful missile defense. Today, missiles are most common among systems designed for delivery of nuclear weapons. Making a warhead small enough to fit onto a missile, though, can be difficult.[11]

Tactical weapons have involved the most variety of delivery types, including not only gravity bombs and missiles but also artillery shells, land mines, and nuclear depth charges and torpedoes for anti-submarine warfare. An atomic mortar has been tested by the United States. Small, two-man portable tactical weapons (somewhat misleadingly referred to as suitcase bombs), such as the Special Atomic Demolition Munition, have been developed, although the difficulty of combining sufficient yield with portability limits their military utility.[11]

Nuclear strategy

Nuclear warfare strategy is a set of policies that deal with preventing or fighting a nuclear war. The policy of trying to prevent an attack by a nuclear weapon from another country by threatening nuclear retaliation is known as the strategy of nuclear deterrence. The goal in deterrence is to always maintain a second strike capability (the ability of a country to respond to a nuclear attack with one of its own) and potentially to strive for first strike status (the ability to destroy an enemy's nuclear forces before they could retaliate). During the Cold War, policy and military theorists considered the sorts of policies that might prevent a nuclear attack, and they developed game theory models that could lead to stable deterrence conditions.[26]

 
The now decommissioned United States' Peacekeeper missile was an ICBM developed to replace the Minuteman missile in the late 1980s. Each missile, like the heavier lift Russian SS-18 Satan, could contain up to ten nuclear warheads (shown in red), each of which could be aimed at a different target. A factor in the development of MIRVs was to make complete missile defense difficult for an enemy country.

Different forms of nuclear weapons delivery (see above) allow for different types of nuclear strategies. The goals of any strategy are generally to make it difficult for an enemy to launch a pre-emptive strike against the weapon system and difficult to defend against the delivery of the weapon during a potential conflict. This can mean keeping weapon locations hidden, such as deploying them on submarines or land mobile transporter erector launchers whose locations are difficult to track, or it can mean protecting weapons by burying them in hardened missile silo bunkers. Other components of nuclear strategies included using missile defenses to destroy the missiles before they land, or implementing civil defense measures using early-warning systems to evacuate citizens to safe areas before an attack.

Weapons designed to threaten large populations or to deter attacks are known as strategic weapons. Nuclear weapons for use on a battlefield in military situations are called tactical weapons.

Critics of nuclear war strategy often suggest that a nuclear war between two nations would result in mutual annihilation. From this point of view, the significance of nuclear weapons is to deter war because any nuclear war would escalate out of mutual distrust and fear, resulting in mutually assured destruction. This threat of national, if not global, destruction has been a strong motivation for anti-nuclear weapons activism.

Critics from the peace movement and within the military establishment[citation needed] have questioned the usefulness of such weapons in the current military climate. According to an advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice in 1996, the use of (or threat of use of) such weapons would generally be contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, but the court did not reach an opinion as to whether or not the threat or use would be lawful in specific extreme circumstances such as if the survival of the state were at stake.

Another deterrence position is that nuclear proliferation can be desirable. In this case, it is argued that, unlike conventional weapons, nuclear weapons deter all-out war between states, and they succeeded in doing this during the Cold War between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.[27] In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Gen. Pierre Marie Gallois of France, an adviser to Charles de Gaulle, argued in books like The Balance of Terror: Strategy for the Nuclear Age (1961) that mere possession of a nuclear arsenal was enough to ensure deterrence, and thus concluded that the spread of nuclear weapons could increase international stability. Some prominent neo-realist scholars, such as Kenneth Waltz and John Mearsheimer, have argued, along the lines of Gallois, that some forms of nuclear proliferation would decrease the likelihood of total war, especially in troubled regions of the world where there exists a single nuclear-weapon state. Aside from the public opinion that opposes proliferation in any form, there are two schools of thought on the matter: those, like Mearsheimer, who favored selective proliferation,[28] and Waltz, who was somewhat more non-interventionist.[29][30] Interest in proliferation and the stability-instability paradox that it generates continues to this day, with ongoing debate about indigenous Japanese and South Korean nuclear deterrent against North Korea.[31]

The threat of potentially suicidal terrorists possessing nuclear weapons (a form of nuclear terrorism) complicates the decision process. The prospect of mutually assured destruction might not deter an enemy who expects to die in the confrontation. Further, if the initial act is from a stateless terrorist instead of a sovereign nation, there might not be a nation or specific target to retaliate against. It has been argued, especially after the September 11, 2001, attacks, that this complication calls for a new nuclear strategy, one that is distinct from that which gave relative stability during the Cold War.[32] Since 1996, the United States has had a policy of allowing the targeting of its nuclear weapons at terrorists armed with weapons of mass destruction.[33]

Robert Gallucci argues that although traditional deterrence is not an effective approach toward terrorist groups bent on causing a nuclear catastrophe, Gallucci believes that "the United States should instead consider a policy of expanded deterrence, which focuses not solely on the would-be nuclear terrorists but on those states that may deliberately transfer or inadvertently leak nuclear weapons and materials to them. By threatening retaliation against those states, the United States may be able to deter that which it cannot physically prevent.".[34]

Graham Allison makes a similar case, arguing that the key to expanded deterrence is coming up with ways of tracing nuclear material to the country that forged the fissile material. "After a nuclear bomb detonates, nuclear forensics cops would collect debris samples and send them to a laboratory for radiological analysis. By identifying unique attributes of the fissile material, including its impurities and contaminants, one could trace the path back to its origin."[35] The process is analogous to identifying a criminal by fingerprints. "The goal would be twofold: first, to deter leaders of nuclear states from selling weapons to terrorists by holding them accountable for any use of their weapons; second, to give leaders every incentive to tightly secure their nuclear weapons and materials."[35]

According to the Pentagon's June 2019 "Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations" of the Joint Chiefs of Staffs website Publication, "Integration of nuclear weapons employment with conventional and special operations forces is essential to the success of any mission or operation."[36][37]

Governance, control, and law

 
The International Atomic Energy Agency was created in 1957 to encourage peaceful development of nuclear technology while providing international safeguards against nuclear proliferation.

Because they are weapons of mass destruction, the proliferation and possible use of nuclear weapons are important issues in international relations and diplomacy. In most countries, the use of nuclear force can only be authorized by the head of government or head of state.[38] Despite controls and regulations governing nuclear weapons, there is an inherent danger of "accidents, mistakes, false alarms, blackmail, theft, and sabotage".[39]

In the late 1940s, lack of mutual trust prevented the United States and the Soviet Union from making progress on arms control agreements. The Russell–Einstein Manifesto was issued in London on July 9, 1955, by Bertrand Russell in the midst of the Cold War. It highlighted the dangers posed by nuclear weapons and called for world leaders to seek peaceful resolutions to international conflict. The signatories included eleven pre-eminent intellectuals and scientists, including Albert Einstein, who signed it just days before his death on April 18, 1955. A few days after the release, philanthropist Cyrus S. Eaton offered to sponsor a conference—called for in the manifesto—in Pugwash, Nova Scotia, Eaton's birthplace. This conference was to be the first of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, held in July 1957.

By the 1960s, steps were taken to limit both the proliferation of nuclear weapons to other countries and the environmental effects of nuclear testing. The Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (1963) restricted all nuclear testing to underground nuclear testing, to prevent contamination from nuclear fallout, whereas the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (1968) attempted to place restrictions on the types of activities signatories could participate in, with the goal of allowing the transference of non-military nuclear technology to member countries without fear of proliferation.

 
UN vote on adoption of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons on July 7, 2017
  Yes
  No
  Did not vote

In 1957, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was established under the mandate of the United Nations to encourage development of peaceful applications of nuclear technology, provide international safeguards against its misuse, and facilitate the application of safety measures in its use. In 1996, many nations signed the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty,[40] which prohibits all testing of nuclear weapons. A testing ban imposes a significant hindrance to nuclear arms development by any complying country.[41] The Treaty requires the ratification by 44 specific states before it can go into force; as of 2012, the ratification of eight of these states is still required.[40]

Additional treaties and agreements have governed nuclear weapons stockpiles between the countries with the two largest stockpiles, the United States and the Soviet Union, and later between the United States and Russia. These include treaties such as SALT II (never ratified), START I (expired), INF, START II (never in effect), SORT, and New START, as well as non-binding agreements such as SALT I and the Presidential Nuclear Initiatives[42] of 1991. Even when they did not enter into force, these agreements helped limit and later reduce the numbers and types of nuclear weapons between the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia.

Nuclear weapons have also been opposed by agreements between countries. Many nations have been declared Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones, areas where nuclear weapons production and deployment are prohibited, through the use of treaties. The Treaty of Tlatelolco (1967) prohibited any production or deployment of nuclear weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Treaty of Pelindaba (1964) prohibits nuclear weapons in many African countries. As recently as 2006 a Central Asian Nuclear Weapon Free Zone was established among the former Soviet republics of Central Asia prohibiting nuclear weapons.

 
Large stockpile with global range (dark blue), smaller stockpile with global range (medium blue), small stockpile with regional range (light blue).

In 1996, the International Court of Justice, the highest court of the United Nations, issued an Advisory Opinion concerned with the "Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons". The court ruled that the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons would violate various articles of international law, including the Geneva Conventions, the Hague Conventions, the UN Charter, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Given the unique, destructive characteristics of nuclear weapons, the International Committee of the Red Cross calls on States to ensure that these weapons are never used, irrespective of whether they consider them lawful or not.[43]

Additionally, there have been other, specific actions meant to discourage countries from developing nuclear arms. In the wake of the tests by India and Pakistan in 1998, economic sanctions were (temporarily) levied against both countries, though neither were signatories with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. One of the stated casus belli for the initiation of the 2003 Iraq War was an accusation by the United States that Iraq was actively pursuing nuclear arms (though this was soon discovered not to be the case as the program had been discontinued). In 1981, Israel had bombed a nuclear reactor being constructed in Osirak, Iraq, in what it called an attempt to halt Iraq's previous nuclear arms ambitions; in 2007, Israel bombed another reactor being constructed in Syria.

In 2013, Mark Diesendorf said that governments of France, India, North Korea, Pakistan, UK, and South Africa have used nuclear power and/or research reactors to assist nuclear weapons development or to contribute to their supplies of nuclear explosives from military reactors.[44]

The two tied-for-lowest points for the Doomsday Clock have been in 1953, when the Clock was set to two minutes until midnight after the U.S. and the Soviet Union began testing hydrogen bombs, and in 2018, following the failure of world leaders to address tensions relating to nuclear weapons and climate change issues.[45]

Disarmament

 
The USSR and United States nuclear weapon stockpiles throughout the Cold War until 2015, with a precipitous drop in total numbers following the end of the Cold War in 1991.

Nuclear disarmament refers to both the act of reducing or eliminating nuclear weapons and to the end state of a nuclear-free world, in which nuclear weapons are eliminated.

Beginning with the 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty and continuing through the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, there have been many treaties to limit or reduce nuclear weapons testing and stockpiles. The 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty has as one of its explicit conditions that all signatories must "pursue negotiations in good faith" towards the long-term goal of "complete disarmament". The nuclear-weapon states have largely treated that aspect of the agreement as "decorative" and without force.[46]

Only one country—South Africa—has ever fully renounced nuclear weapons they had independently developed. The former Soviet republics of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine returned Soviet nuclear arms stationed in their countries to Russia after the collapse of the USSR.

Proponents of nuclear disarmament say that it would lessen the probability of nuclear war, especially accidentally. Critics of nuclear disarmament say that it would undermine the present nuclear peace and deterrence and would lead to increased global instability. Various American elder statesmen,[47] who were in office during the Cold War period, have been advocating the elimination of nuclear weapons. These officials include Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, Sam Nunn, and William Perry. In January 2010, Lawrence M. Krauss stated that "no issue carries more importance to the long-term health and security of humanity than the effort to reduce, and perhaps one day, rid the world of nuclear weapons".[48]

 
Ukrainian workers use equipment provided by the U.S. Defense Threat Reduction Agency to dismantle a Soviet-era missile silo. After the end of the Cold War, Ukraine and the other non-Russian, post-Soviet republics relinquished Soviet nuclear stockpiles to Russia.

In January 1986, Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev publicly proposed a three-stage program for abolishing the world's nuclear weapons by the end of the 20th century.[49] In the years after the end of the Cold War, there have been numerous campaigns to urge the abolition of nuclear weapons, such as that organized by the Global Zero movement, and the goal of a "world without nuclear weapons" was advocated by United States President Barack Obama in an April 2009 speech in Prague.[50] A CNN poll from April 2010 indicated that the American public was nearly evenly split on the issue.[51]

Some analysts have argued that nuclear weapons have made the world relatively safer, with peace through deterrence and through the stability–instability paradox, including in south Asia.[52][53] Kenneth Waltz has argued that nuclear weapons have helped keep an uneasy peace, and further nuclear weapon proliferation might even help avoid the large scale conventional wars that were so common before their invention at the end of World War II.[30] But former Secretary Henry Kissinger says there is a new danger, which cannot be addressed by deterrence: "The classical notion of deterrence was that there was some consequences before which aggressors and evildoers would recoil. In a world of suicide bombers, that calculation doesn’t operate in any comparable way".[54] George Shultz has said, "If you think of the people who are doing suicide attacks, and people like that get a nuclear weapon, they are almost by definition not deterrable".[55]

As of early 2019, more than 90% of world's 13,865 nuclear weapons were owned by Russia and the United States.[56][57]

United Nations

The UN Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA) is a department of the United Nations Secretariat established in January 1998 as part of the United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan's plan to reform the UN as presented in his report to the General Assembly in July 1997.[58]

Its goal is to promote nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation and the strengthening of the disarmament regimes in respect to other weapons of mass destruction, chemical and biological weapons. It also promotes disarmament efforts in the area of conventional weapons, especially land mines and small arms, which are often the weapons of choice in contemporary conflicts.

Controversy

Ethics

 
Anti-nuclear weapons protest march in Oxford, 1980

Even before the first nuclear weapons had been developed, scientists involved with the Manhattan Project were divided over the use of the weapon. The role of the two atomic bombings of the country in Japan's surrender and the U.S.'s ethical justification for them has been the subject of scholarly and popular debate for decades. The question of whether nations should have nuclear weapons, or test them, has been continually and nearly universally controversial.[59]

Notable nuclear weapons accidents

Nuclear testing and fallout

 
Over 2,000 nuclear tests have been conducted in over a dozen different sites around the world. Red Russia/Soviet Union, blue France, light blue United States, violet Britain, yellow China, orange India, brown Pakistan, green North Korea and light green (territories exposed to nuclear bombs). The Black dot indicates the location of the Vela incident.
 
This view of downtown Las Vegas shows a mushroom cloud in the background. Scenes such as this were typical during the 1950s. From 1951 to 1962 the government conducted 100 atmospheric tests at the nearby Nevada Test Site.

Over 500 atmospheric nuclear weapons tests were conducted at various sites around the world from 1945 to 1980. Radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons testing was first drawn to public attention in 1954 when the Castle Bravo hydrogen bomb test at the Pacific Proving Grounds contaminated the crew and catch of the Japanese fishing boat Lucky Dragon.[75] One of the fishermen died in Japan seven months later, and the fear of contaminated tuna led to a temporary boycotting of the popular staple in Japan. The incident caused widespread concern around the world, especially regarding the effects of nuclear fallout and atmospheric nuclear testing, and "provided a decisive impetus for the emergence of the anti-nuclear weapons movement in many countries".[75]

As public awareness and concern mounted over the possible health hazards associated with exposure to the nuclear fallout, various studies were done to assess the extent of the hazard. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/ National Cancer Institute study claims that fallout from atmospheric nuclear tests would lead to perhaps 11,000 excess deaths among people alive during atmospheric testing in the United States from all forms of cancer, including leukemia, from 1951 to well into the 21st century.[76][77] As of March 2009, the U.S. is the only nation that compensates nuclear test victims. Since the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990, more than $1.38 billion in compensation has been approved. The money is going to people who took part in the tests, notably at the Nevada Test Site, and to others exposed to the radiation.[78][79]

In addition, leakage of byproducts of nuclear weapon production into groundwater has been an ongoing issue, particularly at the Hanford site.[80]

Effects of nuclear explosions

Effects of nuclear explosions on human health

 
A photograph of Sumiteru Taniguchi's back injuries taken in January 1946 by a U.S. Marine photographer

Some scientists estimate that a nuclear war with 100 Hiroshima-size nuclear explosions on cities could cost the lives of tens of millions of people from long-term climatic effects alone. The climatology hypothesis is that if each city firestorms, a great deal of soot could be thrown up into the atmosphere which could blanket the earth, cutting out sunlight for years on end, causing the disruption of food chains, in what is termed a nuclear winter.[81][82]

People near the Hiroshima explosion and who managed to survive the explosion subsequently suffered a variety of medical effects:[83]

  • Initial stage—the first 1–9 weeks, in which are the greatest number of deaths, with 90% due to thermal injury and/or blast effects and 10% due to super-lethal radiation exposure.
  • Intermediate stage—from 10 to 12 weeks. The deaths in this period are from ionizing radiation in the median lethal range – LD50
  • Late period—lasting from 13 to 20 weeks. This period has some improvement in survivors' condition.
  • Delayed period—from 20+ weeks. Characterized by numerous complications, mostly related to healing of thermal and mechanical injuries, and if the individual was exposed to a few hundred to a thousand millisieverts of radiation, it is coupled with infertility, sub-fertility and blood disorders. Furthermore, ionizing radiation above a dose of around 50–100 millisievert exposure has been shown to statistically begin increasing one's chance of dying of cancer sometime in their lifetime over the normal unexposed rate of ~25%, in the long term, a heightened rate of cancer, proportional to the dose received, would begin to be observed after ~5+ years, with lesser problems such as eye cataracts and other more minor effects in other organs and tissue also being observed over the long term.

Fallout exposure—depending on if further afield individuals shelter in place or evacuate perpendicular to the direction of the wind, and therefore avoid contact with the fallout plume, and stay there for the days and weeks after the nuclear explosion, their exposure to fallout, and therefore their total dose, will vary. With those who do shelter in place, and or evacuate, experiencing a total dose that would be negligible in comparison to someone who just went about their life as normal.[84][85]

Staying indoors until after the most hazardous fallout isotope, I-131 decays away to 0.1% of its initial quantity after ten half-lifes—which is represented by 80 days in I-131s case, would make the difference between likely contracting Thyroid cancer or escaping completely from this substance depending on the actions of the individual.[86]

Effects of nuclear war

Nuclear war could yield unprecedented human death tolls and habitat destruction. Detonating large numbers of nuclear weapons would have an immediate, short term and long-term effects on the climate, potentially causing cold weather known as a "nuclear winter".[87][88] In 1982, Brian Martin estimated that a US–Soviet nuclear exchange might kill 400–450 million directly, mostly in the United States, Europe and Russia, and maybe several hundred million more through follow-up consequences in those same areas.[89] Many scholars have posited that a global thermonuclear war with Cold War-era stockpiles, or even with the current smaller stockpiles, may lead to the extinction of the human race.[90] The International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War believe that nuclear war could indirectly contribute to human extinction via secondary effects, including environmental consequences, societal breakdown, and economic collapse. It has been estimated that a relatively small-scale nuclear exchange between India and Pakistan involving 100 Hiroshima yield (15 kilotons) weapons, could cause a nuclear winter and kill more than a billion people.[91]

According to a peer-reviewed study published in the journal Nature Food in August 2022, a full-scale nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia would directly kill 360 million people and more than 5 billion people would die from starvation. More than 2 billion people could die from a smaller-scale nuclear war between India and Pakistan.[88][92][93]

Public opposition

 
Protest in Bonn against the nuclear arms race between the U.S./NATO and the Warsaw Pact, 1981
 
Demonstration against nuclear testing in Lyon, France, in the 1980s.

Peace movements emerged in Japan and in 1954 they converged to form a unified "Japan Council against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs." Japanese opposition to nuclear weapons tests in the Pacific Ocean was widespread, and "an estimated 35 million signatures were collected on petitions calling for bans on nuclear weapons".[94]

In the United Kingdom, the first Aldermaston March organised by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament(CND) took place at Easter 1958, when, according to the CND, several thousand people marched for four days from Trafalgar Square, London, to the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment close to Aldermaston in Berkshire, England, to demonstrate their opposition to nuclear weapons.[95][96] The Aldermaston marches continued into the late 1960s when tens of thousands of people took part in the four-day marches.[94]

In 1959, a letter in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists was the start of a successful campaign to stop the Atomic Energy Commission dumping radioactive waste in the sea 19 kilometres from Boston.[97] In 1962, Linus Pauling won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work to stop the atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons, and the "Ban the Bomb" movement spread.[59]

In 1963, many countries ratified the Partial Test Ban Treaty prohibiting atmospheric nuclear testing. Radioactive fallout became less of an issue and the anti-nuclear weapons movement went into decline for some years.[75][98] A resurgence of interest occurred amid European and American fears of nuclear war in the 1980s.[99]

Costs and technology spin-offs

According to an audit by the Brookings Institution, between 1940 and 1996, the U.S. spent $10.1 trillion in present-day terms[100] on nuclear weapons programs. 57% of which was spent on building nuclear weapons delivery systems. 6.3% of the total, $631 billion in present-day terms, was spent on environmental remediation and nuclear waste management, for example cleaning up the Hanford site, and 7% of the total, $707 billion was spent on making nuclear weapons themselves.[101]

Non-weapons uses

Peaceful nuclear explosions are nuclear explosions conducted for non-military purposes, such as activities related to economic development including the creation of canals. During the 1960s and 1970s, both the United States and the Soviet Union conducted a number of PNEs. Six of the explosions by the Soviet Union are considered to have been of an applied nature, not just tests.

The United States and the Soviet Union later halted their programs. Definitions and limits are covered in the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty of 1976.[102][103] The stalled Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty of 1996 would prohibit all nuclear explosions, regardless of whether they are for peaceful purposes or not.[104]

History of development

 
In nuclear fission, the nucleus of a fissile atom (in this case, enriched uranium) absorbs a thermal neutron, becomes unstable and splits into two new atoms, releasing some energy and between one and three new neutrons, which can perpetuate the process.

In the first decades of the 20th century, physics was revolutionized with developments in the understanding of the nature of atoms including the discoveries in atomic theory by John Dalton.[105] In 1898, Pierre and Marie Curie discovered that pitchblende, an ore of uranium, contained a substance—which they named radium—that emitted large amounts of radioactivity. Ernest Rutherford and Frederick Soddy identified that atoms were breaking down and turning into different elements. Hopes were raised among scientists and laymen that the elements around us could contain tremendous amounts of unseen energy, waiting to be harnessed.

In 1934, Szilard joined with Enrico Fermi in patenting the world's first working nuclear reactor.[106]

In Paris in 1934, Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie discovered that artificial radioactivity could be induced in stable elements by bombarding them with alpha particles; in Italy Enrico Fermi reported similar results when bombarding uranium with neutrons.

In December 1938, Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann reported that they had detected the element barium after bombarding uranium with neutrons. Lise Meitner and Otto Robert Frisch correctly interpreted these results as being due to the splitting of the uranium atom. Frisch confirmed this experimentally on January 13, 1939.[107] They gave the process the name "fission" because of its similarity to the splitting of a cell into two new cells. Even before it was published, news of Meitner's and Frisch's interpretation crossed the Atlantic.[108]

Between 1939 and 1940, Joliot-Curie's team applied for a patent family covering different use cases of atomic energy, one (case III, in patent FR 971,324 - Perfectionnements aux charges explosives, meaning Improvements in Explosive Charges) being the first official document explicitly mentioning a nuclear explosion as a purpose, including for war.[109] This patent was applied for on May 4, 1939, but only granted in 1950, being withheld by French authorities in the meantime.

Uranium appears in nature primarily in two isotopes: uranium-238 and uranium-235. When the nucleus of uranium-235 absorbs a neutron, it undergoes nuclear fission, releasing energy and, on average, 2.5 neutrons. Because uranium-235 releases more neutrons than it absorbs, it can support a chain reaction and so is described as fissile. Uranium-238, on the other hand, is not fissile as it does not normally undergo fission when it absorbs a neutron.

By the start of the war in September 1939, many scientists likely to be persecuted by the Nazis had already escaped. Physicists on both sides were well aware of the possibility of utilizing nuclear fission as a weapon, but no one was quite sure how it could be engineered. In August 1939, concerned that Germany might have its own project to develop fission-based weapons, Albert Einstein signed a letter to U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt warning him of the threat.[110]

Roosevelt responded by setting up the Uranium Committee under Lyman James Briggs but, with little initial funding ($6,000), progress was slow. It was not until the U.S. entered the war in December 1941 that Washington decided to commit the necessary resources to a top-secret high priority bomb project.[111]

Organized research first began in Britain and Canada as part of the Tube Alloys project: the world's first nuclear weapons project. The Maud Committee was set up following the work of Frisch and Rudolf Peierls who calculated uranium-235's critical mass and found it to be much smaller than previously thought which meant that a deliverable bomb should be possible.[112] In the February 1940 Frisch–Peierls memorandum they stated that: "The energy liberated in the explosion of such a super-bomb...will, for an instant, produce a temperature comparable to that of the interior of the sun. The blast from such an explosion would destroy life in a wide area. The size of this area is difficult to estimate, but it will probably cover the centre of a big city."

 
Leo Szilard, invented the electron microscope, linear accelerator, cyclotron, nuclear chain reaction and patented the nuclear reactor in London in 1934.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ also known as an atom bomb, atomic bomb, nuclear bomb or nuclear warhead, and colloquially as an A-bomb or nuke
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  108. ^ Richard Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb 268 (Simon and Schuster, 1986).
  109. ^ Bendjebbar (2000). Histoire secrète de la bombe atomique française. Cherche Midi. p. 403. ISBN 978-2-86274-794-1.
  110. ^ Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb (1986) 305-312..
  111. ^ Geoffrey Lucas Herrera (2006). Technology and International Transformation: The Railroad, the Atom Bomb, and the Politics of Technological Change. SUNY Press. pp. 179–80. ISBN 978-0-7914-6868-5.
  112. ^ Laucht, Christoph (2012). Elemental Germans: Klaus Fuchs, Rudolf Peierls and the Making of British Nuclear Culture 1939–59. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 31–33. ISBN 978-1-137-22295-4.

Bibliography

  • Bethe, Hans Albrecht. The Road from Los Alamos. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991. ISBN 0-671-74012-1
  • DeVolpi, Alexander, Minkov, Vladimir E., Simonenko, Vadim A., and Stanford, George S. Nuclear Shadowboxing: Contemporary Threats from Cold War Weaponry. Fidlar Doubleday, 2004 (Two volumes, both accessible on Google Book Search) (Content of both volumes is now available in the 2009 trilogy by Alexander DeVolpi: Nuclear Insights: The Cold War Legacy)
  • Glasstone, Samuel and Dolan, Philip J. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1977.
  • NATO Handbook on the Medical Aspects of NBC Defensive Operations (Part I – Nuclear). Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force: Washington, D.C., 1996
  • Hansen, Chuck. U.S. Nuclear Weapons: The Secret History. Arlington, TX: Aerofax, 1988
  • Hansen, Chuck, "Swords of Armageddon: U.S. nuclear weapons development since 1945" (CD-ROM & download available). PDF. 2,600 pages, Sunnyvale, California, Chucklea Publications, 1995, 2007. ISBN 978-0-9791915-0-3 (2nd Ed.)
  • Holloway, David. Stalin and the Bomb. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-300-06056-4
  • The Manhattan Engineer District, "The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki" (1946)
  • (in French) Jean-Hugues Oppel, Réveillez le président, Éditions Payot et rivages, 2007 (ISBN 978-2-7436-1630-4). The book is a fiction about the nuclear weapons of France; the book also contains about ten chapters on true historical incidents involving nuclear weapons and strategy.
  • Smyth, Henry DeWolf. Atomic Energy for Military Purposes. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1945. (Smyth Report – the first declassified report by the US government on nuclear weapons)
  • . Office of Technology Assessment, May 1979.
  • Rhodes, Richard. Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995. ISBN 0-684-82414-0
  • Rhodes, Richard. The Making of the Atomic Bomb. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1986 ISBN 0-684-81378-5
  • Shultz, George P. and Goodby, James E. The War that Must Never be Fought, Hoover Press, 2015, ISBN 978-0-8179-1845-3.
  • Weart, Spencer R. Nuclear Fear: A History of Images. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-674-62836-5
  • Weart, Spencer R. The Rise of Nuclear Fear. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2012. ISBN 0-674-05233-1

Further reading

External links

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  • Nuclear Weapon Archive from Carey Sublette is a reliable source of information and has links to other sources and an informative FAQ.
  • The Federation of American Scientists provide solid information on weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear weapons and their
  • Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues – contains many resources related to nuclear weapons, including a historical and technical overview and searchable bibliography of web and print resources.
  • Video archive of US, Soviet, UK, Chinese and French Nuclear Weapon Testing at sonicbomb.com
  • The National Museum of Nuclear Science & History (United States) – located in Albuquerque, New Mexico; a Smithsonian Affiliate Museum
  • Nuclear Emergency and Radiation Resources
  • at AtomicArchive.com
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory: History (U.S. nuclear history)
  • Race for the Superbomb, PBS website on the history of the H-bomb
  • or NPIHP is a global network of individuals and institutions engaged in the study of international nuclear history through archival documents, oral history interviews and other empirical sources.
  • NUKEMAP3D – a 3D nuclear weapons effects simulator powered by Google Maps.

nuclear, weapon, atom, bomb, bomb, redirect, here, other, uses, atom, bomb, disambiguation, bomb, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . Atom bomb and A bomb redirect here For other uses see Atom bomb disambiguation and A bomb disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nuclear weapon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A nuclear weapon a is an explosive device that derives its destructive force from nuclear reactions either fission fission bomb or a combination of fission and fusion reactions thermonuclear bomb producing a nuclear explosion Both bomb types release large quantities of energy from relatively small amounts of matter The first test of a fission atomic bomb released an amount of energy approximately equal to 20 000 tons of TNT 84 TJ 1 The first thermonuclear hydrogen bomb test released energy approximately equal to 10 million tons of TNT 42 PJ Nuclear bombs have had yields between 10 tons TNT the W54 and 50 megatons for the Tsar Bomba see TNT equivalent A thermonuclear weapon weighing as little as 600 pounds 270 kg can release energy equal to more than 1 2 megatonnes of TNT 5 0 PJ 2 A nuclear device no larger than a conventional bomb can devastate an entire city by blast fire and radiation Since they are weapons of mass destruction the proliferation of nuclear weapons is a focus of international relations policy Nuclear weapons have been deployed twice in war by the United States against the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 during World War II Contents 1 Testing and deployment 2 Types 2 1 Fission weapons 2 2 Fusion weapons 2 3 Other types 2 3 1 Tactical nuclear weapons 3 Weapons delivery 4 Nuclear strategy 5 Governance control and law 5 1 Disarmament 5 2 United Nations 6 Controversy 6 1 Ethics 6 2 Notable nuclear weapons accidents 6 3 Nuclear testing and fallout 7 Effects of nuclear explosions 7 1 Effects of nuclear explosions on human health 7 2 Effects of nuclear war 7 3 Public opposition 8 Costs and technology spin offs 9 Non weapons uses 10 History of development 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Bibliography 12 3 Further reading 13 External linksTesting and deploymentNuclear weapons have only twice been used in war both times by the United States against Japan near the end of World War II On August 6 1945 the U S Army Air Forces detonated a uranium gun type fission bomb nicknamed Little Boy over the Japanese city of Hiroshima three days later on August 9 the U S Army Air Forces detonated a plutonium implosion type fission bomb nicknamed Fat Man over the Japanese city of Nagasaki These bombings caused injuries that resulted in the deaths of approximately 200 000 civilians and military personnel 3 The ethics of these bombings and their role in Japan s surrender are subjects of debate Since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear weapons have been detonated over 2 000 times for testing and demonstration Only a few nations possess such weapons or are suspected of seeking them The only countries known to have detonated nuclear weapons and acknowledge possessing them are chronologically by date of first test the United States the Soviet Union succeeded as a nuclear power by Russia the United Kingdom France China India Pakistan and North Korea Israel is believed to possess nuclear weapons though in a policy of deliberate ambiguity it does not acknowledge having them Germany Italy Turkey Belgium and the Netherlands are nuclear weapons sharing states 4 5 6 South Africa is the only country to have independently developed and then renounced and dismantled its nuclear weapons 7 The Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons aims to reduce the spread of nuclear weapons but its effectiveness has been questioned Modernisation of weapons continues to this day 8 TypesMain article Nuclear weapon design The Trinity test of the Manhattan Project was the first detonation of a nuclear weapon which led J Robert Oppenheimer to recall verses from the Hindu scripture Bhagavad Gita If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at once into the sky that would be like the splendor of the mighty one I am become Death the destroyer of worlds 9 Robert Oppenheimer principal leader of the Manhattan Project often referred to as the father of the atomic bomb There are two basic types of nuclear weapons those that derive the majority of their energy from nuclear fission reactions alone and those that use fission reactions to begin nuclear fusion reactions that produce a large amount of the total energy output 10 Fission weapons The two basic fission weapon designs All existing nuclear weapons derive some of their explosive energy from nuclear fission reactions Weapons whose explosive output is exclusively from fission reactions are commonly referred to as atomic bombs or atom bombs abbreviated as A bombs This has long been noted as something of a misnomer as their energy comes from the nucleus of the atom just as it does with fusion weapons In fission weapons a mass of fissile material enriched uranium or plutonium is forced into supercriticality allowing an exponential growth of nuclear chain reactions either by shooting one piece of sub critical material into another the gun method or by compression of a sub critical sphere or cylinder of fissile material using chemically fueled explosive lenses The latter approach the implosion method is more sophisticated and more efficient smaller less massive and requiring less of the expensive fissile fuel than the former 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 from the equivalent of just under a ton to upwards of 500 000 tons 500 kilotons of TNT 4 2 to 2 1 106 GJ 11 All fission reactions generate fission products the remains of the split atomic nuclei Many fission products are either highly radioactive but short lived or moderately radioactive but long lived and as such they are a serious form of radioactive contamination Fission products are the principal radioactive component of nuclear fallout Another source of radioactivity is the burst of free neutrons produced by the weapon When they collide with other nuclei in the surrounding material the neutrons transmute those nuclei into other isotopes altering their stability and making them radioactive The most commonly used fissile materials for nuclear weapons applications have been uranium 235 and plutonium 239 Less commonly used has been uranium 233 Neptunium 237 and some isotopes of americium may be usable for nuclear explosives as well but it is not clear that this has ever been implemented and their plausible use in nuclear weapons is a matter of dispute 12 Fusion weapons Main article Thermonuclear weapon The basics of the Teller Ulam design for a hydrogen bomb a fission bomb uses radiation to compress and heat a separate section of fusion fuel The other basic type of nuclear weapon produces a large proportion of its energy in nuclear fusion reactions Such fusion weapons are generally referred to as thermonuclear weapons or more colloquially as hydrogen bombs abbreviated as H bombs as they rely on fusion reactions between isotopes of hydrogen deuterium and tritium All such weapons derive a significant portion of their energy from fission reactions used to trigger fusion reactions and fusion reactions can themselves trigger additional fission reactions 13 Only six countries United States Russia United Kingdom China France and India have conducted thermonuclear weapon tests Whether India has detonated a true multi staged thermonuclear weapon is controversial 14 North Korea claims to have tested a fusion weapon as of January 2016 update though this claim is disputed 15 Thermonuclear weapons are considered much more difficult to successfully design and execute than primitive fission weapons Almost all of the nuclear weapons deployed today use the thermonuclear design because it is more efficient 16 Thermonuclear bombs work by using the energy of a fission bomb 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 rays and X rays emitted first compress the fusion fuel then heat it to thermonuclear temperatures The ensuing fusion reaction creates enormous numbers of high speed neutrons which can then induce fission in materials not normally prone to it such as depleted uranium Each of these components is known as a stage with the fission bomb as the primary and the fusion capsule as the secondary In large megaton range hydrogen bombs about half of the yield comes from the final fissioning of depleted uranium 11 Virtually all thermonuclear weapons deployed today use the two stage design described above but it is possible to add additional fusion stages each stage igniting a larger amount of fusion fuel in the next stage This technique can be used to construct thermonuclear weapons of arbitrarily large yield This is in contrast to fission bombs which are limited in their explosive power due to criticality danger premature nuclear chain reaction caused by too large amounts of pre assembled fissile fuel The largest nuclear weapon ever detonated the Tsar Bomba of the USSR which released an energy equivalent of over 50 megatons of TNT 210 PJ was a three stage weapon Most thermonuclear weapons are considerably smaller than this due to practical constraints from missile warhead space and weight requirements 17 Edward Teller often referred to as the father of the hydrogen bomb Fusion reactions do not create fission products and thus contribute far less to the creation of nuclear fallout than fission reactions but because all thermonuclear weapons contain at least one fission stage and many high yield thermonuclear devices have a final fission stage thermonuclear weapons can generate at least as much nuclear fallout as fission only weapons Furthermore high yield thermonuclear explosions most dangerously ground bursts have the force to lift radioactive debris upwards past the tropopause into the stratosphere where the calm non turbulent winds permit the debris to travel great distances from the burst eventually settling and unpredictably contaminating areas far removed from the target of the explosion Other types Main articles Boosted fission weapon Neutron bomb Radiological warfare Induced gamma emission and Antimatter weapon There are other types of nuclear weapons as well For example a boosted fission weapon is a fission bomb that increases its explosive yield through a small number of fusion reactions but it is not a fusion bomb In the boosted bomb the neutrons produced by the fusion reactions serve primarily to increase the efficiency of the fission bomb There are two types of boosted fission bomb internally boosted in which a deuterium tritium mixture is injected into the bomb core and externally boosted in which concentric shells of lithium deuteride and depleted uranium are layered on the outside of the fission bomb core The external method of boosting enabled the USSR to field the first partially thermonuclear weapons but it is now obsolete because it demands a spherical bomb geometry which was adequate during the 1950s arms race when bomber aircraft were the only available delivery vehicles The detonation of any nuclear weapon is accompanied by a blast of neutron radiation Surrounding a nuclear weapon with suitable materials such as cobalt or gold creates a weapon known as a salted bomb This device can produce exceptionally large quantities of long lived radioactive contamination It has been conjectured that such a device could serve as a doomsday weapon because such a large quantity of radioactivities with half lives of decades lifted into the stratosphere where winds would distribute it around the globe would make all life on the planet extinct In connection with the Strategic Defense Initiative research into the nuclear pumped laser was conducted under the DOD program Project Excalibur but this did not result in a working weapon The concept involves the tapping of the energy of an exploding nuclear bomb to power a single shot laser that is directed at a distant target During the Starfish Prime high altitude nuclear test in 1962 an unexpected effect was produced which is called a nuclear electromagnetic pulse This is an intense flash of electromagnetic energy produced by a rain of high energy electrons which in turn are produced by a nuclear bomb s gamma rays This flash of energy can permanently destroy or disrupt electronic equipment if insufficiently shielded It has been proposed to use this effect to disable an enemy s military and civilian infrastructure as an adjunct to other nuclear or conventional military operations By itself it could as well be useful to terrorists for crippling a nation s economic electronics based infrastructure Because the effect is most effectively produced by high altitude nuclear detonations by military weapons delivered by air though ground bursts also produce EMP effects over a localized area it can produce damage to electronics over a wide even continental geographical area Research has been done into the possibility of pure fusion bombs nuclear weapons that consist of fusion reactions without requiring a fission bomb to initiate them Such a device might provide a simpler path to thermonuclear weapons than one that required the development of fission weapons first and pure fusion weapons would create significantly less nuclear fallout than other thermonuclear weapons because they would not disperse fission products In 1998 the United States Department of Energy divulged that the United States had made a substantial investment in the past to develop pure fusion weapons but that The U S does not have and is not developing a pure fusion weapon and that No credible design for a pure fusion weapon resulted from the DOE investment 18 Nuclear isomers provide a possible pathway to fissionless fusion bombs These are naturally occurring isotopes 178m2Hf being a prominent example which exist in an elevated energy state Mechanisms to release this energy as bursts of gamma radiation as in the hafnium controversy have been proposed as possible triggers for conventional thermonuclear reactions Antimatter which consists of particles resembling ordinary matter particles in most of their properties but having opposite electric charge has been considered as a trigger mechanism for nuclear weapons 19 20 21 A major obstacle is the difficulty of producing antimatter in large enough quantities and there is no evidence that it is feasible beyond the military domain 22 However the U S Air Force funded studies of the physics of antimatter in the Cold War and began considering its possible use in weapons not just as a trigger but as the explosive itself 23 A fourth generation nuclear weapon design 19 is related to and relies upon the same principle as antimatter catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion 24 Most variation in nuclear weapon design is for the purpose of achieving different yields for different situations and in manipulating design elements to attempt to minimize weapon size 11 radiation hardness or requirements for special materials especially fissile fuel or tritium Tactical nuclear weapons Some nuclear weapons are designed for special purposes most of these are for non strategic decisively war winning purposes and are referred to as tactical nuclear weapons The neutron bomb purportedly conceived by Sam Cohen is a thermonuclear weapon that yields a relatively small explosion but a relatively large amount of neutron radiation Such a weapon could according to tacticians be used to cause massive biological casualties while leaving inanimate infrastructure mostly intact and creating minimal fallout Because high energy neutrons are capable of penetrating dense matter such as tank armor neutron warheads were procured in the 1980s though not deployed in Europe as intended over the objections of NATO allies for use as tactical payloads for US Army artillery shells 200 mm W79 and 155 mm W82 and short range missile forces Soviet authorities announced similar intentions for neutron warhead deployment in Europe indeed claimed to have originally invented the neutron bomb but their deployment on USSR tactical nuclear forces is unverifiable citation needed A type of nuclear explosive most suitable for use by ground special forces was the Special Atomic Demolition Munition or SADM sometimes popularly known as a suitcase nuke This is a nuclear bomb that is man portable or at least truck portable and though of a relatively small yield one or two kilotons is sufficient to destroy important tactical targets such as bridges dams tunnels important military or commercial installations etc either behind enemy lines or pre emptively on friendly territory soon to be overtaken by invading enemy forces These weapons require plutonium fuel and are particularly dirty Obviously they also demand especially stringent security precautions in their storage and deployment citation needed Small tactical nuclear weapons were deployed for use as antiaircraft weapons Examples include the USAF AIR 2 Genie the AIM 26 Falcon and US Army Nike Hercules Missile interceptors such as the Sprint and the Spartan also used small nuclear warheads optimized to produce neutron or X ray flux but were for use against enemy strategic warheads citation needed Other small or tactical nuclear weapons were deployed by naval forces for use primarily as antisubmarine weapons These included nuclear depth bombs or nuclear armed torpedoes Nuclear mines for use on land or at sea are also possibilities citation needed Weapons deliverySee also Nuclear weapons delivery Nuclear triad Strategic bomber Intercontinental ballistic missile and Submarine launched ballistic missile The first nuclear weapons were gravity bombs such as this Fat Man weapon dropped on Nagasaki Japan They were large and could only be delivered by heavy bomber aircraft A demilitarized commercial launch of the Russian Strategic Rocket Forces R 36 ICBM also known by the NATO reporting name SS 18 Satan Upon its first fielding in the late 1960s the SS 18 remains the single highest throw weight missile delivery system ever built The system used to deliver a nuclear weapon to its target is an important factor affecting both nuclear weapon design and nuclear strategy The design development and maintenance of delivery systems are among the most expensive parts of a nuclear weapons program they account for example for 57 of the financial resources spent by the United States on nuclear weapons projects since 1940 25 The simplest method for delivering a nuclear weapon is a gravity bomb dropped from aircraft this was the method used by the United States against Japan This method places few restrictions on the size of the weapon It does however limit attack range response time to an impending attack and the number of weapons that a country can field at the same time With miniaturization nuclear bombs can be delivered by both strategic bombers and tactical fighter bombers This method is the primary means of nuclear weapons delivery the majority of U S nuclear warheads for example are free fall gravity bombs namely the B61 11 needs update Montage of an inert test of a United States Trident SLBM submarine launched ballistic missile from submerged to the terminal or re entry phase of the multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles Preferable from a strategic point of view is a nuclear weapon mounted on a missile which can use a ballistic trajectory to deliver the warhead over the horizon Although even short range missiles allow for a faster and less vulnerable attack the development of long range intercontinental ballistic missiles ICBMs and submarine launched ballistic missiles SLBMs has given some nations the ability to plausibly deliver missiles anywhere on the globe with a high likelihood of success More advanced systems such as multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles MIRVs can launch multiple warheads at different targets from one missile reducing the chance of a successful missile defense Today missiles are most common among systems designed for delivery of nuclear weapons Making a warhead small enough to fit onto a missile though can be difficult 11 Tactical weapons have involved the most variety of delivery types including not only gravity bombs and missiles but also artillery shells land mines and nuclear depth charges and torpedoes for anti submarine warfare An atomic mortar has been tested by the United States Small two man portable tactical weapons somewhat misleadingly referred to as suitcase bombs such as the Special Atomic Demolition Munition have been developed although the difficulty of combining sufficient yield with portability limits their military utility 11 Nuclear strategyMain articles Nuclear strategy and Deterrence theory See also Nuclear peace Essentials of Post Cold War Deterrence Single Integrated Operational Plan Nuclear warfare and On Thermonuclear War Nuclear warfare strategy is a set of policies that deal with preventing or fighting a nuclear war The policy of trying to prevent an attack by a nuclear weapon from another country by threatening nuclear retaliation is known as the strategy of nuclear deterrence The goal in deterrence is to always maintain a second strike capability the ability of a country to respond to a nuclear attack with one of its own and potentially to strive for first strike status the ability to destroy an enemy s nuclear forces before they could retaliate During the Cold War policy and military theorists considered the sorts of policies that might prevent a nuclear attack and they developed game theory models that could lead to stable deterrence conditions 26 The now decommissioned United States Peacekeeper missile was an ICBM developed to replace the Minuteman missile in the late 1980s Each missile like the heavier lift Russian SS 18 Satan could contain up to ten nuclear warheads shown in red each of which could be aimed at a different target A factor in the development of MIRVs was to make complete missile defense difficult for an enemy country Different forms of nuclear weapons delivery see above allow for different types of nuclear strategies The goals of any strategy are generally to make it difficult for an enemy to launch a pre emptive strike against the weapon system and difficult to defend against the delivery of the weapon during a potential conflict This can mean keeping weapon locations hidden such as deploying them on submarines or land mobile transporter erector launchers whose locations are difficult to track or it can mean protecting weapons by burying them in hardened missile silo bunkers Other components of nuclear strategies included using missile defenses to destroy the missiles before they land or implementing civil defense measures using early warning systems to evacuate citizens to safe areas before an attack Weapons designed to threaten large populations or to deter attacks are known as strategic weapons Nuclear weapons for use on a battlefield in military situations are called tactical weapons Critics of nuclear war strategy often suggest that a nuclear war between two nations would result in mutual annihilation From this point of view the significance of nuclear weapons is to deter war because any nuclear war would escalate out of mutual distrust and fear resulting in mutually assured destruction This threat of national if not global destruction has been a strong motivation for anti nuclear weapons activism Critics from the peace movement and within the military establishment citation needed have questioned the usefulness of such weapons in the current military climate According to an advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice in 1996 the use of or threat of use of such weapons would generally be contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict but the court did not reach an opinion as to whether or not the threat or use would be lawful in specific extreme circumstances such as if the survival of the state were at stake Another deterrence position is that nuclear proliferation can be desirable In this case it is argued that unlike conventional weapons nuclear weapons deter all out war between states and they succeeded in doing this during the Cold War between the U S and the Soviet Union 27 In the late 1950s and early 1960s Gen Pierre Marie Gallois of France an adviser to Charles de Gaulle argued in books like The Balance of Terror Strategy for the Nuclear Age 1961 that mere possession of a nuclear arsenal was enough to ensure deterrence and thus concluded that the spread of nuclear weapons could increase international stability Some prominent neo realist scholars such as Kenneth Waltz and John Mearsheimer have argued along the lines of Gallois that some forms of nuclear proliferation would decrease the likelihood of total war especially in troubled regions of the world where there exists a single nuclear weapon state Aside from the public opinion that opposes proliferation in any form there are two schools of thought on the matter those like Mearsheimer who favored selective proliferation 28 and Waltz who was somewhat more non interventionist 29 30 Interest in proliferation and the stability instability paradox that it generates continues to this day with ongoing debate about indigenous Japanese and South Korean nuclear deterrent against North Korea 31 The threat of potentially suicidal terrorists possessing nuclear weapons a form of nuclear terrorism complicates the decision process The prospect of mutually assured destruction might not deter an enemy who expects to die in the confrontation Further if the initial act is from a stateless terrorist instead of a sovereign nation there might not be a nation or specific target to retaliate against It has been argued especially after the September 11 2001 attacks that this complication calls for a new nuclear strategy one that is distinct from that which gave relative stability during the Cold War 32 Since 1996 the United States has had a policy of allowing the targeting of its nuclear weapons at terrorists armed with weapons of mass destruction 33 Robert Gallucci argues that although traditional deterrence is not an effective approach toward terrorist groups bent on causing a nuclear catastrophe Gallucci believes that the United States should instead consider a policy of expanded deterrence which focuses not solely on the would be nuclear terrorists but on those states that may deliberately transfer or inadvertently leak nuclear weapons and materials to them By threatening retaliation against those states the United States may be able to deter that which it cannot physically prevent 34 Graham Allison makes a similar case arguing that the key to expanded deterrence is coming up with ways of tracing nuclear material to the country that forged the fissile material After a nuclear bomb detonates nuclear forensics cops would collect debris samples and send them to a laboratory for radiological analysis By identifying unique attributes of the fissile material including its impurities and contaminants one could trace the path back to its origin 35 The process is analogous to identifying a criminal by fingerprints The goal would be twofold first to deter leaders of nuclear states from selling weapons to terrorists by holding them accountable for any use of their weapons second to give leaders every incentive to tightly secure their nuclear weapons and materials 35 According to the Pentagon s June 2019 Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations of the Joint Chiefs of Staffs website Publication Integration of nuclear weapons employment with conventional and special operations forces is essential to the success of any mission or operation 36 37 Governance control and lawMain articles Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Strategic Arms Limitation Talks Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty START I START II Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Lahore Declaration and New START See also Anti nuclear movement The International Atomic Energy Agency was created in 1957 to encourage peaceful development of nuclear technology while providing international safeguards against nuclear proliferation Because they are weapons of mass destruction the proliferation and possible use of nuclear weapons are important issues in international relations and diplomacy In most countries the use of nuclear force can only be authorized by the head of government or head of state 38 Despite controls and regulations governing nuclear weapons there is an inherent danger of accidents mistakes false alarms blackmail theft and sabotage 39 In the late 1940s lack of mutual trust prevented the United States and the Soviet Union from making progress on arms control agreements The Russell Einstein Manifesto was issued in London on July 9 1955 by Bertrand Russell in the midst of the Cold War It highlighted the dangers posed by nuclear weapons and called for world leaders to seek peaceful resolutions to international conflict The signatories included eleven pre eminent intellectuals and scientists including Albert Einstein who signed it just days before his death on April 18 1955 A few days after the release philanthropist Cyrus S Eaton offered to sponsor a conference called for in the manifesto in Pugwash Nova Scotia Eaton s birthplace This conference was to be the first of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs held in July 1957 By the 1960s steps were taken to limit both the proliferation of nuclear weapons to other countries and the environmental effects of nuclear testing The Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 1963 restricted all nuclear testing to underground nuclear testing to prevent contamination from nuclear fallout whereas the Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons 1968 attempted to place restrictions on the types of activities signatories could participate in with the goal of allowing the transference of non military nuclear technology to member countries without fear of proliferation UN vote on adoption of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons on July 7 2017 Yes No Did not vote In 1957 the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA was established under the mandate of the United Nations to encourage development of peaceful applications of nuclear technology provide international safeguards against its misuse and facilitate the application of safety measures in its use In 1996 many nations signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 40 which prohibits all testing of nuclear weapons A testing ban imposes a significant hindrance to nuclear arms development by any complying country 41 The Treaty requires the ratification by 44 specific states before it can go into force as of 2012 update the ratification of eight of these states is still required 40 Additional treaties and agreements have governed nuclear weapons stockpiles between the countries with the two largest stockpiles the United States and the Soviet Union and later between the United States and Russia These include treaties such as SALT II never ratified START I expired INF START II never in effect SORT and New START as well as non binding agreements such as SALT I and the Presidential Nuclear Initiatives 42 of 1991 Even when they did not enter into force these agreements helped limit and later reduce the numbers and types of nuclear weapons between the United States and the Soviet Union Russia Nuclear weapons have also been opposed by agreements between countries Many nations have been declared Nuclear Weapon Free Zones areas where nuclear weapons production and deployment are prohibited through the use of treaties The Treaty of Tlatelolco 1967 prohibited any production or deployment of nuclear weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean and the Treaty of Pelindaba 1964 prohibits nuclear weapons in many African countries As recently as 2006 a Central Asian Nuclear Weapon Free Zone was established among the former Soviet republics of Central Asia prohibiting nuclear weapons Large stockpile with global range dark blue smaller stockpile with global range medium blue small stockpile with regional range light blue In 1996 the International Court of Justice the highest court of the United Nations issued an Advisory Opinion concerned with the Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons The court ruled that the use or threat of use of nuclear weapons would violate various articles of international law including the Geneva Conventions the Hague Conventions the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Given the unique destructive characteristics of nuclear weapons the International Committee of the Red Cross calls on States to ensure that these weapons are never used irrespective of whether they consider them lawful or not 43 Additionally there have been other specific actions meant to discourage countries from developing nuclear arms In the wake of the tests by India and Pakistan in 1998 economic sanctions were temporarily levied against both countries though neither were signatories with the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty One of the stated casus belli for the initiation of the 2003 Iraq War was an accusation by the United States that Iraq was actively pursuing nuclear arms though this was soon discovered not to be the case as the program had been discontinued In 1981 Israel had bombed a nuclear reactor being constructed in Osirak Iraq in what it called an attempt to halt Iraq s previous nuclear arms ambitions in 2007 Israel bombed another reactor being constructed in Syria In 2013 Mark Diesendorf said that governments of France India North Korea Pakistan UK and South Africa have used nuclear power and or research reactors to assist nuclear weapons development or to contribute to their supplies of nuclear explosives from military reactors 44 The two tied for lowest points for the Doomsday Clock have been in 1953 when the Clock was set to two minutes until midnight after the U S and the Soviet Union began testing hydrogen bombs and in 2018 following the failure of world leaders to address tensions relating to nuclear weapons and climate change issues 45 Disarmament Main article Nuclear disarmament For statistics on possession and deployment see List of states with nuclear weapons The USSR and United States nuclear weapon stockpiles throughout the Cold War until 2015 with a precipitous drop in total numbers following the end of the Cold War in 1991 Nuclear disarmament refers to both the act of reducing or eliminating nuclear weapons and to the end state of a nuclear free world in which nuclear weapons are eliminated Beginning with the 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty and continuing through the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty there have been many treaties to limit or reduce nuclear weapons testing and stockpiles The 1968 Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty has as one of its explicit conditions that all signatories must pursue negotiations in good faith towards the long term goal of complete disarmament The nuclear weapon states have largely treated that aspect of the agreement as decorative and without force 46 Only one country South Africa has ever fully renounced nuclear weapons they had independently developed The former Soviet republics of Belarus Kazakhstan and Ukraine returned Soviet nuclear arms stationed in their countries to Russia after the collapse of the USSR Proponents of nuclear disarmament say that it would lessen the probability of nuclear war especially accidentally Critics of nuclear disarmament say that it would undermine the present nuclear peace and deterrence and would lead to increased global instability Various American elder statesmen 47 who were in office during the Cold War period have been advocating the elimination of nuclear weapons These officials include Henry Kissinger George Shultz Sam Nunn and William Perry In January 2010 Lawrence M Krauss stated that no issue carries more importance to the long term health and security of humanity than the effort to reduce and perhaps one day rid the world of nuclear weapons 48 Ukrainian workers use equipment provided by the U S Defense Threat Reduction Agency to dismantle a Soviet era missile silo After the end of the Cold War Ukraine and the other non Russian post Soviet republics relinquished Soviet nuclear stockpiles to Russia In January 1986 Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev publicly proposed a three stage program for abolishing the world s nuclear weapons by the end of the 20th century 49 In the years after the end of the Cold War there have been numerous campaigns to urge the abolition of nuclear weapons such as that organized by the Global Zero movement and the goal of a world without nuclear weapons was advocated by United States President Barack Obama in an April 2009 speech in Prague 50 A CNN poll from April 2010 indicated that the American public was nearly evenly split on the issue 51 Some analysts have argued that nuclear weapons have made the world relatively safer with peace through deterrence and through the stability instability paradox including in south Asia 52 53 Kenneth Waltz has argued that nuclear weapons have helped keep an uneasy peace and further nuclear weapon proliferation might even help avoid the large scale conventional wars that were so common before their invention at the end of World War II 30 But former Secretary Henry Kissinger says there is a new danger which cannot be addressed by deterrence The classical notion of deterrence was that there was some consequences before which aggressors and evildoers would recoil In a world of suicide bombers that calculation doesn t operate in any comparable way 54 George Shultz has said If you think of the people who are doing suicide attacks and people like that get a nuclear weapon they are almost by definition not deterrable 55 As of early 2019 more than 90 of world s 13 865 nuclear weapons were owned by Russia and the United States 56 57 United Nations Main article United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs The UN Office for Disarmament Affairs UNODA is a department of the United Nations Secretariat established in January 1998 as part of the United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan s plan to reform the UN as presented in his report to the General Assembly in July 1997 58 Its goal is to promote nuclear disarmament and non proliferation and the strengthening of the disarmament regimes in respect to other weapons of mass destruction chemical and biological weapons It also promotes disarmament efforts in the area of conventional weapons especially land mines and small arms which are often the weapons of choice in contemporary conflicts ControversySee also Nuclear weapons debate and History of the anti nuclear movement Ethics Main article Nuclear ethics Anti nuclear weapons protest march in Oxford 1980 Even before the first nuclear weapons had been developed scientists involved with the Manhattan Project were divided over the use of the weapon The role of the two atomic bombings of the country in Japan s surrender and the U S s ethical justification for them has been the subject of scholarly and popular debate for decades The question of whether nations should have nuclear weapons or test them has been continually and nearly universally controversial 59 Notable nuclear weapons accidents Main articles Nuclear and radiation accidents and incidents and List of military nuclear accidents See also List of nuclear close calls August 21 1945 While conducting experiments on a plutonium gallium core at Los Alamos National Laboratory physicist Harry Daghlian received a lethal dose of radiation when an error caused it to enter prompt criticality He died 25 days later on September 15 1945 from radiation poisoning May 21 1946 While conducting further experiments on the same core at Los Alamos National Laboratory physicist Louis Slotin accidentally caused the core to become briefly supercritical He received a lethal dose of gamma and neutron radiation and died nine days later on May 30 1946 After the death of Daghlian and Slotin the mass became known as the demon core It was ultimately used to construct a bomb for use on the Nevada Test Range 60 February 13 1950 a Convair B 36B crashed in northern British Columbia after jettisoning a Mark IV atomic bomb This was the first such nuclear weapon loss in history The accident was designated a Broken Arrow an accident involving a nuclear weapon but which does not present a risk of war Experts believe that up to 50 nuclear weapons were lost during the Cold War 61 May 22 1957 a 42 000 pound 19 000 kg Mark 17 hydrogen bomb accidentally fell from a bomber near Albuquerque New Mexico The detonation of the device s conventional explosives destroyed it on impact and formed a crater 25 feet 7 6 m in diameter on land owned by the University of New Mexico According to a researcher at the Natural Resources Defense Council it was one of the most powerful bombs made to date 62 June 7 1960 the 1960 Fort Dix IM 99 accident destroyed a Boeing CIM 10 Bomarc nuclear missile and shelter and contaminated the BOMARC Missile Accident Site in New Jersey January 24 1961 the 1961 Goldsboro B 52 crash occurred near Goldsboro North Carolina A Boeing B 52 Stratofortress carrying two Mark 39 nuclear bombs broke up in mid air dropping its nuclear payload in the process 63 1965 Philippine Sea A 4 crash where a Skyhawk attack aircraft with a nuclear weapon fell into the sea 64 The pilot the aircraft and the B43 nuclear bomb were never recovered 65 It was not until 1989 that the Pentagon revealed the loss of the one megaton bomb 66 January 17 1966 the 1966 Palomares B 52 crash occurred when a B 52G bomber of the USAF collided with a KC 135 tanker during mid air refuelling off the coast of Spain The KC 135 was completely destroyed when its fuel load ignited killing all four crew members The B 52G broke apart killing three of the seven crew members aboard 67 Of the four Mk28 type hydrogen bombs the B 52G carried 68 three were found on land near Almeria Spain The non nuclear explosives in two of the weapons detonated upon impact with the ground resulting in the contamination of a 2 square kilometer 490 acre 0 78 square mile area by radioactive plutonium The fourth which fell into the Mediterranean Sea was recovered intact after a 21 2 month long search 69 January 21 1968 the 1968 Thule Air Base B 52 crash involved a United States Air Force USAF B 52 bomber The aircraft was carrying four hydrogen bombs when a cabin fire forced the crew to abandon the aircraft Six crew members ejected safely but one who did not have an ejection seat was killed while trying to bail out The bomber crashed onto sea ice in Greenland causing the nuclear payload to rupture and disperse which resulted in widespread radioactive contamination 70 One of the bombs remains lost 71 September 18 19 1980 the Damascus Accident occurred in Damascus Arkansas where a Titan missile equipped with a nuclear warhead exploded The accident was caused by a maintenance man who dropped a socket from a socket wrench down an 80 foot 24 m shaft puncturing a fuel tank on the rocket Leaking fuel resulted in a hypergolic fuel explosion jettisoning the W 53 warhead beyond the launch site 72 73 74 Nuclear testing and fallout Main article Nuclear fallout See also Downwinders Over 2 000 nuclear tests have been conducted in over a dozen different sites around the world Red Russia Soviet Union blue France light blue United States violet Britain yellow China orange India brown Pakistan green North Korea and light green territories exposed to nuclear bombs The Black dot indicates the location of the Vela incident This view of downtown Las Vegas shows a mushroom cloud in the background Scenes such as this were typical during the 1950s From 1951 to 1962 the government conducted 100 atmospheric tests at the nearby Nevada Test Site Over 500 atmospheric nuclear weapons tests were conducted at various sites around the world from 1945 to 1980 Radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons testing was first drawn to public attention in 1954 when the Castle Bravo hydrogen bomb test at the Pacific Proving Grounds contaminated the crew and catch of the Japanese fishing boat Lucky Dragon 75 One of the fishermen died in Japan seven months later and the fear of contaminated tuna led to a temporary boycotting of the popular staple in Japan The incident caused widespread concern around the world especially regarding the effects of nuclear fallout and atmospheric nuclear testing and provided a decisive impetus for the emergence of the anti nuclear weapons movement in many countries 75 As public awareness and concern mounted over the possible health hazards associated with exposure to the nuclear fallout various studies were done to assess the extent of the hazard A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Cancer Institute study claims that fallout from atmospheric nuclear tests would lead to perhaps 11 000 excess deaths among people alive during atmospheric testing in the United States from all forms of cancer including leukemia from 1951 to well into the 21st century 76 77 As of March 2009 update the U S is the only nation that compensates nuclear test victims Since the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990 more than 1 38 billion in compensation has been approved The money is going to people who took part in the tests notably at the Nevada Test Site and to others exposed to the radiation 78 79 In addition leakage of byproducts of nuclear weapon production into groundwater has been an ongoing issue particularly at the Hanford site 80 Effects of nuclear explosionsMain article Effects of nuclear explosions Effects of nuclear explosions on human health Main article Effects of nuclear explosions on human health A photograph of Sumiteru Taniguchi s back injuries taken in January 1946 by a U S Marine photographer Some scientists estimate that a nuclear war with 100 Hiroshima size nuclear explosions on cities could cost the lives of tens of millions of people from long term climatic effects alone The climatology hypothesis is that if each city firestorms a great deal of soot could be thrown up into the atmosphere which could blanket the earth cutting out sunlight for years on end causing the disruption of food chains in what is termed a nuclear winter 81 82 People near the Hiroshima explosion and who managed to survive the explosion subsequently suffered a variety of medical effects 83 Initial stage the first 1 9 weeks in which are the greatest number of deaths with 90 due to thermal injury and or blast effects and 10 due to super lethal radiation exposure Intermediate stage from 10 to 12 weeks The deaths in this period are from ionizing radiation in the median lethal range LD50 Late period lasting from 13 to 20 weeks This period has some improvement in survivors condition Delayed period from 20 weeks Characterized by numerous complications mostly related to healing of thermal and mechanical injuries and if the individual was exposed to a few hundred to a thousand millisieverts of radiation it is coupled with infertility sub fertility and blood disorders Furthermore ionizing radiation above a dose of around 50 100 millisievert exposure has been shown to statistically begin increasing one s chance of dying of cancer sometime in their lifetime over the normal unexposed rate of 25 in the long term a heightened rate of cancer proportional to the dose received would begin to be observed after 5 years with lesser problems such as eye cataracts and other more minor effects in other organs and tissue also being observed over the long term Fallout exposure depending on if further afield individuals shelter in place or evacuate perpendicular to the direction of the wind and therefore avoid contact with the fallout plume and stay there for the days and weeks after the nuclear explosion their exposure to fallout and therefore their total dose will vary With those who do shelter in place and or evacuate experiencing a total dose that would be negligible in comparison to someone who just went about their life as normal 84 85 Staying indoors until after the most hazardous fallout isotope I 131 decays away to 0 1 of its initial quantity after ten half lifes which is represented by 80 days in I 131s case would make the difference between likely contracting Thyroid cancer or escaping completely from this substance depending on the actions of the individual 86 Effects of nuclear war See also Nuclear holocaust Doomsday Clock Doomsday device World War III and Nuclear famine The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nuclear war could yield unprecedented human death tolls and habitat destruction Detonating large numbers of nuclear weapons would have an immediate short term and long term effects on the climate potentially causing cold weather known as a nuclear winter 87 88 In 1982 Brian Martin estimated that a US Soviet nuclear exchange might kill 400 450 million directly mostly in the United States Europe and Russia and maybe several hundred million more through follow up consequences in those same areas 89 Many scholars have posited that a global thermonuclear war with Cold War era stockpiles or even with the current smaller stockpiles may lead to the extinction of the human race 90 The International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War believe that nuclear war could indirectly contribute to human extinction via secondary effects including environmental consequences societal breakdown and economic collapse It has been estimated that a relatively small scale nuclear exchange between India and Pakistan involving 100 Hiroshima yield 15 kilotons weapons could cause a nuclear winter and kill more than a billion people 91 According to a peer reviewed study published in the journal Nature Food in August 2022 a full scale nuclear war between the U S and Russia would directly kill 360 million people and more than 5 billion people would die from starvation More than 2 billion people could die from a smaller scale nuclear war between India and Pakistan 88 92 93 Public opposition See also Nuclear disarmament and International Day against Nuclear Tests Protest in Bonn against the nuclear arms race between the U S NATO and the Warsaw Pact 1981 Demonstration against nuclear testing in Lyon France in the 1980s Peace movements emerged in Japan and in 1954 they converged to form a unified Japan Council against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs Japanese opposition to nuclear weapons tests in the Pacific Ocean was widespread and an estimated 35 million signatures were collected on petitions calling for bans on nuclear weapons 94 In the United Kingdom the first Aldermaston March organised by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament CND took place at Easter 1958 when according to the CND several thousand people marched for four days from Trafalgar Square London to the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment close to Aldermaston in Berkshire England to demonstrate their opposition to nuclear weapons 95 96 The Aldermaston marches continued into the late 1960s when tens of thousands of people took part in the four day marches 94 In 1959 a letter in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists was the start of a successful campaign to stop the Atomic Energy Commission dumping radioactive waste in the sea 19 kilometres from Boston 97 In 1962 Linus Pauling won the Nobel Peace Prize for his work to stop the atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons and the Ban the Bomb movement spread 59 In 1963 many countries ratified the Partial Test Ban Treaty prohibiting atmospheric nuclear testing Radioactive fallout became less of an issue and the anti nuclear weapons movement went into decline for some years 75 98 A resurgence of interest occurred amid European and American fears of nuclear war in the 1980s 99 Costs and technology spin offsSee also Global Positioning System Nuclear weapons delivery History of computing hardware ENIAC and Swords to ploughshares According to an audit by the Brookings Institution between 1940 and 1996 the U S spent 10 1 trillion in present day terms 100 on nuclear weapons programs 57 of which was spent on building nuclear weapons delivery systems 6 3 of the total 631 billion in present day terms was spent on environmental remediation and nuclear waste management for example cleaning up the Hanford site and 7 of the total 707 billion was spent on making nuclear weapons themselves 101 Non weapons usesMain article Peaceful nuclear explosion Peaceful nuclear explosions are nuclear explosions conducted for non military purposes such as activities related to economic development including the creation of canals During the 1960s and 1970s both the United States and the Soviet Union conducted a number of PNEs Six of the explosions by the Soviet Union are considered to have been of an applied nature not just tests The United States and the Soviet Union later halted their programs Definitions and limits are covered in the Peaceful Nuclear Explosions Treaty of 1976 102 103 The stalled Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of 1996 would prohibit all nuclear explosions regardless of whether they are for peaceful purposes or not 104 History of developmentMain article History of nuclear weapons See also Soviet atomic bomb project Manhattan Project Cold War and History of the Teller Ulam design This section is an excerpt from History of nuclear weapons Background edit In nuclear fission the nucleus of a fissile atom in this case enriched uranium absorbs a thermal neutron becomes unstable and splits into two new atoms releasing some energy and between one and three new neutrons which can perpetuate the process In the first decades of the 20th century physics was revolutionized with developments in the understanding of the nature of atoms including the discoveries in atomic theory by John Dalton 105 In 1898 Pierre and Marie Curie discovered that pitchblende an ore of uranium contained a substance which they named radium that emitted large amounts of radioactivity Ernest Rutherford and Frederick Soddy identified that atoms were breaking down and turning into different elements Hopes were raised among scientists and laymen that the elements around us could contain tremendous amounts of unseen energy waiting to be harnessed In 1934 Szilard joined with Enrico Fermi in patenting the world s first working nuclear reactor 106 In Paris in 1934 Irene and Frederic Joliot Curie discovered that artificial radioactivity could be induced in stable elements by bombarding them with alpha particles in Italy Enrico Fermi reported similar results when bombarding uranium with neutrons In December 1938 Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann reported that they had detected the element barium after bombarding uranium with neutrons Lise Meitner and Otto Robert Frisch correctly interpreted these results as being due to the splitting of the uranium atom Frisch confirmed this experimentally on January 13 1939 107 They gave the process the name fission because of its similarity to the splitting of a cell into two new cells Even before it was published news of Meitner s and Frisch s interpretation crossed the Atlantic 108 Between 1939 and 1940 Joliot Curie s team applied for a patent family covering different use cases of atomic energy one case III in patent FR 971 324 Perfectionnements aux charges explosives meaning Improvements in Explosive Charges being the first official document explicitly mentioning a nuclear explosion as a purpose including for war 109 This patent was applied for on May 4 1939 but only granted in 1950 being withheld by French authorities in the meantime Uranium appears in nature primarily in two isotopes uranium 238 and uranium 235 When the nucleus of uranium 235 absorbs a neutron it undergoes nuclear fission releasing energy and on average 2 5 neutrons Because uranium 235 releases more neutrons than it absorbs it can support a chain reaction and so is described as fissile Uranium 238 on the other hand is not fissile as it does not normally undergo fission when it absorbs a neutron By the start of the war in September 1939 many scientists likely to be persecuted by the Nazis had already escaped Physicists on both sides were well aware of the possibility of utilizing nuclear fission as a weapon but no one was quite sure how it could be engineered In August 1939 concerned that Germany might have its own project to develop fission based weapons Albert Einstein signed a letter to U S President Franklin D Roosevelt warning him of the threat 110 Roosevelt responded by setting up the Uranium Committee under Lyman James Briggs but with little initial funding 6 000 progress was slow It was not until the U S entered the war in December 1941 that Washington decided to commit the necessary resources to a top secret high priority bomb project 111 Organized research first began in Britain and Canada as part of the Tube Alloys project the world s first nuclear weapons project The Maud Committee was set up following the work of Frisch and Rudolf Peierls who calculated uranium 235 s critical mass and found it to be much smaller than previously thought which meant that a deliverable bomb should be possible 112 In the February 1940 Frisch Peierls memorandum they stated that The energy liberated in the explosion of such a super bomb will for an instant produce a temperature comparable to that of the interior of the sun The blast from such an explosion would destroy life in a wide area The size of this area is difficult to estimate but it will probably cover the centre of a big city Leo Szilard invented the electron microscope linear accelerator cyclotron nuclear chain reaction and patented the nuclear reactor in London in 1934 See alsoCobalt bomb Cosmic bomb phrase Cuban Missile Crisis Dirty bomb Induced gamma emission List of states with nuclear weapons List of nuclear close calls List of nuclear weapons Nth Country Experiment Nuclear blackout Nuclear bunker buster Nuclear holocaust Nuclear weapons and the United Kingdom Nuclear weapons in popular 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Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Estimated Minimum Incurred Costs of U S Nuclear Weapons Programs 1940 1996 Brookings Institution Archived from the original on March 5 2004 Retrieved November 20 2015 Announcement of Treaty on Underground Nuclear Explosions Peaceful Purposes PNE Treaty PDF Gerald R Ford Museum and Library May 28 1976 Archived from the original PDF on March 5 2016 Retrieved February 22 2016 Peters Gerhard Woolley John T Gerald R Ford Message to the Senate Transmitting United States Soviet Treaty and Protocol on the Limitation of Underground Nuclear Explosions July 29 1976 The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Status of Signature and Ratification ctbto dot org CTBT Organization Preparatory Commission Archived from the original on December 28 2016 Retrieved December 29 2016 Young Brown F 2016 Nuclear Fusion and Fission Great Discoveries in Science Cavendish Square p 33 ISBN 978 1 5026 1949 5 Retrieved January 8 2023 L Annunziata Michael 2016 Radioactivity Introduction and History From the Quantum to Quarks Elsevier p 324 ISBN 9780444634962 Richard Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb 263 and 268 Simon and Schuster 1986 Richard Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb 268 Simon and Schuster 1986 Bendjebbar 2000 Histoire secrete de la bombe atomique francaise Cherche Midi p 403 ISBN 978 2 86274 794 1 Rhodes The Making of the Atomic Bomb 1986 305 312 Geoffrey Lucas Herrera 2006 Technology and International Transformation The Railroad the Atom Bomb and the Politics of Technological Change SUNY Press pp 179 80 ISBN 978 0 7914 6868 5 Laucht Christoph 2012 Elemental Germans Klaus Fuchs Rudolf Peierls and the Making of British Nuclear Culture 1939 59 Palgrave Macmillan pp 31 33 ISBN 978 1 137 22295 4 Bibliography See also List of books about nuclear issues Bethe Hans Albrecht The Road from Los Alamos New York Simon and Schuster 1991 ISBN 0 671 74012 1 DeVolpi Alexander Minkov Vladimir E Simonenko Vadim A and Stanford George S Nuclear Shadowboxing Contemporary Threats from Cold War Weaponry Fidlar Doubleday 2004 Two volumes both accessible on Google Book Search Content of both volumes is now available in the 2009 trilogy by Alexander DeVolpi Nuclear Insights The Cold War Legacy Glasstone Samuel and Dolan Philip J The Effects of Nuclear Weapons third edition Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1977 Available online PDF NATO Handbook on the Medical Aspects of NBC Defensive Operations Part I Nuclear Departments of the Army Navy and Air Force Washington D C 1996 Hansen Chuck U S Nuclear Weapons The Secret History Arlington TX Aerofax 1988 Hansen Chuck Swords of Armageddon U S nuclear weapons development since 1945 CD ROM amp download available PDF 2 600 pages Sunnyvale California Chucklea Publications 1995 2007 ISBN 978 0 9791915 0 3 2nd Ed Holloway David Stalin and the Bomb New Haven Yale University Press 1994 ISBN 0 300 06056 4 The Manhattan Engineer District The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1946 in French Jean Hugues Oppel Reveillez le president Editions Payot et rivages 2007 ISBN 978 2 7436 1630 4 The book is a fiction about the nuclear weapons of France the book also contains about ten chapters on true historical incidents involving nuclear weapons and strategy Smyth Henry DeWolf Atomic Energy for Military Purposes Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1945 Smyth Report the first declassified report by the US government on nuclear weapons The Effects of Nuclear War Office of Technology Assessment May 1979 Rhodes Richard Dark Sun The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb New York Simon and Schuster 1995 ISBN 0 684 82414 0 Rhodes Richard The Making of the Atomic Bomb New York Simon and Schuster 1986 ISBN 0 684 81378 5 Shultz George P and Goodby James E The War that Must Never be Fought Hoover Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 8179 1845 3 Weart Spencer R Nuclear Fear A History of Images Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1988 ISBN 0 674 62836 5 Weart Spencer R The Rise of Nuclear Fear Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2012 ISBN 0 674 05233 1 Further reading Laura Grego and David Wright Broken Shield Missiles designed to destroy incoming nuclear warheads fail frequently in tests and could increase global risk of mass destruction Scientific American vol 320 no no 6 June 2019 pp 62 67 Current U S missile defense plans are being driven largely by technology politics and fear Missile defenses will not allow us to escape our vulnerability to nuclear weapons Instead large scale developments will create barriers to taking real steps toward reducing nuclear risks by blocking further cuts in nuclear arsenals and potentially spurring new deployments p 67 Michael T Klare Missile Mania The death of the INF Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987 has escalated the arms race The Nation vol 309 no 6 September 23 2019 p 4 Moniz Ernest J and Sam Nunn The Return of Doomsday The New Nuclear Arms Race and How Washington and Moscow Can Stop It Foreign Affairs vol 98 no 5 September October 2019 pp 150 161 Former U S Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz and former U S Senator Sam Nunn write that the old strategic equilibrium between the United States and Russia has been destabilized by clashing national interests insufficient dialogue eroding arms control structures advanced missile systems and new cyberweapons Unless Washington and Moscow confront these problems now a major international conflict or nuclear escalation is disturbingly plausible perhaps even likely p 161 Thomas Powers The Nuclear Worrier review of Daniel Ellsberg The Doomsday Machine Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner New York Bloomsbury 2017 ISBN 9781608196708 420 pp The New York Review of Books vol LXV no 1 January 18 2018 pp 13 15 Eric Schlosser Command and Control Nuclear Weapons the Damascus Accident and the Illusion of Safety Penguin Press 2013 ISBN 1594202273 The book became the basis for a 2 hour 2017 PBS American Experience episode likewise titled Command and Control Nuclear weapons continue to be equally hazardous to their owners as to their potential targets Under the 1970 Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons nuclear weapon states are obliged to work toward the elimination of nuclear weapons Tom Stevenson A Tiny Sun review of Fred Kaplan The Bomb Presidents Generals and the Secret History of Nuclear War Simon and Schuster 2021 384 pp and Keir A Lieber and Daryl G Press The Myth of the Nuclear Revolution Power Politics in the Atomic Age Cornell 2020 180 pp London Review of Books vol 44 no 4 24 February 2022 pp 29 32 Nuclear strategists systematically underestimate the chances of nuclear accident T here have been too many close calls for accidental use to be discounted p 32 David Wright and Cameron Tracy Over hyped Physics dictates that hypersonic weapons cannot live up to the grand promises made on their behalf Scientific American vol 325 no 2 August 2021 pp 64 71 Failure to fully assess the potential benefits and costs of hypersonic weapons is a recipe for wasteful spending and increased global risk p 71 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nuclear weapons Wikiquote has quotations related to Nuclear weapon Wikinews has news related to Nuclear proliferation Wikibooks has a book on the topic of The Atomic Age Listen to this article 15 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 1 December 2005 2005 12 01 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Nuclear Weapon Archive from Carey Sublette is a reliable source of information and has links to other sources and an informative FAQ The Federation of American Scientists provide solid information on weapons of mass destruction including nuclear weapons and their effects Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues contains many resources related to nuclear weapons including a historical and technical overview and searchable bibliography of web and print resources Video archive of US Soviet UK Chinese and French Nuclear Weapon Testing at sonicbomb com The National Museum of Nuclear Science amp History United States located in Albuquerque New Mexico a Smithsonian Affiliate Museum Nuclear Emergency and Radiation Resources The Manhattan Project Making the Atomic Bomb at AtomicArchive com Los Alamos National Laboratory History U S nuclear history Race for the Superbomb PBS website on the history of the H bomb Recordings of recollections of the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki The Woodrow Wilson Center s Nuclear Proliferation International History Project or NPIHP is a global network of individuals and institutions engaged in the study of international nuclear history through archival documents oral history interviews and other empirical sources NUKEMAP3D a 3D nuclear weapons effects simulator powered by Google Maps Portal Nuclear technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nuclear weapon amp oldid 1137444068, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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