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Nuclear holocaust

A nuclear holocaust, also known as a nuclear apocalypse, nuclear annihilation, nuclear armageddon, or atomic holocaust, is a theoretical scenario where the mass detonation of nuclear weapons causes widespread destruction and radioactive fallout. Such a scenario envisages large parts of the Earth becoming uninhabitable due to the effects of nuclear warfare, potentially causing the collapse of civilization, the extinction of humanity, and/or the termination of most biological life on Earth.

Mushroom cloud from the 1954 explosion of Castle Bravo, the largest nuclear weapon detonated by the U.S.

Besides the immediate destruction of cities by nuclear blasts, the potential aftermath of a nuclear war could involve firestorms, a nuclear winter, widespread radiation sickness from fallout, and/or the temporary (if not permanent) loss of much modern technology due to electromagnetic pulses. Some scientists, such as Alan Robock, have speculated that a thermonuclear war could result in the end of modern civilization on Earth, in part due to a long-lasting nuclear winter. In one model, the average temperature of Earth following a full thermonuclear war falls for several years by 7 – 8 °C (13 to 15 degrees Fahrenheit) on average.[1]

Early Cold War-era studies suggested that billions of humans would survive the immediate effects of nuclear blasts and radiation following a global thermonuclear war.[2][3][4][5] 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.

The threat of a nuclear holocaust plays an important role in the popular perception of nuclear weapons. It features in the security concept of mutually assured destruction (MAD) and is a common scenario in survivalism. Nuclear holocaust is a common feature in literature and film, especially in speculative genres such as science fiction, dystopian and post-apocalyptic fiction.[6]

Etymology and usage edit

The English word "holocaust", derived from the Greek term "holokaustos" meaning "completely burnt", refers to great destruction and loss of life, especially by fire.[7][8]

One early use of the word "holocaust" to describe an imagined nuclear destruction appears in Reginald Glossop's 1926 novel The Orphan of Space: "Moscow ... beneath them ... a crash like a crack of Doom! The echoes of this Holocaust rumbled and rolled ... a distinct smell of sulphur ... atomic destruction."[9] In the novel, an atomic weapon is planted in the office of the Soviet dictator, who, with German help and Chinese mercenaries, is preparing the takeover of Western Europe.

Likelihood of nuclear war edit

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

As of 2021, humanity has about 13,410 nuclear weapons, thousands of which are on hair-trigger alert.[10][11] While stockpiles have been on the decline following the end of the Cold War, every nuclear country is currently undergoing modernization of its nuclear arsenal.[12][13][14] The Bulletin advanced their symbolic Doomsday Clock in 2015, citing among other factors "a nuclear arms race resulting from modernization of huge arsenals".[15] In January 2020, it was moved forward to 100 seconds before midnight.[16] In 2023, it was moved forward to 90 seconds before midnight.

John F. Kennedy estimated the probability of the Cuban Missile Crisis escalating to nuclear conflict as between 33% and 50%.[17][18]

In a poll of experts at the Global Catastrophic Risk Conference in Oxford (17–20 July 2008), the Future of Humanity Institute estimated the probability of complete human extinction by nuclear weapons at 1% within the century, the probability of 1 billion dead at 10% and the probability of 1 million dead at 30%.[19] These results reflect the median opinions of a group of experts, rather than a probabilistic model; the actual values may be much lower or higher.

Scientists have argued that even a small-scale nuclear war between two countries, such as India and Pakistan, could have devastating global consequences and such local conflicts are more likely than full-scale nuclear war.[20][21][22]

Moral importance of human extinction risk edit

In his book Reasons and Persons, philosopher Derek Parfit posed the following question:[23]

Compare three outcomes:

  1. Peace.
  2. A nuclear war that kills 99% of the world's existing population.
  3. A nuclear war that kills 100%.

(2) would be worse than (1), and (3) would be worse than (2). Which is the greater of these two differences?

He continues that "Most people believe that the greater difference is between (1) and (2). I believe that the difference between (2) and (3) is very much greater." Thus, he argues, even if it would be bad if massive numbers of humans died, human extinction would itself be much worse because it prevents the existence of all future generations. And given the magnitude of the calamity were the human race to become extinct, Nick Bostrom argues that there is an overwhelming moral imperative to reduce even small risks of human extinction.[24]

Likelihood of complete human extinction edit

 
The United States and Soviet Union/Russia nuclear stockpiles, in total number of nuclear bombs/warheads in existence throughout the Cold War and post-Cold War era.

Many scholars have posited that a global thermonuclear war with Cold War-era stockpiles, or even with the current smaller stockpiles, may lead to human extinction. This position was bolstered when nuclear winter was first conceptualized and modelled in 1983. However, models from the past decade consider total extinction very unlikely, and suggest parts of the world would remain habitable.[25] Technically the risk may not be zero, as the climatic effects of nuclear war are uncertain and could theoretically be larger than current models suggest, just as they could theoretically be smaller than current models suggest. There could also be indirect risks, such as a societal collapse following nuclear war that can make humanity much more vulnerable to other existential threats.[26]

A related area of inquiry is: if a future nuclear arms race someday leads to larger stockpiles or more dangerous nuclear weapons than existed at the height of the Cold War, at what point could war with such weapons result in human extinction?[26] Physicist Leo Szilard warned in the 1950s that a deliberate doomsday device could be constructed by surrounding powerful hydrogen bombs with a massive amount of cobalt. Cobalt has a half-life of five years, and its global fallout might, some physicists have posited, be able to clear out all human life via lethal radiation intensity. The main motivation for building a cobalt bomb in this scenario is its reduced expense compared with the arsenals possessed by superpowers; such a doomsday device does not need to be launched before detonation and thus does not require expensive missile delivery systems, and the hydrogen bombs do not need to be miniaturized for delivery via missile. The system for triggering it might have to be completely automated, in order for the deterrent to be effective. A modern twist might be to also lace the bombs with aerosols designed to exacerbate nuclear winter. A major caveat is that nuclear fallout transfer between the northern and southern hemispheres is expected to be small; unless a bomb detonates in each hemisphere, the effect of a bomb detonated in one hemisphere on the other is diminished.[27]

Effects of nuclear war edit

Historically, it has been difficult to estimate the total number of deaths resulting from a global nuclear exchange because scientists are continually discovering new effects of nuclear weapons, and also revising existing models.

Early reports considered direct effects from nuclear blast and radiation and indirect effects from economic, social, and political disruption. In a 1979 report for the U.S. Senate, the Office of Technology Assessment estimated casualties under different scenarios. For a full-scale countervalue/counterforce nuclear exchange between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, they predicted U.S. deaths from 35 to 77 percent (70 million to 160 million dead at the time), and Soviet deaths from 20 to 40 percent of the population.[28]

Although this report was made when nuclear stockpiles were at much higher levels than they are today, it also was made before the risk of nuclear winter was first theorized in the early 1980s. Additionally, it did not consider other secondary effects, such as electromagnetic pulses (EMP), and the ramifications they would have on modern technology and industry.

Nuclear winter edit

In the early 1980s, scientists began to consider the effects of smoke and soot arising from burning wood, plastics, and petroleum fuels in nuclear-devastated cities. It was speculated that the intense heat would carry these particulates to extremely high altitudes where they could drift for weeks and block out all but a fraction of the sun's light.[29] A landmark 1983 study by the so-called TTAPS team (Richard P. Turco, Owen Toon, Thomas P. Ackerman, James B. Pollack and Carl Sagan) was the first to model these effects and coined the term "nuclear winter."[30]

More recent studies make use of modern global circulation models and far greater computer power than was available for the 1980s studies. A 2007 study examined the consequences of a global nuclear war involving moderate to large portions of the current global arsenal.[31] The study found cooling by about 12–20 °C in much of the core farming regions of the US, Europe, Russia and China and as much as 35 °C in parts of Russia for the first two summer growing seasons. The changes they found were also much longer-lasting than previously thought, because their new model better represented entry of soot aerosols in the upper stratosphere, where precipitation does not occur, and therefore clearance was on the order of 10 years.[21] In addition, they found that global cooling caused a weakening of the global hydrological cycle, reducing global precipitation by about 45%.

The authors did not discuss the implications for agriculture in depth, but noted that a 1986 study which assumed no food production for a year projected that "most of the people on the planet would run out of food and starve to death by then" and commented that their own results show that, "This period of no food production needs to be extended by many years, making the impacts of nuclear winter even worse than previously thought."[31]

In contrast to the above investigations of global nuclear conflicts, studies have shown that even small-scale, regional nuclear conflicts could disrupt the global climate for a decade or more. In a regional nuclear conflict scenario where two opposing nations in the subtropics would each use 50 Hiroshima-sized nuclear weapons (about 15 kilotons each) on major populated centres, the researchers estimated as much as five million tons of soot would be released, which would produce a cooling of several degrees over large areas of North America and Eurasia, including most of the grain-growing regions.[32][20][21] The cooling would last for years, and according to the research, could be "catastrophic". Additionally, the analysis showed a 10% drop in average global precipitation, with the largest losses in the low latitudes due to failure of the monsoons.

Regional nuclear conflicts could also inflict significant damage to the ozone layer. A 2008 study found that a regional nuclear weapons exchange could create a near-global ozone hole, triggering human health problems and impacting agriculture for at least a decade.[33] This effect on the ozone would result from heat absorption by soot in the upper stratosphere, which would modify wind currents and draw in ozone-destroying nitrogen oxides. These high temperatures and nitrogen oxides would reduce ozone to the same dangerous levels that are experienced below the ozone hole above Antarctica every spring.[21]

Nuclear famine edit

It is difficult to estimate the number of casualties that would result from nuclear winter, but it is likely that the primary effect would be global famine (known as Nuclear Famine), wherein mass starvation occurs due to disrupted agricultural production and distribution.[34] In 2013 and 2022 reports, the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) voiced concerns that more than two billion people, about a third of the world's population, would be at risk of starvation in the event of a regional nuclear exchange between India and Pakistan, or by the use of even a small proportion of nuclear arms held by America and Russia.[35][36] Several independent studies[citation needed] show corroborated conclusions that agricultural outputs would be significantly reduced for years by climatic changes driven by nuclear wars. Reduction of food supply would be further exacerbated by rising food prices, affecting hundreds of millions of vulnerable people, especially in the poorest nations of the world.

According to a peer-reviewed study published in the journal Nature Food in August 2022,[22] a full-scale nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia might kill 360 million people directly and more than 5 billion people might die as a consequence from starvation due to soot created by firestorms after nuclear bombing. More than 2 billion people were projected to die as a consequence from a smaller-scale nuclear war between India and Pakistan. In the event of a nuclear war between Russia and the United States, 99% of the people in the United States, Russia, Europe, and China would die.[37]

Electromagnetic pulse edit

An electromagnetic pulse (EMP) is a burst of electromagnetic radiation. Nuclear explosions create a pulse of electromagnetic radiation called a nuclear EMP or NEMP. Such EMP interference is known to be generally disruptive or damaging to electronic equipment.[38]

By disabling electronics and their functioning, an EMP would disable hospitals, water treatment facilities, food storage facilities, and all electronic forms of communication, and thereby threaten key aspects of the modern human condition.[citation needed] Certain EMP attacks could lead to a large loss of power for months or years.[39] Currently, failures of the power grid are dealt with using support from the outside. In the event of an EMP attack, such support would not exist and all damaged components, devices, and electronics would need to be completely replaced.

In 2013, the US House of Representatives considered the "Secure High-voltage Infrastructure for Electricity from Lethal Damage Act" that would provide surge protection for some 300 large transformers around the country.[40] The problem of protecting civilian infrastructure from electromagnetic pulse has also been intensively studied throughout the European Union, and in particular by the United Kingdom.[41] While precautions have been taken, James Woolsey and the EMP Commission suggested that an EMP is the most significant threat to the U.S.[39][42]

The risk of an EMP, either through solar or atmospheric activity or enemy attack, while not dismissed, was suggested to be overblown by the news media in a commentary in Physics Today.[43] Instead, the weapons from rogue states were still too small and uncoordinated to cause a massive EMP, underground infrastructure is sufficiently protected, and there will be enough warning time from continuous solar observatories like SOHO to protect surface transformers should a devastating solar storm be detected.[43]

Nuclear fallout edit

Nuclear fallout is the residual radioactive dust and ash propelled into the upper atmosphere following a nuclear explosion.[44] Fallout is usually limited to the immediate area, and can only spread for hundreds of kilometers from the explosion site if the explosion is high enough in the atmosphere. Fallout may get entrained with the products of a pyrocumulus cloud and fall as black rain[45] (rain darkened by soot and other particulates).

This radioactive dust, usually consisting of fission products mixed with bystanding atoms that are neutron activated by exposure, is a highly dangerous kind of radioactive contamination. The main radiation hazard from fallout is due to short-lived radionuclides external to the body.[46] While most of the particles carried by nuclear fallout decay rapidly, some radioactive particles will have half-lives of seconds to a few months. Some radioactive isotopes, like strontium-90 and caesium-137, are very long-lived and will create radioactive hot spots for up to 5 years after the initial explosion.[46] Fallout and black rain may contaminate waterways, agriculture, and soil. Contact with radioactive materials can lead to radiation poisoning through external exposure or accidental consumption. In acute doses over a short amount of time radiation will lead to prodromal syndrome, bone marrow death, central nervous system death and gastrointestinal death.[47] Over longer periods of exposure to radiation, cancer becomes the main health risk. Long-term radiation exposure can also lead to in utero effects on human development and transgenerational genetic damage.[47][48]

Origins and analysis of extinction hypotheses edit

As a result of the extensive nuclear fallout of the 1954 Castle Bravo nuclear detonation, author Nevil Shute wrote the popular novel On the Beach, released in 1957. In this novel, so much fallout is generated in a nuclear war that all human life is extinguished. However, the premise that all of humanity would die following a nuclear war and only the "cockroaches would survive" is critically dealt with in the 1988 book Would the Insects Inherit the Earth and Other Subjects of Concern to Those Who Worry About Nuclear War, by nuclear weapons expert Philip J. Dolan.

In 1982, nuclear disarmament activist Jonathan Schell published The Fate of the Earth, which is regarded by many to be the first carefully argued presentation that concluded that extinction is a significant possibility from nuclear war. However, the assumptions made in this book have been thoroughly analyzed and determined to be "quite dubious".[49] The impetus for Schell's work, according to physicist Brian Martin, was:

The implicit premise [...] that if people are not taking action on the issue, they must not perceive it as threatening enough. Perhaps if the thought of 500 million people dying in a nuclear war is not enough to stimulate action, then the thought of extinction will. Indeed, Schell explicitly advocates use of the fear of extinction as the basis for inspiring the "complete rearrangement of world politics" (p. 221)[49]

The belief in "overkill" is also commonly encountered, with an example being the following statement made by nuclear disarmament activist Philip Noel-Baker in 1971: "Both the US and the Soviet Union now possess nuclear stockpiles large enough to exterminate mankind three or four – some say ten – times over". Brian Martin suggested that the origin of this belief was from "crude linear extrapolations" of the bombing of Hiroshima. He said that if the bomb dropped on Hiroshima had been 1,000 times as powerful, it could not have killed 1,000 times as many people.[4] Similarly, it is common to see stated that the combined explosive energy released in the entirety of World War II was about 3 megatons, while a nuclear war with warhead stockpiles at Cold War highs would release 6000 WWII's of explosive energy.[50] An estimate for the necessary amount of fallout to begin to have the potential of causing human extinction is regarded by physicist and disarmament activist Joseph Rotblat to be 10 to 100 times the megatonnage in nuclear arsenals as they stood in 1976; however, with the world megatonnage decreasing since the Cold War ended this possibility remains hypothetical.[4]

 
The massive use and deployment of nuclear weapons are commonly theorized to yield enough global destructive potential to render large parts of the Earth uninhabitable.

According to the 1980 United Nations report General and Complete Disarmament: Comprehensive Study on Nuclear Weapons: Report of the Secretary-General, it was estimated that there were a total of about 40,000 nuclear warheads in existence at that time, with a potential combined explosive yield of approximately 13,000 megatons.

By comparison – in the timeline of volcanism on Earth – the 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora exploded with a force of roughly 30,000 megatons,[51] and ejected 160 km3 (38 cu mi) of mostly rock and tephra,[52] which included 120 million tonnes of sulfur dioxide as an upper estimate, turning 1816 into the "year without a summer" due to the levels of global dimming sulfate aerosols and ash expelled.[53] The larger Mount Toba eruption, which occurred approximately 74,000 years ago, produced an estimated 2,800 km3 (670 cu mi) of tephra[54] and 6,000 million tonnes (6.6×109 short tons) of sulfur dioxide,[55][56] with a possible explosion force of 20,000,000 megatons (Mt) of TNT, forming Lake Toba and reducing the human population to mere tens of thousands. The Chicxulub impact, connected with the extinction of the dinosaurs, corresponds to at least 70,000,000 Mt of energy, which is roughly 7000 times the combined maximum arsenal of the US and Soviet Union.

Comparisons with supervolcanos are more misleading than helpful due to the different aerosols released, the likely air burst fuzing height of nuclear weapons and the globally scattered location of these potential nuclear detonations all being in contrast to the singular and subterranean nature of a supervolcanic eruption.[57] Moreover, assuming the entire world stockpile of weapons were grouped together, it would be difficult due to the nuclear fratricide effect to ensure the individual weapons would detonate all at once. Nonetheless, many people believe that a full-scale nuclear war would result, through the nuclear winter effect, in the extinction of the human species, though not all analysts agree on the assumptions put into these nuclear winter models.[2]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Nuclear Holocausts: Atomic War in Fiction, By Paul Brians, Professor of English, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington
  • Brief Q&A with Luke Oman on the unlikeliness of human extinction from nuclear war

nuclear, holocaust, nuclear, holocaust, also, known, nuclear, apocalypse, nuclear, annihilation, nuclear, armageddon, atomic, holocaust, theoretical, scenario, where, mass, detonation, nuclear, weapons, causes, widespread, destruction, radioactive, fallout, su. A nuclear holocaust also known as a nuclear apocalypse nuclear annihilation nuclear armageddon or atomic holocaust is a theoretical scenario where the mass detonation of nuclear weapons causes widespread destruction and radioactive fallout Such a scenario envisages large parts of the Earth becoming uninhabitable due to the effects of nuclear warfare potentially causing the collapse of civilization the extinction of humanity and or the termination of most biological life on Earth Mushroom cloud from the 1954 explosion of Castle Bravo the largest nuclear weapon detonated by the U S Besides the immediate destruction of cities by nuclear blasts the potential aftermath of a nuclear war could involve firestorms a nuclear winter widespread radiation sickness from fallout and or the temporary if not permanent loss of much modern technology due to electromagnetic pulses Some scientists such as Alan Robock have speculated that a thermonuclear war could result in the end of modern civilization on Earth in part due to a long lasting nuclear winter In one model the average temperature of Earth following a full thermonuclear war falls for several years by 7 8 C 13 to 15 degrees Fahrenheit on average 1 Early Cold War era studies suggested that billions of humans would survive the immediate effects of nuclear blasts and radiation following a global thermonuclear war 2 3 4 5 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 The threat of a nuclear holocaust plays an important role in the popular perception of nuclear weapons It features in the security concept of mutually assured destruction MAD and is a common scenario in survivalism Nuclear holocaust is a common feature in literature and film especially in speculative genres such as science fiction dystopian and post apocalyptic fiction 6 Contents 1 Etymology and usage 2 Likelihood of nuclear war 3 Moral importance of human extinction risk 4 Likelihood of complete human extinction 5 Effects of nuclear war 5 1 Nuclear winter 5 2 Nuclear famine 5 3 Electromagnetic pulse 5 4 Nuclear fallout 6 Origins and analysis of extinction hypotheses 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEtymology and usage editThe English word holocaust derived from the Greek term holokaustos meaning completely burnt refers to great destruction and loss of life especially by fire 7 8 One early use of the word holocaust to describe an imagined nuclear destruction appears in Reginald Glossop s 1926 novel The Orphan of Space Moscow beneath them a crash like a crack of Doom The echoes of this Holocaust rumbled and rolled a distinct smell of sulphur atomic destruction 9 In the novel an atomic weapon is planted in the office of the Soviet dictator who with German help and Chinese mercenaries is preparing the takeover of Western Europe Likelihood of nuclear war editSee also World War III Historical close calls nbsp Large stockpile with global range dark blue smaller stockpile with global range medium blue small stockpile with regional range light blue As of 2021 humanity has about 13 410 nuclear weapons thousands of which are on hair trigger alert 10 11 While stockpiles have been on the decline following the end of the Cold War every nuclear country is currently undergoing modernization of its nuclear arsenal 12 13 14 The Bulletin advanced their symbolic Doomsday Clock in 2015 citing among other factors a nuclear arms race resulting from modernization of huge arsenals 15 In January 2020 it was moved forward to 100 seconds before midnight 16 In 2023 it was moved forward to 90 seconds before midnight John F Kennedy estimated the probability of the Cuban Missile Crisis escalating to nuclear conflict as between 33 and 50 17 18 In a poll of experts at the Global Catastrophic Risk Conference in Oxford 17 20 July 2008 the Future of Humanity Institute estimated the probability of complete human extinction by nuclear weapons at 1 within the century the probability of 1 billion dead at 10 and the probability of 1 million dead at 30 19 These results reflect the median opinions of a group of experts rather than a probabilistic model the actual values may be much lower or higher Scientists have argued that even a small scale nuclear war between two countries such as India and Pakistan could have devastating global consequences and such local conflicts are more likely than full scale nuclear war 20 21 22 Moral importance of human extinction risk editMain article Human extinction Ethics In his book Reasons and Persons philosopher Derek Parfit posed the following question 23 Compare three outcomes Peace A nuclear war that kills 99 of the world s existing population A nuclear war that kills 100 2 would be worse than 1 and 3 would be worse than 2 Which is the greater of these two differences He continues that Most people believe that the greater difference is between 1 and 2 I believe that the difference between 2 and 3 is very much greater Thus he argues even if it would be bad if massive numbers of humans died human extinction would itself be much worse because it prevents the existence of all future generations And given the magnitude of the calamity were the human race to become extinct Nick Bostrom argues that there is an overwhelming moral imperative to reduce even small risks of human extinction 24 Likelihood of complete human extinction editSee also Cobalt bomb and Nuclear winter nbsp The United States and Soviet Union Russia nuclear stockpiles in total number of nuclear bombs warheads in existence throughout the Cold War and post Cold War era Many scholars have posited that a global thermonuclear war with Cold War era stockpiles or even with the current smaller stockpiles may lead to human extinction This position was bolstered when nuclear winter was first conceptualized and modelled in 1983 However models from the past decade consider total extinction very unlikely and suggest parts of the world would remain habitable 25 Technically the risk may not be zero as the climatic effects of nuclear war are uncertain and could theoretically be larger than current models suggest just as they could theoretically be smaller than current models suggest There could also be indirect risks such as a societal collapse following nuclear war that can make humanity much more vulnerable to other existential threats 26 A related area of inquiry is if a future nuclear arms race someday leads to larger stockpiles or more dangerous nuclear weapons than existed at the height of the Cold War at what point could war with such weapons result in human extinction 26 Physicist Leo Szilard warned in the 1950s that a deliberate doomsday device could be constructed by surrounding powerful hydrogen bombs with a massive amount of cobalt Cobalt has a half life of five years and its global fallout might some physicists have posited be able to clear out all human life via lethal radiation intensity The main motivation for building a cobalt bomb in this scenario is its reduced expense compared with the arsenals possessed by superpowers such a doomsday device does not need to be launched before detonation and thus does not require expensive missile delivery systems and the hydrogen bombs do not need to be miniaturized for delivery via missile The system for triggering it might have to be completely automated in order for the deterrent to be effective A modern twist might be to also lace the bombs with aerosols designed to exacerbate nuclear winter A major caveat is that nuclear fallout transfer between the northern and southern hemispheres is expected to be small unless a bomb detonates in each hemisphere the effect of a bomb detonated in one hemisphere on the other is diminished 27 Further information Human extinction ProbabilityEffects of nuclear war editHistorically it has been difficult to estimate the total number of deaths resulting from a global nuclear exchange because scientists are continually discovering new effects of nuclear weapons and also revising existing models Early reports considered direct effects from nuclear blast and radiation and indirect effects from economic social and political disruption In a 1979 report for the U S Senate the Office of Technology Assessment estimated casualties under different scenarios For a full scale countervalue counterforce nuclear exchange between the U S and the Soviet Union they predicted U S deaths from 35 to 77 percent 70 million to 160 million dead at the time and Soviet deaths from 20 to 40 percent of the population 28 Although this report was made when nuclear stockpiles were at much higher levels than they are today it also was made before the risk of nuclear winter was first theorized in the early 1980s Additionally it did not consider other secondary effects such as electromagnetic pulses EMP and the ramifications they would have on modern technology and industry Nuclear winter edit Main article Nuclear winter In the early 1980s scientists began to consider the effects of smoke and soot arising from burning wood plastics and petroleum fuels in nuclear devastated cities It was speculated that the intense heat would carry these particulates to extremely high altitudes where they could drift for weeks and block out all but a fraction of the sun s light 29 A landmark 1983 study by the so called TTAPS team Richard P Turco Owen Toon Thomas P Ackerman James B Pollack and Carl Sagan was the first to model these effects and coined the term nuclear winter 30 More recent studies make use of modern global circulation models and far greater computer power than was available for the 1980s studies A 2007 study examined the consequences of a global nuclear war involving moderate to large portions of the current global arsenal 31 The study found cooling by about 12 20 C in much of the core farming regions of the US Europe Russia and China and as much as 35 C in parts of Russia for the first two summer growing seasons The changes they found were also much longer lasting than previously thought because their new model better represented entry of soot aerosols in the upper stratosphere where precipitation does not occur and therefore clearance was on the order of 10 years 21 In addition they found that global cooling caused a weakening of the global hydrological cycle reducing global precipitation by about 45 The authors did not discuss the implications for agriculture in depth but noted that a 1986 study which assumed no food production for a year projected that most of the people on the planet would run out of food and starve to death by then and commented that their own results show that This period of no food production needs to be extended by many years making the impacts of nuclear winter even worse than previously thought 31 In contrast to the above investigations of global nuclear conflicts studies have shown that even small scale regional nuclear conflicts could disrupt the global climate for a decade or more In a regional nuclear conflict scenario where two opposing nations in the subtropics would each use 50 Hiroshima sized nuclear weapons about 15 kilotons each on major populated centres the researchers estimated as much as five million tons of soot would be released which would produce a cooling of several degrees over large areas of North America and Eurasia including most of the grain growing regions 32 20 21 The cooling would last for years and according to the research could be catastrophic Additionally the analysis showed a 10 drop in average global precipitation with the largest losses in the low latitudes due to failure of the monsoons Regional nuclear conflicts could also inflict significant damage to the ozone layer A 2008 study found that a regional nuclear weapons exchange could create a near global ozone hole triggering human health problems and impacting agriculture for at least a decade 33 This effect on the ozone would result from heat absorption by soot in the upper stratosphere which would modify wind currents and draw in ozone destroying nitrogen oxides These high temperatures and nitrogen oxides would reduce ozone to the same dangerous levels that are experienced below the ozone hole above Antarctica every spring 21 Nuclear famine edit Main article Nuclear famine It is difficult to estimate the number of casualties that would result from nuclear winter but it is likely that the primary effect would be global famine known as Nuclear Famine wherein mass starvation occurs due to disrupted agricultural production and distribution 34 In 2013 and 2022 reports the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War IPPNW voiced concerns that more than two billion people about a third of the world s population would be at risk of starvation in the event of a regional nuclear exchange between India and Pakistan or by the use of even a small proportion of nuclear arms held by America and Russia 35 36 Several independent studies citation needed show corroborated conclusions that agricultural outputs would be significantly reduced for years by climatic changes driven by nuclear wars Reduction of food supply would be further exacerbated by rising food prices affecting hundreds of millions of vulnerable people especially in the poorest nations of the world According to a peer reviewed study published in the journal Nature Food in August 2022 22 a full scale nuclear war between the U S and Russia might kill 360 million people directly and more than 5 billion people might die as a consequence from starvation due to soot created by firestorms after nuclear bombing More than 2 billion people were projected to die as a consequence from a smaller scale nuclear war between India and Pakistan In the event of a nuclear war between Russia and the United States 99 of the people in the United States Russia Europe and China would die 37 Electromagnetic pulse edit See also Nuclear electromagnetic pulse and High altitude nuclear explosion An electromagnetic pulse EMP is a burst of electromagnetic radiation Nuclear explosions create a pulse of electromagnetic radiation called a nuclear EMP or NEMP Such EMP interference is known to be generally disruptive or damaging to electronic equipment 38 By disabling electronics and their functioning an EMP would disable hospitals water treatment facilities food storage facilities and all electronic forms of communication and thereby threaten key aspects of the modern human condition citation needed Certain EMP attacks could lead to a large loss of power for months or years 39 Currently failures of the power grid are dealt with using support from the outside In the event of an EMP attack such support would not exist and all damaged components devices and electronics would need to be completely replaced In 2013 the US House of Representatives considered the Secure High voltage Infrastructure for Electricity from Lethal Damage Act that would provide surge protection for some 300 large transformers around the country 40 The problem of protecting civilian infrastructure from electromagnetic pulse has also been intensively studied throughout the European Union and in particular by the United Kingdom 41 While precautions have been taken James Woolsey and the EMP Commission suggested that an EMP is the most significant threat to the U S 39 42 The risk of an EMP either through solar or atmospheric activity or enemy attack while not dismissed was suggested to be overblown by the news media in a commentary in Physics Today 43 Instead the weapons from rogue states were still too small and uncoordinated to cause a massive EMP underground infrastructure is sufficiently protected and there will be enough warning time from continuous solar observatories like SOHO to protect surface transformers should a devastating solar storm be detected 43 Nuclear fallout edit Main article Nuclear fallout Nuclear fallout is the residual radioactive dust and ash propelled into the upper atmosphere following a nuclear explosion 44 Fallout is usually limited to the immediate area and can only spread for hundreds of kilometers from the explosion site if the explosion is high enough in the atmosphere Fallout may get entrained with the products of a pyrocumulus cloud and fall as black rain 45 rain darkened by soot and other particulates This radioactive dust usually consisting of fission products mixed with bystanding atoms that are neutron activated by exposure is a highly dangerous kind of radioactive contamination The main radiation hazard from fallout is due to short lived radionuclides external to the body 46 While most of the particles carried by nuclear fallout decay rapidly some radioactive particles will have half lives of seconds to a few months Some radioactive isotopes like strontium 90 and caesium 137 are very long lived and will create radioactive hot spots for up to 5 years after the initial explosion 46 Fallout and black rain may contaminate waterways agriculture and soil Contact with radioactive materials can lead to radiation poisoning through external exposure or accidental consumption In acute doses over a short amount of time radiation will lead to prodromal syndrome bone marrow death central nervous system death and gastrointestinal death 47 Over longer periods of exposure to radiation cancer becomes the main health risk Long term radiation exposure can also lead to in utero effects on human development and transgenerational genetic damage 47 48 Origins and analysis of extinction hypotheses editAs a result of the extensive nuclear fallout of the 1954 Castle Bravo nuclear detonation author Nevil Shute wrote the popular novel On the Beach released in 1957 In this novel so much fallout is generated in a nuclear war that all human life is extinguished However the premise that all of humanity would die following a nuclear war and only the cockroaches would survive is critically dealt with in the 1988 book Would the Insects Inherit the Earth and Other Subjects of Concern to Those Who Worry About Nuclear War by nuclear weapons expert Philip J Dolan In 1982 nuclear disarmament activist Jonathan Schell published The Fate of the Earth which is regarded by many to be the first carefully argued presentation that concluded that extinction is a significant possibility from nuclear war However the assumptions made in this book have been thoroughly analyzed and determined to be quite dubious 49 The impetus for Schell s work according to physicist Brian Martin was The implicit premise that if people are not taking action on the issue they must not perceive it as threatening enough Perhaps if the thought of 500 million people dying in a nuclear war is not enough to stimulate action then the thought of extinction will Indeed Schell explicitly advocates use of the fear of extinction as the basis for inspiring the complete rearrangement of world politics p 221 49 The belief in overkill is also commonly encountered with an example being the following statement made by nuclear disarmament activist Philip Noel Baker in 1971 Both the US and the Soviet Union now possess nuclear stockpiles large enough to exterminate mankind three or four some say ten times over Brian Martin suggested that the origin of this belief was from crude linear extrapolations of the bombing of Hiroshima He said that if the bomb dropped on Hiroshima had been 1 000 times as powerful it could not have killed 1 000 times as many people 4 Similarly it is common to see stated that the combined explosive energy released in the entirety of World War II was about 3 megatons while a nuclear war with warhead stockpiles at Cold War highs would release 6000 WWII s of explosive energy 50 An estimate for the necessary amount of fallout to begin to have the potential of causing human extinction is regarded by physicist and disarmament activist Joseph Rotblat to be 10 to 100 times the megatonnage in nuclear arsenals as they stood in 1976 however with the world megatonnage decreasing since the Cold War ended this possibility remains hypothetical 4 nbsp The massive use and deployment of nuclear weapons are commonly theorized to yield enough global destructive potential to render large parts of the Earth uninhabitable According to the 1980 United Nations report General and Complete Disarmament Comprehensive Study on Nuclear Weapons Report of the Secretary General it was estimated that there were a total of about 40 000 nuclear warheads in existence at that time with a potential combined explosive yield of approximately 13 000 megatons By comparison in the timeline of volcanism on Earth the 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora exploded with a force of roughly 30 000 megatons 51 and ejected 160 km3 38 cu mi of mostly rock and tephra 52 which included 120 million tonnes of sulfur dioxide as an upper estimate turning 1816 into the year without a summer due to the levels of global dimming sulfate aerosols and ash expelled 53 The larger Mount Toba eruption which occurred approximately 74 000 years ago produced an estimated 2 800 km3 670 cu mi of tephra 54 and 6 000 million tonnes 6 6 109 short tons of sulfur dioxide 55 56 with a possible explosion force of 20 000 000 megatons Mt of TNT forming Lake Toba and reducing the human population to mere tens of thousands The Chicxulub impact connected with the extinction of the dinosaurs corresponds to at least 70 000 000 Mt of energy which is roughly 7000 times the combined maximum arsenal of the US and Soviet Union Comparisons with supervolcanos are more misleading than helpful due to the different aerosols released the likely air burst fuzing height of nuclear weapons and the globally scattered location of these potential nuclear detonations all being in contrast to the singular and subterranean nature of a supervolcanic eruption 57 Moreover assuming the entire world stockpile of weapons were grouped together it would be difficult due to the nuclear fratricide effect to ensure the individual weapons would detonate all at once Nonetheless many people believe that a full scale nuclear war would result through the nuclear winter effect in the extinction of the human species though not all analysts agree on the assumptions put into these nuclear winter models 2 See also editSecond Cold War Term referring to heightened tensions in the 21st century Environmental impact of war Environmental problems caused by warfare Global catastrophic risk Potentially harmful worldwide events Human extinction Hypothetical end of the human species List of nuclear holocaust fiction Nuclear anxiety Fear of nuclear war Nuclear terrorism Terrorism involving nuclear material or weapons Silurian hypothesis Thought experiment to assess ability to detect evidence of a prior advanced civilization World War III Hypothetical future global conflictReferences edit Robock Alan Toon Owen B 2012 Self assured destruction The climate impacts of nuclear war Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 68 5 66 74 Bibcode 2012BuAtS 68e 66R doi 10 1177 0096340212459127 S2CID 14377214 Archived from the original on 2 April 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2016 a b Martin Brian 1982 Critique of Nuclear Extinction Journal of Peace Research 19 4 287 300 doi 10 1177 002234338201900401 S2CID 110974484 The Effects of a Global Thermonuclear War Johnstonsarchive net Retrieved on 2013 07 21 a b c Martin Brian December 1982 The global health effects of nuclear war Current Affairs Bulletin 59 7 14 26 Detonations National Research Council 16 November 1975 Long term worldwide effects of multiple nuclear weapons detonations Washington National Academy of Sciences ISBN 9780309024181 Retrieved 16 November 2018 via Trove Nuclear Holocausts Atomic War in Fiction Common Errors in English Usage and More Washington State University holocaust Retrieved 16 November 2018 via The Free Dictionary holocaust Definition of holocaust in US English by Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on June 6 2013 Retrieved 16 November 2018 Reginald Glossop The Orphan of Space London G MacDonald 1926 pp 303 306 Status of World Nuclear Forces Federation of American Scientists Retrieved 26 April 2020 Fact Sheet Building Global Security by Taking Nuclear Weapons off Hair Trigger Alert National Threat Initiative 15 October 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2016 Broad William J 2014 09 21 U S Ramping Up Major Renewal in Nuclear Arms New York Times Retrieved 24 January 2016 Mecklin John 4 March 2015 Disarm and Modernize Retrieved 22 March 2016 Kristensen H M Norris R S 20 June 2014 Slowing nuclear weapon reductions and endless nuclear weapon modernizations A challenge to the NPT Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 70 4 94 107 Bibcode 2014BuAtS 70d 94K doi 10 1177 0096340214540062 S2CID 145122829 Rhodan Maya January 2016 4 Times the World Came Close to Doomsday Time Retrieved 24 May 2020 James Sara January 24 2020 If there s ever a time to wake up it s now Doomsday Clock moves 20 seconds closer to midnight ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved January 24 2020 Allison Graham 2012 The Cuban Missile Crisis at 50 Foreign Affairs 91 4 Retrieved 9 July 2012 VZGLYaD SShA i Rossiya krizis 1962 go vzglyad ru 22 November 2013 Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Sandberg Anders Bostrom Nick Global Catastrophic Risks Survey PDF Future of Humanity Institute Future of Humanity Institute Oxford University Archived from the original PDF on 20 October 2016 Retrieved 18 August 2016 a b Robock A Oman L Stenchikov GL Toon OB Bardeen C Turco RP 2007 Climatic consequences of regional nuclear conflicts PDF Atmos Chem Phys 7 8 2003 2012 Bibcode 2007ACP 7 2003R doi 10 5194 acp 7 2003 2007 a b c d Robock A Toon OB 2010 Local nuclear war global suffering PDF Scientific American 302 1 74 81 Bibcode 2010SciAm 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singular chain of events Futures 41 10 706 714 doi 10 1016 j futures 2009 07 009 S2CID 144553194 a b Bostrom Nick 2002 Existential risks Journal of Evolution and Technology 9 1 1 31 4 2 Max Tegmark 2017 Chapter 5 Aftermath The Next 10 000 Years Life 3 0 Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence 1st ed Doomsday Devices Knopf ISBN 9780451485076 Johns Lionel S Sharfman Peter Medalia Jonathan Vining Robert W Lewis Kevin Proctor Gloria 1979 The Effects of Nuclear War PDF Library of Congress Retrieved 13 February 2016 Nuclear winter Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 13 February 2016 Turco R P Toon O B Ackerman T P Pollack J B Sagan C 23 December 1983 Nuclear Winter Global Consequences of Multiple Nuclear Explosions Science 222 4630 1283 92 Bibcode 1983Sci 222 1283T doi 10 1126 science 222 4630 1283 PMID 17773320 S2CID 45515251 a b Robock Alan Oman Luke Stenchikov Georgiy L 2007 Nuclear winter revisited with a modern climate model and current nuclear arsenals Still catastrophic consequences PDF Journal of Geophysical Research 112 D13107 14 Bibcode 2007JGRD 11213107R doi 10 1029 2006JD008235 Retrieved 13 February 2016 Regional Nuclear War Could Devastate Global Climate Science Daily December 11 2006 Mills M J Toon O B Turco R P Kinnison D E Garcia R R 2008 Massive global ozone loss predicted following regional nuclear conflict Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105 14 5307 12 Bibcode 2008PNAS 105 5307M doi 10 1073 pnas 0710058105 PMC 2291128 PMID 18391218 as PDF Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Harwell M and C Harwell 1986 Nuclear Famine The Indirect Effects of Nuclear War pp 117 135 in Solomon F and R Marston Eds The Medical Implications of Nuclear War Washington D C National Academy Press ISBN 0309036925 Helfand Ira Nuclear Famine Two Billion Prople at Risk PDF IPPNW Retrieved 30 December 2022 Bivens Matt Nuclear Famine Even a limited nuclear war would cause abrupt climate disruption and global starvation PDF IPPNW Retrieved 30 December 2022 Here s How Bad a Nuclear War Would Actually Be Time 29 June 2023 Broad William J Nuclear Pulse I Awakening to the Chaos Factor Science 29 May 1981 212 1009 1012 a b Report of the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse EMP Attack Retrieved 16 January 2016 McCormack John 2013 06 17 Lights out House plan would protect nation s electricity from solar flare nuclear bomb Washington Examiner Retrieved 2016 01 16 House of Commons Defence Committee Developing Threats Electro Magnetic Pulses EMP Tenth Report of Session 2010 12 Woosley R James Pry Peter Vincent 2014 08 12 The Growing Threat From an EMP Attack Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2016 01 16 a b Corneliussen Steven T 2016 06 23 Conservative media sustain alarm about a possible electromagnetic pulse catastrophe Physics Today doi 10 1063 PT 5 8178 Radioactive Fallout Effects of Nuclear Weapons atomicarchive com www atomicarchive com Retrieved 2016 12 31 AtomicBombMuseum org Destructive Effects atomicbombmuseum org Retrieved 2016 12 31 a b Radioactive Fallout Atomic Archive Retrieved 23 January 2016 a b Coggle J E Lindop Patricia J Medical Consequences of Radiation Following a Global Nuclear War The Aftermath 1983 60 71 公益財団法人 放射線影響研究所 RERF www rerf jp Retrieved 16 November 2018 a b Martin Brian March 1983 The fate of extinction arguments Department of Mathematics Faculty of Science Australian National University Willens Harold 1990 The Trimtab factor 1984 Alternatives 16 4 Foden J 1986 01 01 The petrology of Tambora volcano Indonesia A model for the 1815 eruption Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 27 1 2 1 41 Bibcode 1986JVGR 27 1F doi 10 1016 0377 0273 86 90079 X ISSN 0377 0273 Stothers Richard B 1984 The Great Tambora Eruption in 1815 and Its Aftermath Science 224 4654 1191 1198 Bibcode 1984Sci 224 1191S doi 10 1126 science 224 4654 1191 PMID 17819476 S2CID 23649251 Oppenheimer Clive 2003 Climatic environmental and human consequences of the largest known historic eruption Tambora volcano Indonesia 1815 Progress in Physical Geography 27 2 230 259 Bibcode 2003PrPG 27 230O doi 10 1191 0309133303pp379ra S2CID 131663534 Supersized eruptions are all the rage USGS April 28 2005 Robock A C M Ammann L Oman D Shindell S Levis G Stenchikov 2009 Did the Toba volcanic eruption of 74k BP produce widespread glaciation Journal of Geophysical Research 114 D10 D10107 Bibcode 2009JGRD 11410107R doi 10 1029 2008JD011652 Huang C Y Zhao M X Wang C C Wei G J 2001 Cooling of the South China Sea by the Toba Eruption and correlation with other climate proxies 71 000 years ago Geophysical Research Letters 28 20 3915 3918 Bibcode 2001GeoRL 28 3915H doi 10 1029 2000GL006113 Margulis Lynn 1999 Symbiotic Planet A New Look At Evolution Houston Basic Book External links editNuclear Holocausts Atomic War in Fiction By Paul Brians Professor of English Washington State University Pullman Washington Brief Q amp A with Luke Oman on the unlikeliness of human extinction from nuclear war Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nuclear holocaust amp oldid 1217221492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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