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I question was raised in another group that intrigued me. I followed up
on a link someone else had posted, and got some fascinating information, but couldn't answer the question. Then I remembered r.a.m. I'll post this back to that group (alt.fan.cecil-adams), as well; I thought about setting FU to that group, but it seems like this might be a topic that some in r.a.m might find of interest as well. Here's a copy. Anybody have numbers on this? quote ---------- The question arose about whether or not there were any US fusion bombs dropped from aircraft for testing purposes. Someone provided a page with a detailed list of all US atmospheric (and underwater) nuclear tests.[1] From that list I grepped 52 airdropped nuclear detonations. I can't tell from the page which ones were fusion devices, and can't assume that *all* of them, after the first fusion bomb tested, were. That one was touched off on November 1, 1952 (the Mike event of the Ivy series), and is rated at 10.4 megatons. (The largest detonation was 15 megatons: Castle/Bravo, March 1, 1954.) But there was a whole range of devices being tested then, and later. For instance, Mike's companion in the Ivy series, King, went 400 kilotons, and while that was much less than Mike's yield, it was still nearly twice as powerful as anything before Mike -- but it was *not* a fusion bomb. Thus, to refine that raw number of 52 total airdrops, to determine the number of those that were fusion devices, doesn't seem possible from this source. I base this on the fact that many of the subsequent (read: post-Mike) tests were much, much smaller than the full-on H-weapons Mike represented. Many of these were tactical battlefield devices. At least one was artillery-delivered. Another test niche were rocket-launched aerial tests with devices that were detonated at up to 300 miles altitude; there were nine such rocket shots. There were also quite a few "safety tests", focused on the determination of the risks of unplanned detonation during device storage. All in all, the range, starting with Mike, goes from its 15 megatons down to far less than one *ton*, and I haven't the ability to sort out the fusion devices from the fission devices. Again: this assumes that they continued development of fission bombs for smaller applications, even after fusion weapons had become operational. I *can* say, however, that even remembering most of the years of our nuclear testing heyday (born 1947), I'm astounded by the number of devices we tested, which is summed up nicely on another page at the same site.[2] [1]http://nuketesting.enviroweb.org/atmosphr/ustests.htm [2]http://nuketesting.enviroweb.org/atmosphr/ustable.htm /quote ----------- -- Blinky Linux RU 297263 Nixon's secretary now at MS? http://snurl.com/rosemary |
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In article ,
Blinky the Shark wrote: The question arose about whether or not there were any US fusion bombs dropped from aircraft for testing purposes. The earliest fusion weapon drop I found, the Cherokee test, in May 1956, was a 3.8 megaton bomb dropped by a B-52. The tests in Operation Dominic featured a number of airdropped fusion devices. A number of these were tests of the warheads for the Minuteman missile. A good source for nuke tests is: http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/ That's where I got the info above. -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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Chad Irby wrote:
In article , Blinky the Shark wrote: The question arose about whether or not there were any US fusion bombs dropped from aircraft for testing purposes. The earliest fusion weapon drop I found, the Cherokee test, in May 1956, was a 3.8 megaton bomb dropped by a B-52. The tests in Operation Dominic featured a number of airdropped fusion devices. A number of these were tests of the warheads for the Minuteman missile. A good source for nuke tests is: http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/ Thanks, Chad; I'll check the site out. And thanks for the above data. -- Blinky Linux RU 297263 Nixon's secretary now at MS? http://snurl.com/rosemary |
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![]() Chad Irby wrote: In article , Blinky the Shark wrote: The question arose about whether or not there were any US fusion bombs dropped from aircraft for testing purposes. The earliest fusion weapon drop I found, the Cherokee test, in May 1956, was a 3.8 megaton bomb dropped by a B-52. The tests in Operation Dominic featured a number of airdropped fusion devices. A number of these were tests of the warheads for the Minuteman missile. A good source for nuke tests is: http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/ That's where I got the info above. -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. Project CHEROKEE was a B-36 drop: the movie Trinity and Beyond has footage of the test, including the drop from the plane. Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
#5
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![]() Blinky the Shark wrote: Chad Irby wrote: In article , Blinky the Shark wrote: The question arose about whether or not there were any US fusion bombs dropped from aircraft for testing purposes. The earliest fusion weapon drop I found, the Cherokee test, in May 1956, was a 3.8 megaton bomb dropped by a B-52. The tests in Operation Dominic featured a number of airdropped fusion devices. A number of these were tests of the warheads for the Minuteman missile. A good source for nuke tests is: http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/ Thanks, Chad; I'll check the site out. And thanks for the above data. -- Blinky Linux RU 297263 Nixon's secretary now at MS? http://snurl.com/rosemary Blinky, did you find the reply I gave to your original post? If not, Project CHEORKEE was a B-36 drop of the 3.6 MT weapon. Find the movie Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie. It has footage of the test, including the test plane and the actual drop from the aircraft. Posted via www.My-Newsgroups.com - web to news gateway for usenet access! |
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