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![]() Let's see, all we need is a water tank, steam boiler, turbine, some uranium 235 or plutonium 239, plenty of lead shielding, a condenser, and the will to cope with the radiation hazard in the event of a mishap. Containment? We don't need no stinkin' containment. :-) But weight isn't an issue in the micro gravity of space ... http://www.newscientist.com/article/...-aircraft.html Atomic Aircraft 18 November 2006 NewScientist.com news service ENTHUSIASM for the nuclear-powered bomber project in the United States blows alternately hot and cold. Mr. R. E. Gross, chairman of Lockheed Aircraft, one of the two companies with contracts to develop the airframes (the other being Convair) has said recently that if the American government were to give the "go ahead signal", Lockheed could have an aircraft ready to make its first flight in the mid-1960s. The type of aircraft the company has in mind would have the shielded crew cabin in the nose, the reactor in the tail as far from the crew as possible, a small tankage of conventional turbine fuel for take-off and landing so that the reactor was only at full power in the air and never near the ground, and thin straight wings free from the encumbrances of fuel tanks, engines or undercarriage gear. The Air Force wants atomic bombers of this kind for the same reason that the Navy wanted atomic submarines: they could range the world without refuelling. But the Air Force faces one great technical difficulty that did not trouble the Navy - weight. Even when the weight of reactor shielding is cut to the minimum by concentrating on a radiation-proof cabin for the crew rather than trying to block all escape of radiation from the reactor, it still remains the biggest barrier to getting an atomic aircraft off the ground. Mr. Donald Quarles, who was until recently Secretary for Air, told a Congressional Committee earlier this summer that reactor weight had increased so much above original estimates that any plans for putting the aircraft themselves into production should be dropped while designers went right back to what he called "reactor fundamentals". And this was when the US Government was spending roughly £70 millions a year on the project. This evidence could be read as meaning that the aircraft companies will not get the green light they want until there is a technical breakthrough leading to lightweight reactor design. These facts should be borne in mind when Britain is criticised for the absence of a similar project here. In spite of the unlimited range that only a nuclear plant can give, some scientists believe it is not a development that should be undertaken at this stage. Mr. Cleveland, who is in charge of Lockheed's atomic design, has himself suggested there are serious health problems connected with the maintenance of atomic aircraft because of the radiation leakage. Other experts have pointed to the hazard that would follow the crash of an atomic aircraft, whose reactor would almost inevitably be cracked open, making rescue all but impossible and, if there were a fire, spreading fission products downwind from the wreckage. This article was originally published in New Scientist on 11 July 1957 |
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