So true. Also note the number of recommendations next to each!!!pgbhat wrote:Amber G. wrote:OPed From NY times:
Just Say NO![]()
Comments are more interesting rather than the article itself.
NYT should withdraw that editorial, ........... I think.
So true. Also note the number of recommendations next to each!!!pgbhat wrote:Amber G. wrote:OPed From NY times:
Just Say NO![]()
Comments are more interesting rather than the article itself.
What the Gods of BR giwth, the Gods of BR can taketh.PS: My 1000th post.![]()
What is the upper bound for the yield of a two stage TN? At what point does a TN device need more than 2 stages to increase the yield obtained? One thing I've been mulling about is if the current brouhaha is more about the uncertain ability to scale up the TN device beyond 2 stages.shiv wrote:If you are looking at 500 kt plus devices - two stage TN is the way to go
As far as I know the US "Castle Bravo" test was the biggest 2 stage device. It was designed for 6 megatons but yielded 15 megatons because of an unexpected error. It was not a weapon test. Weighing 10 tons the device was not seriously deliverable. The Tsar Bomba had a third fusion stage (apparently)vera_k wrote:What is the upper bound for the yield of a two stage TN? At what point does a TN device need more than 2 stages to increase the yield obtained? One thing I've been mulling about is if the current brouhaha is more about the uncertain ability to scale up the TN device beyond 2 stages.shiv wrote:If you are looking at 500 kt plus devices - two stage TN is the way to go
As per Carey Sublette, Tritium gas requires renewal every 17 years or so, but can be injected for boosting just before the explosion.Gagan wrote:Are the requirements of Tritium seperate from that of LiD?
Tritium is needed for FBF where it is compressed and attacked by neutrons at the center of the Fission bomb. It decays and therefore will need to be replaced.
LiD is more stable, and as part of secondary needs massive battering by X rays and Neutrons to fuse.
I am sure that
Santhanam is on record as saying that India has proven and reliable 20-30 kt warheads.Gagan wrote:Adm Arun Prakash has said that India has 500Kt deployed.
Gen Malik has spoken of Megaton weapons.
I think both are untested TNs. Both clearly said that they needed proof that these would work as advertised. These revelations by both came out only in the wake of KS's statement that the initial TN test was a fizzle, thereby putting a question mark on these (this) TN(s).
Not possible in the British TN design.shiv wrote:Tritium gas requires renewal every 17 years or so, but can be injected for boosting just before the explosion.
Those must be the only field proven and deployed weapons India has.shiv wrote:Santhanam is on record as saying that India has proven and reliable 20-30 kt warheads.
Well all my public source refs (Wiki and family) speak of Tritium injection for US designs.Gagan wrote: I wonder it it would be possible to inject Tritium into the center of the Pu ball if the construction is such.
The official source still maintains that S1 was a triumphant success, so where is the question of rectification hain ji?shiv wrote:Gagan - the "rectification of design" of TN has not appeared from any official source. It may have been an ishara on this forum with no public source to back up that claim. We know nothing of the actual design of the TN test device. Nothing has been made public. The "rectified now" IIRC was a comment on this forum.
It seems sensible to keep that Tritium in a cannister which soldiers with minimum technical training can replace while servicing the device from the outside, without any 'cher chaar' into the core of the weapon. The green peace design shows a different config.shiv wrote:Well all my public source refs (Wiki and family) speak of Tritium injection for US designs.
Well they have not been "field tested", and the comment assumes that Santhanam's words are the only reliable and credible words that we must go by.Gagan wrote:Those must be the only field proven and deployed weapons India has.shiv wrote:Santhanam is on record as saying that India has proven and reliable 20-30 kt warheads.
If I remove the emotion and hints of cheating from the S1 (TN) question there remains the possibility that India tested a 15 kt primary that yielded 5 to 15 kt fusion - which is very good.Gagan wrote: The official source still maintains that S1 was a triumphant success, so where is the question of rectification hain ji?![]()
Sorry - but why is so much being read into 'rectification'? I'm sure the ford model T was a triumphant success in its time - so does that mean no improvements ought to be considered (even theoretical / simulated ones?)Gagan wrote:The official source still maintains that S1 was a triumphant success, so where is the question of rectification hain ji?shiv wrote:Gagan - the "rectification of design" of TN has not appeared from any official source. It may have been an ishara on this forum with no public source to back up that claim. We know nothing of the actual design of the TN test device. Nothing has been made public. The "rectified now" IIRC was a comment on this forum.![]()
But I see further hope in RC's statement that research has gone on.
It seems sensible to keep that Tritium in a cannister which soldiers with minimum technical training can replace while servicing the device from the outside, without any 'cher chaar' into the core of the weapon. The green peace design shows a different config.shiv wrote:Well all my public source refs (Wiki and family) speak of Tritium injection for US designs.
Yes but you need to hot test different designs to play with yields, size and weight.Gagan wrote: The theory seems simple engineering and lots of maths only. I believe that the main constraint to N weapons and TN weapons are the materials in the required quantities and purity. Once that is acquired, almost any reasonable nuclear physicist can fabricate a successful bomb.
I am not sure this is really true. As far as India is concerned, that is really not connected at all. There are reports of "a tritium breakthrough", papers published from BARC on how that is so. Evidently, since we use natural uranium, heavy water moderator in our reactors, tritium collects in the heavy water as a pollutant. BARC came up with some osmosis /membrane type separation system called "De-Tritiation" (surely that is Yindian Inglees, if there is a word for it) , and voila , you get huge huge amounts of tritium, safety concerns taken care off and reactors run more efficiently giving more Pu all in one shot. One shot killing multiple birds onree.5) As regards Tritium it is an "either-or" situation with Plutonium. That means that in order to create Tritium in you reactor you have to stop creating Plutonium.
Exactly.shiv wrote:And the "freezing" at 200 kt may well indicate that this particular design can go that far and no further.
The way I see the "rectification" point is as follows.arnab wrote: Sorry - but why is so much being read into 'rectification'? I'm sure the ford model T was a triumphant success in its time - so does that mean no improvements ought to be considered (even theoretical / simulated ones?)
Also the US NPAs were talking about India having the requisite computing power to 'enhance' its weapons.shiv wrote:And the "freezing" at 200 kt may well indicate that this particular design can go that far and no further.
Why cant we call it "improved design" instead of 'rectified design' !!!Gagan wrote:Exactly.shiv wrote:And the "freezing" at 200 kt may well indicate that this particular design can go that far and no further.
And yet we have 200-500 mentioned by Adm Arun Prakash and MT mentioned by Gen Malik and sandeep unnithan (Arihant packs a megaton punch) already deployed.
This is the rectified design / Mark-2 TN, deployed without testing.
Nit pick strictly speaking, what has been tested is known to work ONLY till the point it was tested IFF it worked as expected. (For example if 20% burn was expected and 10% obtained, we can not say that since "something" burned we know how to scale it)shiv wrote: So there is no question of "rectification". Whatever is rectified has not been tested. What has been tested has been tested at least once and is known to work up to a point. It may not work that way if it is "rectified"
How do you go about resolving whether K Santhanam is right in saying that it did not work as expected, or R..Chidambaram is right in saying that it did work as expected without calling one or the other a liar?Sanku wrote: Nit pick strictly speaking, what has been tested is known to work ONLY till the point it was tested IFF it worked as expected..
That Shiv ji,shiv wrote:How do you go about resolving whether K Santhanam is right in saying that it did not work as expected, or R..Chidambaram is right in saying that it did work as expected without calling one or the other a liar?Nit pick strictly speaking, what has been tested is known to work ONLY till the point it was tested IFF it worked as expected..
Just for record, the former CNS and former COAS have been held up as examples of former armed forces types who do not have faith in the Indian nuclear programme. Yet they tout numbers (yields) which the scientists themselves don't utter? Something gives, nah? (I mean in terms of holding them up as examples of folks who believe that BARC indulged in "shitty science" in 1998).Gagan wrote:And yet we have 200-500 mentioned by Adm Arun Prakash and MT mentioned by Gen Malik and sandeep unnithan (Arihant packs a megaton punch) already deployed.
Looking at the publicly available data I can personally make a judgment call about the veracity and correctness of various statements and favor one vs the other, but yes, there would be no proof which will hold up in a court of law if I am taken there.shiv wrote:How do you go about resolving whether K Santhanam is right in saying that it did not work as expected, or R..Chidambaram is right in saying that it did work as expected without calling one or the other a liar?Sanku wrote: Nit pick strictly speaking, what has been tested is known to work ONLY till the point it was tested IFF it worked as expected..
Whats so difficult to talk about lack of confidence in deployed devices?amit wrote:Just for record, the former CNS and former COAS have been held up as examples of former armed forces types who do not have faith in the Indian nuclear programme. Yet they tout numbers (yields) which the scientists themselves don't utter? Something gives, nah? (I mean in terms of holding them up as examples of folks who believe that BARC indulged in "shitty science" in 1998).Gagan wrote:And yet we have 200-500 mentioned by Adm Arun Prakash and MT mentioned by Gen Malik and sandeep unnithan (Arihant packs a megaton punch) already deployed.
Tests, tests, and more tests followed by LIF and other such establishment (Bing for Lawrence livermore center their home page has a detailed answer to this question)Tanaji wrote:If measuring yield is indeed so difficult with error bars of magnitude 100 or 1000 being considered acceptable (as Amber G said), how do other nations quantify their yields? Supposedly the W-88 are variable yield warheads, so someone must have quantified this somehow. How was that done?
I will attempt to guess the answer, the yield determination for a reactor is different from one in the weapon. For one a reactor is all fission device which as we have discussed is a much better understood phenomena.On a related note, if yield determination is so difficult, how is the output controlled in a nuclear reactor? My childish understanding is output is controlled by graphite rods or other moderators that control how many neutrons are available for the chain reaction. But if output is indeterminate, how do they know how much moderator is required?
The answer lies with these two fine gentlemen. But...Sanku wrote:Whats so difficult to talk about lack of confidence in deployed devices?
You forget, in terms of credibility our understanding isamit wrote:The answer lies with these two fine gentlemen. But...Sanku wrote:Whats so difficult to talk about lack of confidence in deployed devices?
I mean how can you have a lack of confidence in the POK2 TN device - or the 200kt, that RC claimed - and yet talk about bigger bombs even if you had a lack of confidence in the ability of the bigger bombs about which BRAC has made no public statements?
OK granted.Sanku wrote: You forget, in terms of credibility our understanding is
fission > FBF >> TN
The COAS talk of different yields, they rarely talk of the nature of device, so for 200 KT
FBF >> TN
Indeed the confusion is very simple. IMVHO these two very capable gentlemen would not be publicly talking about half a megaton (in one case) and one megaton in the other if they had doubts about the viability of lower yields like 45kt TN and the scaled up version 200kt (TN).that is the answer to the confusion.
This is a totally different issue and should not be mixed into the question of the yield claims of POK2. We can muck up even after further tests where we develop huge mega tonnage bombs if our systems and processes fail and we lack political will. Different issue for a different thread.It is that they are clearly saying that the structure of the Nuclear deterrent needs overhaul, we have not yet met the measures envisaged in the doctrine that was put together for CMD (which has then been watered down even further)
Ok I am lost whats the question again? Why is the reference to high KT weapons in the Chiefs statement not taken to mean that we have a credible deployed arsenal?amit wrote:...