Consequences of Nuclear War

Posted by Ben at 5:44 pm
Feb 022011

Steven Starr over at Nuclear Darkness has collected and expanded upon many studies of the consequences of nuclear war.  In particular, check out Consequences of a large nuclear war and City on fire by Lynn Eden.  City on fire challenges the U.S. government’s own analysis of the consequences of a nuclear strike using the case study of a 300kt detonation at the Pentagon:

The detonation of a 300-kiloton nuclear bomb would release an extraordinary amount of energy in an instant-about 300 trillion calories within about a millionth of a second. More than 95 percent of the energy initially released would be in the form of intense light. This light would be absorbed by the air around the weapon, superheating the air to very high temperatures and creating a ball of intense heat-a fireball.

By the time the fireball approached its maximum size, it would be more than a mile in diameter. It would very briefly produce temperatures at its center of more than 200 million degrees Fahrenheit (about 100 million degrees Celsius)-about four to five times the temperature at the center of the sun.

Because this fireball would be so hot, it would expand rapidly. Almost all of the air that originally occupied the volume within and around the fireball would be compressed into a thin shell of superheated, glowing, high-pressure gas. This shell of gas would compress the surrounding air, forming a steeply fronted, luminous shockwave of enormous extent and power-the blast wave.

Read more here and be sure to explore the rest of Nuclear Darkness while you’re there!

Proliferation Status Map 2009

Posted by Ben at 5:00 pm
Jan 242011
World Map

From the Carnegie Endowment

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has created a map (to the left) that details the status of WMD proliferation globally. It labels countries according to their nuclear status and identifies countries suspected of chemical weapon, biological weapon, and ballistic missile programs.

The original PDF file can be found here.

Nuclear Terrorism Handout

Posted by Ben at 3:48 pm
Jan 242011

Tilman Ruff of energyscience.org.au has created an excellent handout that summarizes the threat of nuclear terrorism.  The handout explains the types of nuclear threats posed by terrorists and the difficulties that terrorist organizations would have to overcome to successfully implement an attack.

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Animated Map of Nuclear Tests

Posted by Ben at 2:39 pm
Jan 242011

1945-1998 by Isao Hashimoto Artist Isao Hashimoto created this video, 1945-1998, as part of a series on “The Fear the Folly of Nuclear Weapons.”

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MONDAY FEBRUARY 18, 2008
North Korea Now: Will the Clock Be Turned Back?

Georgy Toloraya, Visiting Fellow, Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies
The Brookings Institution

FEBRUARY 11, 2008 —
The overall mood regarding possibilities for Korean denuclearization and, more broadly, prospects for a peace process in Korea, has changed dramatically for the worse since the beginning of 2008. Earlier optimism, especially on the North Korean side, was guarded at best: during a trip to Pyongyang in December the author sensed a continuing lack of trust in U.S. intentions, and was told by well-placed sources: “You cannot turn a wolf into a sheep.”

The overall mood regarding possibilities for Korean denuclearization and, more broadly, prospects for a peace process in Korea, has changed dramatically for the worse since the beginning of 2008. Earlier optimism, especially on the North Korean side, was guarded at best: during a trip to Pyongyang in December the author sensed a continuing lack of trust in U.S. intentions, and was told by well-placed sources: “You cannot turn a wolf into a sheep.”

Continue reading »

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