Nuclear Bomb
Nuclear Bomb
You have probably read in history books about the atomic bombs used in World War
II. You may also have seen fictional movies where nuclear weapons were launched or
detonated (Fail Safe, Dr. Strangelove, The Day After, Testament, Fat Man and Little
Boy, The Peacemaker, just to name a few). In the news, while many countries have
been negotiating to disarm their arsenals of nuclear weapons, other countries have
been developing nuclear weapons programs.
In either process, fission or fusion, large amounts of heat energy and radiation are
given off.
To build an atomic bomb, you need:
• A source of fissionable or fusionable fuel
• A triggering device
• A way to allow the majority of fuel to fission or fuse before the explosion occurs
(otherwise the bomb will fizzle out)
The first nuclear bombs were fission devices, and the later fusion bombs required a
fission-bomb trigger. We will discuss the designs of the following devices:
• Fission bombs (in general)
• Gun-triggered fission bomb (Little Boy), which was detonated over Hiroshima,
Japan, in 1945
• Implosion-triggered fission bomb (Fat Man), which was detonated over Nagasaki,
Japan, in 1945
• Fusion bombs (in general)
• Teller-Ulam design of a hydrogen fusion bomb, which was test-detonated on
Elugelap Island in 1952
A fission bomb uses an element like uranium-235 to create a nuclear explosion. If
you have read How Nuclear Radiation Works, then you understand the basic process
behind radioactive decay and fission. Uranium-235 has an extra property that makes
it useful for both nuclear-power production and nuclear-bomb production -- U-235 is
one of the few materials that can undergo induced fission. If a free neutron runs
into a U-235 nucleus, the nucleus will absorb the neutron without hesitation, become
unstable and split immediately.
Critical Mass
In a fission bomb, the fuel must be kept in separate subcritical masses, which will
not support fission, to prevent premature detonation. Critical mass is the minimum
mass of fissionable material required to sustain a nuclear fission reaction. This
separation brings about several problems in the design of a fission bomb that must
be solved:
• The two or more subcritical masses must be brought together to form a
supercritical mass, which will provide more than enough neutrons to sustain a
fission reaction, at the time of detonation.
• Free neutrons must be introduced into the supercritical mass to start the fission.
• As much of the material as possible must be fissioned before the bomb explodes to
prevent fizzle.
To bring the subcritical masses together into a supercritical mass, two techniques are
used:
• Gun-triggered
• Implosion
Neutrons are introduced by making a neutron generator. This generator is a small
pellet of polonium and beryllium, separated by foil within the fissionable fuel core. In
this generator:
1. The foil is broken when the subcritical masses come together and polonium
spontaneously emits alpha particles.
2. These alpha particles then collide with beryllium-9 to produce beryllium-8 and
free neutrons.
3. The neutrons then initiate fission.
Finally, the fission reaction is confined within a dense material called a tamper,
which is usually made of uranium-238. The tamper gets heated and expanded by the
fission core. This expansion of the tamper exerts pressure back on the fission core
and slows the core's expansion. The tamper also reflects neutrons back into the
fission core, increasing the efficiency of the fission reaction.
Types of Bombs
1. The explosives fire and propel the bullet down the barrel.
2. The bullet strikes the sphere and generator, initiating the fission reaction.
3. The fission reaction begins.
4. The bomb explodes.
Little Boy was this type of bomb and had a 14.5-kiloton yield (equal to 14,500 tons
of TNT) with an efficiency of about 1.5 percent. That is, 1.5 percent of the material
was fissioned before the explosion carried the material away.
Implosion-Triggered Fission Bomb
Early in the Manhattan Project, the secret U.S. program to develop the atomic bomb,
scientists working on the project recognized that compressing the subcritical masses
together into a sphere by implosion might be a good way to make a supercritical
mass. There were several problems with this idea, particularly how to control and
direct the shock wave uniformly across the sphere. But the Manhattan Project team
solved the problems. The implosion device consisted of a sphere of uranium-235
(tamper) and a plutonium-239 core surrounded by high explosives. When the bomb
was detonated, this is what happened:
• The explosives fired, creating a shock wave.
• The shock wave compressed the core.
• The fission reaction began.
• The bomb exploded.
Fat Man was this type of bomb and had a 23-kiloton yield with an efficiency of 17
percent. These bombs exploded in fractions of a second. The fission usually occurred
in 560 billionths of a second.
Modern Implosion-Triggered Design
In a later modification of the implosion-triggered design, here is what happens:
• The explosives fire, creating a shock wave.
• The shock wave propels the plutonium pieces together into a sphere.
• The plutonium pieces strike a pellet of beryllium/polonium at the center.
• The fission reaction begins.
• The bomb explodes.
Fusion Bombs
Fission bombs worked, but they weren't very efficient. Fusion bombs, also called
thermonuclear bombs, have higher kiloton yields and greater efficiencies than
fission bombs. To design a fusion bomb, some problems have to be solved:
• Deuterium and tritium, the fuel for fusion, are both gases, which are hard to
store.
• Tritium is in short supply and has a short half-life, so the fuel in the bomb
would have to be continuously replenished.
• Deuterium or tritium has to be highly compressed at high temperature to
initiate the fusion reaction.
First, to store deuterium, the gas could be chemically combined with lithium to make
a solid lithium-deuterate compound. To overcome the tritium problem, the bomb
designers recognized that the neutrons from a fission reaction could produce tritium
from lithium (lithium-6 plus a neutron yields tritium and helium-4; lithium-7 plus a
neutron yields tritium, helium-4 and a neutron). That meant that tritium would not
have to be stored in the bomb. Finally, Stanislaw Ulam recognized that the majority
of radiation given off in a fission reaction was X-rays, and that these X-rays could
provide the high temperatures and pressures necessary to initiate fusion. Therefore,
by encasing a fission bomb within a fusion bomb, several problems could be solved.
All of these events happened in about 600 billionths of a second (550 billionths of a
second for the fission bomb implosion, 50 billionths of a second for the fusion
events). The result was an immense explosion that was more than 700 times greater
than the Little Boy explosion: It had a 10,000-kiloton yield.