And I just read this for the first time: As Kulka reached around the bomb to pull himself up, he mistakenly grabbed the emergency release pin. The Mark 6 nuclear bomb dropped to the floor of the B-47 and the weight forced the bomb bay doors open, sending the bomb 15,000 ft (4,600 m) down to the ground below.
This is no broken arrow [1] - the core was full of lead, not plutonium.
[1] An accidental event that involves nuclear weapons or nuclear components but does not create the risk of nuclear war.
A "Broken Arrow" is the loss of control a functional nuclear weapon. Being misplaced also counts as a "Broken Arrow" incident, as was the case with some nuclear missiles being lost in transit only to be found a few days later at the wrong base. They were mistakenly kept loaded on an aircraft.
There's actually a shocking number of these weapons that are completely unaccounted for. They're presumed to be at the bottom of the ocean.
During the 1960s the US had this completely insane program whereby bombers would be in the air at all times with fully operable nuclear weapons. Not surprisingly there was a number of malfunctions on these aircraft that lead to atomic payloads being dumped so the crew could safely land, though I honestly have no idea where a "safe" spot to ditch a thermonuclear weapon is, armed or not.
A nuclear weapon is a fairly precise instrument. Chances are it breaks apart on impact with water. At that points its really just a hot piece of metal sinking to the bottom of the ocean. Not great but not really a worry.
Though on the other hand farmers keep finding old shells from WW1 and WW2 all over Europe. But a artillery shells probably lives a harder life and are made more robustly
I was reading about old WW1 shells in Europe recently. For instance, around the Belgian town Ypres, in 2000 they still found around 200 tons of munitions per year, tens of shells per day. They have several full time teams collecting them from farmers. 5% of the shells contain poison gas and need to be dismantled by an automatic process. Probably now in 2016 a bit less, but not much.
And that's only Ypres (of course not a random town but one of the largest WW1 battlefields).
A short jaunt through parts of Europe is almost guaranteed to turn up some WW1 vintage artifacts, the level of fighting was so intense, so insane, that there's still thousands of tons of munitions and other dangerous junk out there. Who knows how many artillery shells either failed to explode or were lost.
Some estimates peg WW1 cleanup efforts to continue for hundreds of years. If you feel particularly optimistic about our future, that war may continue continue killing people into the next millennium.
While true that they are fairly precise instruments, they were not always built with insensitive explosives and other physical failsafes against accidental detonation. I believe some models could produce a significant amount of fission just from some of the explosive lenses detonating on impact with the ground.
That kind of accidents are only possible for gun-type bombs. For an implosion-type bomb to initiate, the explosives really do need to all go off simultaneously, detonation from one side just causes the core to be sprayed out through the other side. Implosion bombs are designed to have the least possible amount of fissiles for weight/economics reasons, which means that even a sub-millisecond delay in the detonation of one of the slow explosives causes the core to completely fail to initiate.
Not necessarily true, as the effort to miniaturize the package size for use in ICBM warheads proceeded, they've successively reduced from the "soccerball" style of lenses in the trinity device down to only a handful (it is a design mandate that a bomb retains "one-point" safety in the event that it is detonated by an external source at a single point, but referencing Command and Control here, there have been flawed bomb designs that had a 15% chance of a 40kt yield in an accidental one-point detonation).
A nuclear weapon is a very precise instrument, but there's a huge amount of extremely high explosives involved in some designs, especially those using a plutonium core. Those alone are extremely dangerous, especially because a "fizzle", or incomplete detonation, will release scary amounts of highly radioactive material. Low yield, high fallout.
Conventional explosives are a lot more dangerous, it's true, because they can be set off by a variety of things. A nuclear weapon requires a very aggressive initiator perhaps by design, but it's not like a nuke sitting at the bottom of the ocean is entirely safe.
I think the implication here is that someone who is not part of the planned custody chain has it, but that someone is still within your organization, and under your control.
Paperwork. Miscounting. Bent Spear also covers, imho, incidents where a device is counted twice, where it is on two different inventories. In such a situation there is no suggestion that the device is gone, but at least one of the two lists is inaccurate and therefore 'missing' a device.
It was the only movie with dumb inert object falling in a bedroom I could think of. Unless there is breathing human underneath - almost any place is OK to drop unarmed nuke on. Those things are built brutally.
This incident shows up on all lists of BROKEN ARROW incidents. A more complete description is
"3.2.4. PINNACLE BROKEN ARROW (OPREP-3PBA). Used to report a U.S. nuclear weapon accident that does not create the risk of a nuclear war. Report any of the following as an OPREP-3PBA (T-0):
3.2.4.1. Nuclear detonation of a U.S. nuclear weapon
3.2.4.2. Non-nuclear detonation or burning of a U.S. nuclear weapon
3.2.4.3. Radioactive contamination from a U.S. nuclear weapon or component 3.2.4.4. Jettisoning of a U.S. nuclear weapon or component
3.2.4.5. Public hazard, actual or implied, from a U.S. nuclear weapon or component"
The core was officially full of lead. You think they'd admit to anyone, let alone Russia, that a nuke lay on the seafloor? We already know what huge lengths both sides went to to salvage known marine tech wreckage from one another.
Apparently Tybee island was also a dummy device. It later emerged that it was a full on bomb.
Just saying that they had and continue to have every motive to say it's made of lead.
If it were safe from retrieval I am pretty sure they would let someone know. Certainly other governments would be interested in insuring there was no leakage. Both the US and Russia have lost nuclear submarines and those are well known and even checked for issues by nearby nations.
Now during the 50s and 60s all bets are off, but I doubt any weapon declared one way or another fully escaped attention for this long. You want a real scare, go read up on Operation CHASE which where they were dumping even chemical weapons into the sea
Oh, I know of CHASE. Consider however that they didn't know exactly where it was. In a marine search in such relative proximity to Russian waters, they might not have found it first.
It may well actually be a dummy, but based on their track record I see no terribly good reason to treat them as a credible source.
It didn't later emerge, it was reported by an Asst. SecDef who didn't consult the facts and has been completely disproven. The device was equipped with a simulated trigger and can't undergo nuclear detonation.
The USAF has very little reason to protect this information, and these records have all been subject to extreme and intensive FOIA requests.
It's not entirely clear whether the cores were dummies in either case although it sounds plausible. When actual nukes were dropped as in the Goldsboro incident, the government didn't claim the devices weren't fully operational weapons, just misstated the risk of detonation.
The entire incident was a broken arrow incident. The entire weapon was lost, core included. The core is generally believed to have been found in the aircraft wreckage on land, albeit many years later. The bomb, sans core, is still a considered a nuclear device in that anyone finding it could easily use it to advance their own nuke programs.
Had these objects landed anywhere other than one of the most rugged places in all Canada, armies would have descended to retrieve every scrap.
It looks like they found the bomb, but perhaps not the uranium core as that would not have been inside the bomb during the crash. If so, it's a big metal orb full of very old high explosives ... not the sort of thing to fool around with.
Op here. I had called this a Broken Arrow because it is. The newspaper headline is obviously a toned-down version so as to not raise local alarm. This object, if it is what is suspected, is not just an "old bomb". Old bombs are found almost daily and do no warrant headlines in major newspapers. I refrained from terms like "nuke" as that suggests nuclear material. Nevertheless, this is a nuclear device and part of a notorious, perhaps the definitive, broken arrow incident: a bomb lost for decades on foreign soil, known and read about by people all over the world.
"Nuke" is (among other things) short for "Nuclear weapon". The original title was neither clickbait nor misleading so you should have left it alone, as the guidelines ask and added your bit on the broken-arrowness or whatever else you (rather than the article writers) wanted to say in a comment.
"Capt. Barry turned the plane out to sea so that we could dump the bomb and the dummy core. As soon as we were safely over the sea we dropped the bomb. It was set to airburst at 3000 feet. We were at about 8000 feet when the bomb exploded so we could see the flash as it exploded."
The conventional explosives (TNT and RDX) in the bomb are used to start a chain reaction in the plutonium. Specifically,
Physicist Seth Neddermeyer at Los Alamos constructed a design for the plutonium bomb that used conventional explosives around a central plutonium mass to quickly squeeze and consolidate the plutonium, increasing the pressure and density of the substance. An increased density allowed the plutonium to reach its critical mass, firing neutrons and allowing the fission chain reaction to proceed. To detonate the bomb, the explosives were ignited, releasing a shock wave that compressed the inner plutonium and led to its explosion.[1]
The Composition-B compression explosive was a mix of TNT, RDX and wax. For training missions such as this the plutonium pit was removed but everything else was as in the live weapon, so it could still have made a mighty-but-conventional bang.
Pedantically this wasn't a BROKEN ARROW ( unauthorized use ) but EMPTY QUIVER ( loss or theft of weapon or component thereof ).
> Pedantically this wasn't a BROKEN ARROW ( unauthorized use ) but EMPTY QUIVER ( loss or theft of weapon or component thereof ).
If we're being pedantic, this wasn't EMPTY QUIVER either, though, was it? Both BROKEN ARROW and EMPTY QUIVER are events involving nuclear weapons, but this one had lead instead of plutonium, so it was no longer a nuclear weapon.
It was a "component" of a nuclear weapon (the other component being the plutonium core).
A cannon doesn't stop being a cannon just because you take out the gunpowder and fill it with sand. It may not be at risk of going off accidentally, but it's still a disaster to lose track of one if cannon design techniques are a closely-guarded state secret.
The device lost is still considered a nuclear weapon in the sense that should it fall into enemy hands, it would help the enemy develop their own weapons and understand the limitations of your weapons.
The title is editorialized and should be changed to the original article title: "Canadian army interested in old nuke that may have been found off Haida Gwaii"
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_military_nuclear_acc...
The Tybee bomb is infamous on the East Coast:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1958_Tybee_Island_mid-air_co...
Then there's this one:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1961_Goldsboro_B-52_crash
And I just read this for the first time: As Kulka reached around the bomb to pull himself up, he mistakenly grabbed the emergency release pin. The Mark 6 nuclear bomb dropped to the floor of the B-47 and the weight forced the bomb bay doors open, sending the bomb 15,000 ft (4,600 m) down to the ground below.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1958_Mars_Bluff_B-47_nuclear...