76 years ago tonight at Los Alamos, 24-year-old graduate student and Manhattan Project physicist Harry Daghlian, Jr., was conducting a risky criticality experiment alone when he accidentally dropped a 4.4 kg (9.7 lb) tungsten carbide brick on a 6.2 kg (13.7 lb) plutonium core.
The brick increased neutron reflectivity back into the core, instantly causing it to go supercritical and flood the wooden shack with radiation. Although Daghlian quickly pushed the extra brick off the core with his right hand, he still received an estimated dose of 510 rem.
Daghlian was taken to the Los Alamos hospital and his symptoms were treated. As he slowly and painfully succumbed to acute radiation poisoning, he methodically described his condition to observing doctors. He died 25 days later, the Manhattan Project's first radiation fatality.
Army Private Robert Hemmerly was on guard duty that night in the shack as Daghlian performed his last experiment, but he was seated about 12 feet away with his back turned, reading a newspaper. The 29-year-old saw a bright blue flash and received an estimated dose of 50 rem.
Although Hemmerly's white blood cell count was elevated for a few days and he felt more tired than usual for about two months, he did not suffer from radiation sickness. He fathered two more children in 1947 and 1948 and died from acute myelogenous leukemia in 1978, at age 62.
Nine months to the day after Harry Daghlian's accident, another Los Alamos physicist conducting a similar criticality experiment with the same plutonium core suffered the same fate. The so-called "demon core" was subsequently melted down and reused.
Left: Herbert Lehr and Daghlian load the assembled plutonium core of the "Gadget" into a Plymouth sedan to drive it to the Trinity shot tower on July 13, 1945.
Right: Louis Slotin (standing left) and Daghlian (seated) help to fully assemble the "Gadget" before the Trinity test.
Here's another remarkable photo of Slotin and Lehr standing in the canvas tent at the base of the shot tower next to the now uncovered tamper plug containing the 13.6-pound core of the "Gadget" prior to its insertion into the casing.
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Today in 1955, a specially-modified B-36 bomber—the NB-36H—made its first test flight out of Carswell AFB, Texas, carrying (but not powered by) an operational 1-Megawatt air-cooled nuclear reactor. It would make 46 additional flights over Texas and New Mexico through March 1957.
The NB-36H flew directly over Lake Worth, the principal water source for Fort Worth. A B-50 carrying specially-trained paratroopers escorted each test flight. Had the NB-36H crashed, they would jump into the impact zone to prevent any unauthorized entry.
A 12-ton lead-and-rubber-shielded cockpit with windows 10-12 inches thick protected the flight crew from the otherwise lethal amount of radiation emanating from the reactor hanging in the bomb bay. Special water pockets installed aft of the cockpit also absorbed radiation.
This memorable episode aired less than two months after President John F. Kennedy—in a nationally-televised speech as the Berlin crisis rapidly escalated—urged Americans to start making plans for fallout shelters to save themselves and their families in case of a nuclear attack.
Almost overnight, Kennedy's address set off a nationwide fallout shelter frenzy. Heated debates ensued on the morality of turning away or even shooting neighbors trying to enter a family shelter in an emergency. Here's an article in TIME from August 18, 1961: “Gun Thy Neighbor?”
Harshly criticized (incl. by Eleanor Roosevelt and the Rev. Billy Graham) for triggering the hysteria, JFK subsequently pleaded, “Let us concentrate more on keeping enemy bombers and missiles away from our shores and concentrate less on keeping neighbors away from our shelters.”
Tonight in 1980 at Grand Forks AFB, North Dakota, the number five engine on the right wing of a B-52H on ground alert caught fire during a drill. The aircraft was loaded with 8 Short-Range Attack Missiles (armed with 170-200-kt W69 warheads) and 4 B28 bombs (70 kt to 1.45 Mt).
That night, a southeast wind gusted up to 35 mph. The B-52 pointed in that direction. That alone kept the flames away from the fuselage. Had the nose been facing west, the fire would have incinerated all six crew members as they evacuated and burned the weapons in the bomb bay.
Because the crew did not follow the correct procedure to shut off the fuel lines before evacuating, the fire burned for three hours. Eventually, a crew member broke through the fire line, climbed into the B-52, and properly engaged the shutoff valves, extinguishing the blaze.
Alarmed by Trump's irrational behavior and the insurrection, Gen. Mark Milley took the extraordinary step of ordering officials at the National Military Command Center not to accept any orders—incl. to launch nuclear weapons—unless he was directly involved.cnn.com/2021/09/14/pol…
While somewhat reassuring given the circumstances, Milley's Jan. 8 actions were arguably extralegal because the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff only advises the president and others and does not have the legal authority to impede or override a president's military orders.
Flashback to Trump's State of the Union address on January 30, 2018:
OTD in 1954—for its ninth nuclear test—the USSR staged a live-fire nuclear wargame near Totskoye, ~600 mi. SE of Moscow. At 9:33am (local), a 40-kt atomic bomb exploded 1,150 feet in the air between two groups of soldiers, some just 2 miles from the blast.
The roughly 45,000 soldiers were then ordered into mock battle under highly radioactive conditions for the remainder of the day. Most had no protective equipment and were not warned about the dangers. Some who were issued gas masks removed them in the oppressive 115F (46C) heat.
Exposures that day were reportedly ten times the maximum allowable level for US soldiers for an entire year. The 1,000,000 people who lived within 100 miles of the blast were given no warning at all. For more about this "monstrous" exercise, see washingtonpost.com/archive/politi….
White House Military Office Coast Guard aide Lt. Cdr. Jayna McCarron was on “Football” duty in Wilmington this morning at the start President Biden’s trip to Idaho and California. The ~45-lb. briefcase follows Biden 24/7, enabling him to authorize a nuclear strike at any time.
His briefing at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise over, President Biden heads next to Sacramento, California, for a briefing on California's recent wildfires and to survey some of the damage from the air. Lt. Cdr. McCarron still has the Presidential Emergency Satchel.
At Sacramento Mather Airport (Mather AFB, until 1993), Lt. Cdr. McCarron descended the aft stairway on Air Force One and handed off the satchel to—could it be—her Space Force counterpart? If so, this would be the first time I’ve seen an aide from Space Force with the “Football.”