78 years ago today—at 5:29:45 AM (Mountain War Time)—about 35 miles SE of Socorro, New Mexico, the nuclear age began with a big bang. Contrary to popular belief, the area surrounding the remote Trinity test site was not uninhabited, and the fallout did not drift away harmlessly.
In fact, some 40,000 people lived in the vicinity. Manhattan Project scientists methodically tracked the radioactive cloud from that first test (left). The Los Alamos Historical Document Retrieval and Assessment Project created a more recent graphic (right) using the same data.
In 2021, scientists at Los Alamos reassessed the yield of the Trinity test using high-precision mass spectrometry and found the actual yield was 24.8 ± 2 kilotons, significantly larger than the longtime accepted value of 21 kilotons. https://t.co/uQfpbnFu29tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.108…
Although ignored for decades, Trinity’s radioactive fallout had significant immediate and long-term consequences. This @BulletinAtomic article reveals evidence of a dramatic increase in infant mortality in the downwind region in the months after the test. thebulletin.org/2019/07/trinit…
@BulletinAtomic Lacking familiar objects in the frame, it’s very difficult to gauge how large the Trinity explosion was in photos or films. Fortunately, @wellerstein created this composite image which stacks photos at a consistent scale and includes the Empire State Building as a reference.
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein In 2019, @atomcentral released stunning, restored black-and-white HD footage of the Trinity test, which was conducted in New Mexico’s aptly-named Jornada del Muerto desert. The cleaned-up film reveals a remarkable amount of detail previously unseen.
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral Also via @atomcentral is this extremely rare view of the Trinity test from a 16-mm high-speed Eastman camera shooting through a prism. As filmmaker Peter Kuran notes, “it displays some interesting anomalies not seen in other footage of the Trinity test.”
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral Those present at Trinity had a variety of reactions. Los Alamos director Robert Oppenheimer famously quoted the Bhagavad Gita: “Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.” Physicist Kenneth Bainbridge, the test director, was more blunt: “Now we are all sons of bitches.”
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral On September 9, 1945, General Leslie Groves, the military director of the Manhattan Project, opened up the Trinity site to journalists in order to refute disturbing reports coming from Hiroshima and Nagasaki of deadly radiation-caused illnesses.
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral At one point, Groves ordered Patrick Stout, a 29-year-old Army counterintelligence agent and his driver, to join him at ground zero to prove it was safe. Stout—who also witnessed the Trinity test—remained there for 30 minutes. He became severely ill with leukemia 22 years later.
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral A medical expert at Stout’s military disability compensation appeal estimated his total exposure at nearly 100 roentgens (the crews of two lead-lined tanks sent into the crater several times to collect soil samples the day of the test received 7-15 roentgens). Stout died in 1969.
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral There is only one in-focus, properly-exposed, color photograph of the Trinity test fireball. It was taken with this camera by Jack Aeby, a 21-year-old civilian Manhattan Project employee based at Los Alamos who was not a professional photographer.
@BulletinAtomic @wellerstein @atomcentral In a 2003 interview, Aeby discussed the making of that historic photograph: https://t.co/Wngu8i49vbahf.nuclearmuseum.org/voices/oral-hi…
Radioactive fallout from the Trinity test drifted across the country, but the government never alerted people to the danger. Some of it fell into rivers in Indiana and Iowa, contaminating the strawboard Kodak used to package its X-ray film and ruining it. popularmechanics.com/science/energy…
When the same problem occurred after the first test in Nevada in early 1951, Kodak threatened to sue the gov’t. In response, the Atomic Energy Commission offered to alert Kodak before each future test and provide classified daily maps showing areas of potentially heavy fallout.
A Kodak executive and personnel at other film companies were issued “Q” clearances to receive and use this secret information to ensure their company’s products were not harmed by radioactive fallout. By contrast, the AEC consistently lied to the public about fallout’s dangers.
@cmx11 @GrouchoG @Julian701776140 The actual order to use the A-bombs was given by Acting Army Chief of Staff Gen. Thomas Handy to Gen. Carl Spaatz, commander of US Army Strategic Air Forces on July 25, 1945. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George C. Marshall and Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson approved the order.
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Today in 1959, a clogged coolant channel led to the meltdown of 30 percent of the fuel elements in the core of the uncontained 20-MW Sodium Reactor Experiment nuclear reactor at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory, about 30 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles above Simi Valley.
The coolant disruption and partial meltdown triggered a power excursion that could have caused the reactor to explode (as happened at Chernobyl). Although automatic safety systems failed to shut down the reactor, the operators successfully initiated a manual scram.
Inexplicably, the operators restarted the reactor just a couple hours later, even though they could not determine the cause of the power excursion and knew there was a problem with the coolant. And they kept it running for two weeks even as radiation readings went off the scale.
Today in 1989, more than 70 armed FBI and EPA agents raided the Department of Energy’s Rocky Flats Plant 21 miles northwest of Denver, Colorado, in “Operation Desert Glow” to investigate illegal incineration of plutonium-contaminated wastes and other environmental crimes.
The unprecedented raid halted production of new plutonium pits, ultimately ending the manufacture of new US nuclear warheads. In 1992, contractor Rockwell International pled guilty and paid a $18.5 million fine, the largest levied for an an environmental crime to that date.
That amount, however, was less than what Rockwell had received in bonuses from the DOE to operate the plant. Why the Department of Justice agreed to the plea agreement—when a special grand jury was prepared to indict 3 DOE and 5 Rockwell officials—remains a mystery to this day.
As a reminder, nuclear power plants require a constant supply of freshwater to prevent radioactive fuel in reactors _and_ spent fuel in cooling ponds from overheating and melting down—as well as a constant supply of electricity to circulate and replenish that water.
Since March 2022, Russian forces have repeatedly attacked Zaporizhzia, seriously damaging critical infrastructure. The station currently relies on a single 750-kilovolt power line for electricity needed for essential safety and security operations.
All six Zaporizhzia reactors were placed in cold shutdown last September. Two were subsequently restarted in hot shutdown mode to generate small amounts of energy to keep the station operational. Russia has rejected IAEA requests to guarantee its safety and prevent a catastrophe.
Today in 1980, at 2:26am EDT, warning displays at the Strategic Air Command suddenly indicated that a Soviet SLBM attack on the United States was underway, first showing 2 and then, 18 seconds later, 200 inbound missiles. SAC ordered all alert air crews to start their engines.
Launch officers for 1,000 Minuteman ICBMs were also alerted to be ready to receive an Emergency Action Message (a coded launch order). Three minutes later, duty officers at NORAD determined this was a false alarm because early-warning satellites and radars indicated no attack.
Before that happened, however, Gen. William Odom, National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski’s military asst., called him at home, telling him 220 Soviet SLBMs were hurtling toward the United States. Brzezinski told Odom to call back with a confirmation and the likely targets.
OTD 35 yrs ago, the INF Treaty—signed by Reagan and Gorbachev on Dec. 8, 1987—entered into force. Less than three years later, 2,692 US & Soviet nuclear missiles had been verifiably destroyed. INF ended on Aug. 2, 2019, after Trump unilaterally withdrew the United States from it.
For more on the negotiating history of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, including its unprecedented on-site verification system, see this remarkable collection of declassified documents from the @NSArchive: nsarchive.gwu.edu/briefing-book/…
In 1990, Soviet/Russian painter and sculptor and painter Zurab Tsereteli presented this bronze sculpture to the United Nations to commemorate the signing of the 1987 INF Treaty. Titled “Good Defeats Evil,” it sits in a garden outside UN headquarters in New York City.
Today in 1952, Los Alamos theoretical physicist and weapons designer Ted Taylor used a parabolic mirror and a 15-kt nuclear explosion (George) detonated atop a 300-ft tower in Nevada to light a Pall Mall cigarette. Taylor designed the lightweight “Scorpion” device for the test.
Taylor (1925-2004) subsequently recalled that he “carefully extinguished the cigarette and saved it for a while in my desk drawer at Los Alamos. Sometime, probably in a state of excitement about some new kind of bomb, I must have smoked it by mistake.”
Taylor went on to design the highest- and lowest-yield US atomic (fission) bombs: the B18 (500 kt, tested above Enewetak Atoll in Shot King on November 15, 1952), and the W54 (.018-.022 kt, tested at the Nevada Proving Ground in Little Feller II and I on July 7 and 11, 1962).