ELECTION 2008 | The Pub | The Field Mess | The Staff College | Bookmark WAB



Go Back   World Affairs Board > General Forums > Political Discussions
Register FAQ WAB RSS Feed Forum GuidelinesMembers List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Greetings, and welcome to the World Affairs Board!

The World Affairs Board is one of the premier forums for the discussion of the pressing geopolitical issues of our time. Topics include foreign & defense policy, international security, military developments, weapons proliferation, terrorism, international strategic affairs, and politics. Our membership includes many from military, defense industry, and government backgrounds with expert knowledge on a wide range of topics. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so why not register a World Affairs Board account and join our community today?
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 08-15-2003, 10:51 AM   #1 (permalink)
Anon
New Member
 
Join Date: 08-03-03
Posts: 0
The new Arms race: The "Gamma ray" bomb

Gamma-ray weapons could trigger next arms race


19:00 13 August 03
David Hambling


An exotic kind of nuclear explosive being developed by the US Department of Defense could blur the critical distinction between conventional and nuclear weapons. The work has also raised fears that weapons based on this technology could trigger the next arms race.

The explosive works by stimulating the release of energy from the nuclei of certain elements but does not involve nuclear fission or fusion. The energy, emitted as gamma radiation, is thousands of times greater than that from conventional chemical explosives.

The technology has already been included in the Department of Defense's Militarily Critical Technologies List, which says: "Such extraordinary energy density has the potential to revolutionise all aspects of warfare."

Scientists have known for many years that the nuclei of some elements, such as hafnium, can exist in a high-energy state, or nuclear isomer, that slowly decays to a low-energy state by emitting gamma rays. For example, hafnium-178m2, the excited, isomeric form of hafnium-178, has a half-life of 31 years.

The possibility that this process could be explosive was discovered when Carl Collins and colleagues at the University of Texas at Dallas demonstrated that they could artificially trigger the decay of the hafnium isomer by bombarding it with low-energy X-rays (New Scientist print edition, 3 July 1999). The experiment released 60 times as much energy as was put in, and in theory a much greater energy release could be achieved.


Energy pump


Before hafnium can be used as an explosive, energy has to be "pumped" into its nuclei. Just as the electrons in atoms can be excited when the atom absorbs a photon, hafnium nuclei can become excited by absorbing high-energy photons. The nuclei later return to their lowest energy states by emitting a gamma-ray photon.

Nuclear isomers were originally seen as a means of storing energy, but the possibility that the decay could be accelerated fired the interest of the Department of Defense, which is also investigating several other candidate materials such as thorium and niobium.

For the moment, the production method involves bombarding tantalum with protons, causing it to decay into hafnium-178m2. This requires a nuclear reactor or a particle accelerator, and only tiny amounts can be made.

Currently, the Air Force Research Laboratory at Kirtland, New Mexico, which is studying the phenomenon, gets its hafnium-178m2 from SRS Technologies, a research and development company in Huntsville, Alabama, which refines the hafnium from nuclear material left over from other experiments. The company is under contract to produce experimental sources of hafnium-178m2, but only in amounts less than one ten-thousandth of a gram.


Extremely powerful


But in future there may be cheaper ways to create the hafnium isomer - by bombarding ordinary hafnium with high-energy photons, for example. Hill Roberts, chief scientist at SRS, believes that technology to produce gram quantities will exist within five years.

The price is likely to be high - similar to enriched uranium, which costs thousands of dollars per kilogram - but unlike uranium it can be used in any quantity, as it does not require a critical mass to maintain the nuclear reaction.

The hafnium explosive could be extremely powerful. One gram of fully charged hafnium isomer could store more energy than 50 kilograms of TNT. Miniature missiles could be made with warheads that are far more powerful than existing conventional weapons, giving massively enhanced firepower to the armed forces using them.

The effect of a nuclear-isomer explosion would be to release high-energy gamma rays capable of killing any living thing in the immediate area. It would cause little fallout compared to a fission explosion, but any undetonated isomer would be dispersed as small radioactive particles, making it a somewhat "dirty" bomb. This material could cause long-term health problems for anybody who breathed it in.


Political fallout


There would also be political fallout. In the 1950s, the US backed away from developing nuclear mini-weapons such as the "Davy Crockett" nuclear bazooka that delivered an explosive punch of 18 tonnes of TNT. These weapons blurred the divide between the explosive power of nuclear and conventional weapons, and the government feared that military commanders would be more likely to use nuclear weapons that had a similar effect on the battlefield to conventional weapons.

By ensuring that the explosive power of a nuclear weapon was always far greater, it hoped that they could only be used in exceptional circumstance when a dramatic escalation of force was deemed necessary.

Then in 1994, the US confirmed this policy with the Spratt-Furse law, which prevents US military from developing mini-nukes of less than five kilotons. But the development of a new weapon that spans the gap between the explosive power of nuclear and conventional weapons would remove this restraint, giving commanders a way of increasing the amount of force they can use in a series of small steps. Nuclear-isomer weapons could be a major advantage to armies possessing them, leading to the possibility of an arms race.

André Gsponer, director of the Independent Scientific Research Institute in Geneva, believes that a nation without such weapons would not be able to fight one that possesses them. As a result, he says, "many countries which will not have access to these weapons will produce nuclear weapons as a deterrent", leading to a new cycle of proliferation.

The Department of Defense notes that there are serious technical issues to be overcome and that useful applications may be decades away. But its Militarily Critical Technologies List also says: "We should remember that less than six years intervened between the first scientific publication characterising the phenomenon of fission and the first use of a nuclear weapon in 1945."

www.newscientist.com/news...ns99994049


We SOOOO need a .50 gamma ray warhead projectile for the M-82.
Anon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-15-2003, 11:06 AM   #2 (permalink)
Stinger
Contributor
 
Join Date: 08-08-03
Posts: 714
Send a message via Yahoo to Stinger
What about for the 30mm GUA-8? couldn't that use a new Gamma round too? :twisted:
__________________
Your look more lost than a bastard child on fathers day.
Stinger is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-15-2003, 11:25 AM   #3 (permalink)
bigross86
401 Ikvot Habarzel
Military Professional
 
Join Date: 08-07-03
Location: Ra'anana, Israel
Posts: 3,148
Send a message via ICQ to bigross86 Send a message via AIM to bigross86 Send a message via Yahoo to bigross86
Main gun on the Abrams. Vaporize a tank or two before breakfast.
__________________
You're a naughty girl, go to my room!
bigross86 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-15-2003, 12:06 PM   #4 (permalink)
ChrisF202
Senior Contributor
 
Join Date: 08-12-03
Location: Long Island, New York, USA
Posts: 2,576
Country:
Send a message via AIM to ChrisF202
hmm interesting
ChrisF202 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-15-2003, 21:09 PM   #5 (permalink)
Anon
New Member
 
Join Date: 08-03-03
Posts: 0
LOL, BR, the warhead potential of a 120mm gun using this technology would vaporize a NIEGHBORHOOD!

:N
Anon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-16-2003, 14:46 PM   #6 (permalink)
bigross86
401 Ikvot Habarzel
Military Professional
 
Join Date: 08-07-03
Location: Ra'anana, Israel
Posts: 3,148
Send a message via ICQ to bigross86 Send a message via AIM to bigross86 Send a message via Yahoo to bigross86
Fine, vaporize a battalion or two before breakfast. It's all the same in the long run...
bigross86 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-24-2003, 10:40 AM   #7 (permalink)
2DREZQ
Contributor
 
2DREZQ's Avatar
 
Join Date: 08-04-03
Posts: 702
The potential of such technology is enormous! A nuclear Isomer battery the size of a D cell could power your SUV, emission-free, for months! It might make hand-held energy weapons (Phasers) practical. Interstellar flight propulsion, this is great stuff!
__________________
USS North Dakota
2DREZQ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-24-2003, 13:16 PM   #8 (permalink)
bigross86
401 Ikvot Habarzel
Military Professional
 
Join Date: 08-07-03
Location: Ra'anana, Israel
Posts: 3,148
Send a message via ICQ to bigross86 Send a message via AIM to bigross86 Send a message via Yahoo to bigross86
Back to the whole trekkie thing, huh?
bigross86 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-24-2003, 16:37 PM   #9 (permalink)
2DREZQ
Contributor
 
2DREZQ's Avatar
 
Join Date: 08-04-03
Posts: 702
Well the big problem with making direct-energy weapons (as opposed to kinetic-energy) portable is that, while you can make the laser into a pistol, the 100 megawatt nuclear power plant doesn't fit in the standard ALICE pack. This technology might solve that little problem.
2DREZQ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-24-2003, 18:02 PM   #10 (permalink)
bigross86
401 Ikvot Habarzel
Military Professional
 
Join Date: 08-07-03
Location: Ra'anana, Israel
Posts: 3,148
Send a message via ICQ to bigross86 Send a message via AIM to bigross86 Send a message via Yahoo to bigross86
I suppose. And it would ease the weight of the combat load of the troops.
bigross86 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply




Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Arms race fears as Putin attacks missiles plan Ray The Western Alliance 8 02-20-2007 23:21 PM
China's anti-satellite missile test could ignite space arms race xrough International Defense Topics 0 01-21-2007 21:54 PM
Guerilla Warfare troung The Staff College 13 04-05-2006 02:25 AM
Cheney prepares the way to Tehran? Parihaka The Iranian Question 29 01-27-2005 17:59 PM
Arns Race? Correct or incorrect? tarek South Asian Defense Topics 5 10-15-2004 12:12 PM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 19:24 PM.


Rochen is the business hosting sponsor of World Affairs Board and a provider of reseller web hosting services.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.9
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC8