MarketNuclear weapons testing
Company Profile

Nuclear weapons testing

Nuclear weapons tests are experiments carried out to determine the performance of nuclear weapons and the effects of their explosion. Over 2,000 nuclear weapons tests have been carried out since 1945. Nuclear testing is a sensitive political issue. Governments have often performed tests to signal strength. Because of their destruction and fallout, testing has seen opposition by civilians as well as governments, with international bans having been agreed on. Thousands of tests have been performed, with most in the second half of the 20th century.

Types
, 3. exoatmospheric, and 4. underwater Nuclear weapons tests have historically been divided into four categories reflecting the medium or location of the test. • Atmospheric testing involves explosions that take place in the atmosphere. Generally, these have occurred as devices detonated on towers, balloons, barges, or islands, or dropped from airplanes, and some only buried far enough to intentionally create a surface-breaking crater. The United States, the Soviet Union, and China have all conducted tests involving explosions of missile-launched warheads (See List of nuclear weapons tests#Tests of live warheads on rockets). Nuclear explosions close enough to the ground to draw dirt and debris into their mushroom cloud can generate large amounts of nuclear fallout due to irradiation of the debris (particularly with neutron radiation) as well as radioactive contamination of otherwise non-radioactive material. This definition of atmospheric is used in the Limited Test Ban Treaty, which banned this class of testing along with exoatmospheric and underwater. • Underground testing is conducted below the surface of the earth at varying depths. Underground nuclear testing comprised the majority of nuclear tests by the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War; other forms of nuclear testing were banned by the Limited Test Ban Treaty in 1963. True underground tests are intended to be fully contained and emit a negligible amount of fallout. These nuclear tests do occasionally "vent" to the surface, producing from nearly none to considerable amounts of radioactive debris as a consequence. Underground testing, almost by definition, causes seismic activity of a magnitude that depends on the yield of the nuclear device and the composition of the medium in which it is detonated, and generally creates a subsidence crater. In 1976, the United States and the USSR agreed to limit the maximum yield of underground tests to 150 kt with the Threshold Test Ban Treaty.Underground testing also falls into two physical categories: tunnel tests in generally horizontal tunnel drifts, and shaft tests in vertically drilled holes. • Exoatmospheric testing is conducted above the atmosphere. The test devices are lifted on rockets. These high-altitude nuclear explosions can generate a nuclear electromagnetic pulse (NEMP) when they occur in the ionosphere, and charged particles resulting from the blast can cross hemispheres following geomagnetic lines of force to create an auroral display. • Underwater testing involves nuclear devices being detonated underwater, usually moored to a ship or a barge (which is subsequently destroyed by the explosion). Tests of this nature have usually been conducted to evaluate the effects of nuclear weapons against naval vessels (such as in Operation Crossroads), or to evaluate potential sea-based nuclear weapons (such as nuclear torpedoes or depth charges). Underwater tests close to the surface can disperse large amounts of radioactive particles in water and steam, contaminating nearby ships or structures, though they generally do not create fallout other than very locally to the explosion. Salvo tests Another way to classify nuclear tests is by the number of explosions that constitute the test. The treaty definition of a salvo test is: In conformity with treaties between the United States and the Soviet Union, a salvo is defined, for multiple explosions for peaceful purposes, as two or more separate explosions where a period of time between successive individual explosions does not exceed 5 seconds and where the burial points of all explosive devices can be connected by segments of straight lines, each of them connecting two burial points, and the total length does not exceed 40 kilometers. For nuclear weapon tests, a salvo is defined as two or more underground nuclear explosions conducted at a test site within an area delineated by a circle having a diameter of two kilometers and conducted within a total period of time of 0.1 seconds. The USSR has exploded up to eight devices in a single salvo test; Pakistan's second and last official test exploded four different devices. Almost all lists in the literature are lists of tests; in the lists in Wikipedia (for example, Operation Cresset has separate items for Cremino and Caerphilly, which together constitute a single test), the lists are of explosions. ==Purpose==
Purpose
Separately from these designations, nuclear tests are also often categorized by the purpose of the test itself. • Weapons-related tests are designed to garner information about how (and if) the weapons themselves work. Some serve to develop and validate a specific weapon type. Others test experimental concepts or are physics experiments meant to gain fundamental knowledge of the processes and materials involved in nuclear detonations. • Weapons effects tests are designed to gain information about the effects of the weapons on structures, equipment, organisms, and the environment. They are mainly used to assess and improve survivability to nuclear explosions in civilian and military contexts, tailor weapons to their targets, and develop the tactics of nuclear warfare. • Safety experiments are designed to study the behavior of weapons in simulated accident scenarios. In particular, they are used to verify that a (significant) nuclear detonation cannot happen by accident. They include one-point safety tests and simulations of storage and transportation accidents. • Nuclear test detection experiments are designed to improve the capabilities to detect, locate, and identify nuclear detonations, in particular, to monitor compliance with test-ban treaties. In the United States these tests are associated with Operation Vela Uniform before the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty stopped all nuclear testing among signatories. • Peaceful nuclear explosions were conducted to investigate non-military applications of nuclear explosives. In the United States, these were performed under the umbrella name of Operation Plowshare. Aside from these technical considerations, tests have been conducted for political and training purposes, and can often serve multiple purposes. ==Alternatives to full-scale testing==
Alternatives to full-scale testing
Since the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, "nuclear explosions" of all kinds are banned. Nuclear nations have invested in many alternatives to maintain confidence in weapon capability: • Computer simulation is used extensively to provide as much information as possible without physical testing. Mathematical models for such simulation model scenarios not only of performance but also of shelf life and maintenance. A theme has generally been that even though simulations cannot fully replace physical testing, they can reduce the amount that is necessary. • Physical testing • Materials testing • Subcritical (or cold) tests involving fissile materials and high explosives that purposely result in no yield. The name refers to the lack of creation of a critical mass of fissile material. Subcritical tests continue to be performed by the United States, Russia, and the People's Republic of China, at least. • Proxy isotope testing: high temperature/density/pressure compression testing of non-fissile isotopes such as plutonium-242 or uranium-238, to determine a bomb core's relevant equation of state. • Fission testing • Critical mass experiments studying fissile material compositions, densities, geometries, and reflectors. They can be subcritical or supercritical, in which case significant radiation fluxes can be produced. This type of test has resulted in several criticality accidents. • Hydronuclear tests (hydrodynamical + nuclear) study nuclear materials under the conditions of explosive shock compression. They can create subcritical conditions, or supercritical conditions with yields ranging from negligible all the way up to a substantial fraction of full weapon yield. Any fission yield is considered banned by the CTBT. • Fusion testing: inertial confinement fusion experiments using lasers, like the National Ignition Facility, or magnetized liners, like the Z Pulsed Power Facility, or projectile compression. These study the plasma physics and ignition of deuterium-tritium mixtures. Subcritical tests executed by the United States include: } and | Series of 50 tests during US/USSR joint nuclear test ban. |- ! Odyssey | | NTS Area U1a | and | |- ! Trumpet | | NTS Area U1a-102D | and | |- ! Kismet | | NTS Area U1a | and | Kismet was a proof of concept for modern hydronuclear tests; it did not contain any SNM (Special Nuclear Material—plutonium or uranium). |- ! Rebound | 10:—:— | NTS Area U1a | and | Provided information on the behavior of new plutonium alloys compressed by high-pressure shock waves; same as Stagecoach but for the age of the alloys. |- ! Holog | | NTS Area U1a.101A | and | Holog and Clarinet may have switched locations. |- ! Stagecoach | | NTS Area U1a | and | Provided information on the behavior of aged (up to 40 years) plutonium alloys compressed by high-pressure shock waves. |- ! Bagpipe | | NTS Area U1a.101B | and | |- ! Cimarron | | NTS Area U1a | and | Plutonium surface ejecta studies. |- ! Clarinet | | NTS Area U1a.101C | and | Holog and Clarinet may have switched places on the map. |- ! Oboe | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 2 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 3 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Thoroughbred | | NTS Area U1a | and | Plutonium surface ejecta studies, followup to Cimarron. |- ! Oboe 4 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 5 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 6 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 8 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 7 | | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Oboe 9 | 21:46:— | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Mario | 19:00:— | NTS Area U1a | and | Plutonium surface studies (optical analysis of spall). Used wrought plutonium from Rocky Flats. |- ! Rocco | 19:00:— | NTS Area U1a | and | Plutonium surface studies (optical analysis of spall), followup to Mario. Used cast plutonium from Los Alamos. |- ! Piano | 20:44:— | NTS Area U1a.102C | and | |- ! Armando | | NTS Area U1a | and | Plutonium spall measurements using x-ray analysis. |- ! Step Wedge | | NTS Area U1a | and | April–May 2005, a series of mini-hydronuclear experiments interpreting Armando results. |- ! Unicorn | 01:00:— | NTS Area U6c | and | "...confirm nuclear performance of the W88 warhead with a newly-manufactured pit." Early pit studies. |- ! Thermos | | NTS Area U1a | and | February 6 – May 3, 2007, 12 mini-hydronuclear experiments in thermos-sized flasks. |- ! Bacchus | | NTS Area U1a.05? | and | |- ! Barolo A | | NTS Area U1a.05? | and | |- ! Barolo B | | NTS Area U1a.05? | and | |- ! Castor | | NTS Area U1a | and | Not even a subcritical, contained no plutonium; a dress rehearsal for Pollux. |- ! Pollux | | NTS Area U1a | and | A subcritical test with a scaled-down warhead mockup. |- ! Leda | | NTS Area U1a | and | Like Castor, the plutonium was replaced by a surrogate; this is a dress rehearsal for the later Lydia. The target was a weapons pit mock-up. |- ! Lydia | ??-??-2015 | NTS Area U1a | and | Expected to be a plutonium subcritical test with a scaled-down warhead mockup. |- ! Vega | | Nevada test site | | Plutonium subcritical test with a scaled down warhead mockup. |- ! Ediza | | NTS Area U1a | | Plutonium subcritical test designed to confirm supercomputer simulations for stockpile safety. |- ! Nightshade A | | Nevada test site | | Plutonium subcritical test designed to measure ejecta emission. |} ==History==
History
'' (foreground) in Hong Kong Harbor in 1967, was involved in several famous anti-nuclear protest voyages against nuclear testing in the Pacific. (indicated in red), attached to Kurchatov (along the Irtysh river). The site comprised an area the size of Wales. The first atomic weapons test was conducted near Alamogordo, New Mexico, on July 16, 1945, during the Manhattan Project, and given the codename "Trinity". The test was originally to confirm that the implosion-type nuclear weapon design was feasible, and to give an idea of what the actual size and effects of a nuclear explosion would be before it was used in combat against Japan. The test gave a good approximation of many of the explosion's effects, but did not give an appreciable understanding of nuclear fallout, which was not well understood by the project scientists until after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The United States conducted six atomic tests before the Soviet Union developed its first atomic bomb (RDS-1) and tested it on August 29, 1949. Neither country had many atomic weapons to spare at first, and testing was relatively infrequent. (When the US used two weapons for Operation Crossroads in 1946, they were detonating over 20% of their current arsenal.) By the 1950s the United States had established a dedicated test site on its own territory (Nevada Test Site) and was also using a site in the Marshall Islands (Pacific Proving Grounds) for extensive atomic and nuclear testing. The early tests were used primarily to discern the military effects of atomic weapons (Crossroads had involved the effect of atomic weapons on a navy, and how they functioned underwater) and to test new weapon designs. During the 1950s, these included new hydrogen bomb designs, which were tested in the Pacific, and also new and improved fission weapon designs. The Soviet Union also began testing on a limited scale, primarily in Kazakhstan. During the later phases of the Cold War, both countries developed accelerated testing programs, testing many hundreds of bombs over the last half of the 20th century. fallout plume spread dangerous levels of radiation over an area over long, including inhabited islands. Atomic and nuclear tests can involve many hazards. Some of these were illustrated in the US Castle Bravo test in 1954. The weapon design tested was a new form of hydrogen bomb, and the scientists underestimated how vigorously some of the weapon materials would react. As a result, the explosion, with a yield of 15 Mt, was over twice what was predicted. The weapon also generated a large amount of radioactive nuclear fallout, more than had been anticipated, and a change in the weather pattern caused the fallout to spread in a direction not cleared in advance. The fallout plume spread high levels of radiation for over , contaminating populated islands in nearby atoll formations. Though they were soon evacuated, many of the islands' inhabitants suffered from radiation burns and later from other effects such as increased cancer rate and birth defects, as did the crew of the Japanese fishing boat Daigo Fukuryū Maru. One crewman died from radiation sickness after returning to port, and it was feared that the radioactive fish they had been carrying may have entered the Japanese food supply. was signed in 1963. Above are the per capita thyroid doses (in rads) in the continental United States resulting from all exposure routes from all atmospheric nuclear tests conducted at the Nevada Test Site from 1951 to 1962. Castle Bravo was the worst US nuclear accident, but many of its component problems—unpredictably large yields, changing weather patterns, unexpected fallout contamination of populations and the food supply—also occurred during atmospheric nuclear weapons tests by other countries. Concerns over worldwide fallout rates eventually led to the Partial Test Ban Treaty in 1963, which limited signatories to underground testing. Not all countries ceased atmospheric testing, but because the United States and the Soviet Union were responsible for roughly 86% of all nuclear tests, their compliance cut the overall level substantially. France continued atmospheric testing until 1974, and China until 1980. A tacit moratorium on testing was in effect from 1958 to 1961 and ended with a series of Soviet tests in late 1961, including the Tsar Bomba, the largest nuclear weapon ever tested. The United States responded in 1962 with Operation Dominic, involving dozens of tests including the explosion of a missile launched from a submarine. Almost all new nuclear powers have announced their possession of nuclear weapons with a nuclear test. The only acknowledged nuclear power that claims never to have conducted a test is South Africa (although see Vela incident), which has since dismantled all of its weapons. Israel is widely thought to possess a sizeable nuclear arsenal though it has never tested, unless they were involved in Vela. Experts disagree on whether states can have reliable nuclear arsenals, especially ones using advanced warhead designs, such as hydrogen bombs and miniaturized weapons, without testing, although all agree that it is unlikely that significant nuclear innovations can be developed without testing. One other approach is to use supercomputers to conduct "virtual" testing, but codes need to be validated against test data. There have been many attempts to limit the number and size of nuclear tests; the most far-reaching was the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty of 1996, which, , had not been ratified by eight of the "Annex 2 countries" required for it to take effect, including the United States. Nuclear testing became a controversial issue in the United States, with a number of politicians saying that future testing might be necessary to maintain the ageing warheads from the Cold War. Nuclear testing is seen as furthering nuclear arms development, and many are opposed to future testing as an acceleration of the arms race. In total nuclear test megatonnage, from 1945 to 1992, 520 atmospheric nuclear explosions (including eight underwater) were conducted with a total yield of 545 megatons, with a peak occurring in 1961–1962, when 340 megatons were detonated in the atmosphere by the United States and Soviet Union. The estimated number of underground nuclear tests conducted in the period from 1957 to 1992 was 1,352 explosions with a total yield of 90 Mt. Image: Trinity shot color.jpg|The first atomic test, "Trinity", took place on July 16, 1945. Image: Sedan Plowshare Crater.jpg|The Sedan test of 1962 was an experiment by the United States in using nuclear devices to excavate large amounts of earth. File:330-PS-3256 (45898 AC) (17204655228).jpg|Kytoon balloons were used on Indian Springs Air Force Base, Nevada, April 20, 1952, to get exact weather information during atomic test periods. ==Yield==
Yield
The yield of atomic and thermonuclear weapons is typically measured in kilotons or megatons TNT equivalent. Thermonuclear (fusion/fission by Teller-Ulam design) bombs, often mesaured in megatons, can be hundreds of times stronger than their atomic (fission only) counterparts measured only in kilotons. In the US context, it was decided during the Manhattan Project that yield measured in tons of TNT equivalent could be imprecise. This comes from the range of experimental values of the energy content of TNT, ranging from . There was also the issue of which ton to use, as short tons, long tons, and metric tonnes all had different values. It was decided that one kiloton would be equivalent to exactly, (the equivalent of 1000 cal/g if the metric tonne were used). ==Nuclear testing by country==
Nuclear testing by country
. , a nuclear test by the United States at Bikini Atoll in 1946 The nuclear powers have conducted more than 2,000 nuclear test explosions (numbers are approximate, as some test results have been disputed): • United States: 1,054 tests by official count (involving at least 1,149 devices). 219 were atmospheric tests as defined by the CTBT. These tests include 904 at the Nevada Test Site, 106 at the Pacific Proving Grounds and other locations in the Pacific, 3 in the South Atlantic Ocean, and 17 other tests taking place in Amchitka Alaska, Colorado, Mississippi, New Mexico and Nevada outside the NNSS (see Nuclear weapons and the United States for details). 24 tests are classified as British tests held at the NTS. There were 35 Plowshare detonations and 7 Vela Uniform tests; 88 tests were safety experiments and 4 were transportation/storage tests. Motion pictures were made of the explosions, later used to validate computer simulation predictions of explosions. ''United States' table data''. • Soviet Union: 715 tests (involving 969 devices) by official count, plus 13 unnumbered test failures. Most were at their Southern Test Area at Semipalatinsk Test Site and the Northern Test Area at Novaya Zemlya. Others include rocket tests and peaceful-use explosions at various sites in Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine. ''Soviet Union's table data''. • United Kingdom: 45 tests, of which 12 were in Australian territory, including three at the Montebello Islands and nine in mainland South Australia at Maralinga and Emu Field, 9 at Christmas Island (Kiritimati) in the Pacific Ocean, plus 24 in the United States at the Nevada Test Site as part of joint test series). 43 safety tests (the Vixen series) are not included in that number, though safety experiments by other countries are. ''The United Kingdom's summary table''. • France: 210 tests by official count (50 atmospheric, 160 underground), four atomic atmospheric tests at C.S.E.M. near Reggane, 13 atomic underground tests at C.E.M.O. near In Ekker in the French Algerian Sahara, and nuclear atmospheric and underground tests at and around Fangataufa and Moruroa Atolls in French Polynesia. Four of the In Ekker tests are counted as peaceful use, as they were reported as part of the CET's APEX (Application pacifique des expérimentations nucléaires, “Peaceful Application of Nuclear Experiments”), and given alternate names. ''France's summary table''. • China: 45 tests (23 atmospheric and 22 underground), at Lop Nur Nuclear Weapons Test Base, in Malan, Xinjiang There are two additional unnumbered failed tests. ''China's summary table''. • India: Six underground explosions (including the first one in 1974), at Pokhran. ''India's summary table''. • Pakistan: Six underground explosions at Ras Koh Hills and the Chagai District. ''Pakistan's summary table''. • North Korea: North Korea is the only country in the world that still tests nuclear weapons, and their tests have caused escalating tensions between them and the United States. Their most recent nuclear test was on September 3, 2017. ''North Korea's summary table'' There may also have been at least three alleged but unacknowledged nuclear explosions (see list of alleged nuclear tests) including the Vela incident. From the first nuclear test in 1945 until tests by Pakistan in 1998, there was never a period of more than 22 months with no nuclear testing. June 1998 to October 2006 was the longest period since 1945 with no acknowledged nuclear tests. A summary table of all the nuclear testing that has happened since 1945 is here: Worldwide nuclear testing counts and summary. == Global fallout ==
Global fallout
, New Zealand and Austria. The New Zealand curve is representative for the Southern Hemisphere, the Austrian curve is representative for the Northern Hemisphere. Atmospheric nuclear weapon tests almost doubled the concentration of 14C in the Northern Hemisphere. Nuclear weapons testing did not produce an outcome like nuclear winter as a result of a scenario of a concentrated number of nuclear explosions in a nuclear holocaust, but the thousands of tests, hundreds being atmospheric, did produce a global fallout that peaked in 1963 (the bomb pulse), reaching levels of about 0.15 mSv per year worldwide, or about 7% of average background radiation dose from all sources. It has slowly decreased since, with natural environmental radiation levels being around 1 mSv. This global fallout was one of the main drivers for the ban on nuclear weapons testing, particularly atmospheric testing. It has been estimated that by 2020 between 200,000 to 460,000 people had died as a result of nuclear weapons testing, while the total number of deaths may rise up to 2.4 million people. ==Criticism==
Criticism
Nuclear arms tests have been criticized for its arms race and its fallout, with a potentially global fallout. Nuclear weapons tests have been criticized by anti-nuclear activists as nuclear imperialism, colonialism, ecocide, environmental racism and nuclear genocide. The movement gained particularly in the 1960s and in the 1980s again. The international day "End Nuclear Tests Day" raises critical awareness annually. ==Treaties against testing==
Treaties against testing
There are many existing anti-nuclear explosion treaties, notably the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. These treaties were proposed in response to growing international concerns about environmental damage, among other risks. Nuclear testing involving humans also contributed to the formation of these treaties. Examples can be seen in the following articles: • Desert Rock exercisesTotskoye range nuclear tests The Partial Nuclear Test Ban treaty makes it illegal to detonate a nuclear explosion anywhere except underground, in order to reduce atmospheric fallout. Most countries have signed and ratified the Partial Nuclear Test Ban, which came into effect in October 1963. Of the nuclear states, France, China, and North Korea have never signed the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. The 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) bans all nuclear explosions everywhere, including underground. For that purpose, the Preparatory Commission of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization is building an international monitoring system with 337 facilities located over the globe. 85% of these facilities are already operational. , the CTBT has been signed by 183 States, of which 157 have also ratified. For the Treaty to enter into force it needs to be ratified by 44 specific nuclear technology-holder countries. These "Annex 2 States" participated in the negotiations on the CTBT between 1994 and 1996 and possessed nuclear power or research reactors at that time. The ratification of eight Annex 2 states is still missing: China, Egypt, Iran, Israel and the United States have signed but not ratified the Treaty; India, North Korea and Pakistan have not signed it. The following is a list of the treaties applicable to nuclear testing: ==Compensation for victims==
Compensation for victims
Over 500 atmospheric nuclear weapons tests were conducted at various sites around the world from 1945 to 1980. As public awareness and concern mounted over possible health hazards associated with exposure to nuclear fallout, various studies were done to assess the extent of the hazard. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/ National Cancer Institute study claimed that nuclear fallout might have led to approximately 11,000 excess deaths, most caused by thyroid cancer linked to exposure to iodine-131. • United States: Prior to March 2009, the US was the only nation to compensate nuclear test victims. Since the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of 1990, more than $1.38 billion in compensation has been approved. The money is going to people who took part in the tests, notably at the Nevada Test Site, and to others exposed to the radiation from these tests. As of 2017, the US government has refused to pay for the medical care of troops who associate their health problems with the construction of Runit Dome in the Marshall Islands. • France: In March 2009, the French Government offered to compensate victims for the first time, and legislation was drafted which would allow payments to people who suffered health problems related to the tests. The payouts would be available to victims' descendants and would include Algerians, who were exposed to nuclear testing in the Sahara in 1960. Victims say the eligibility requirements for compensation are too narrow. • United Kingdom: There is no formal British government compensation program. Nearly 1,000 veterans of Christmas Island nuclear tests in the 1950s are engaged in legal action against the Ministry of Defense for negligence. They say they suffered health problems and were not warned of potential dangers before the experiments. • Russia: Decades later, Russia offered compensation to veterans who were part of the 1954 Totsk test. There was no compensation to civilians made sick by the Totsk test. Anti-nuclear groups say there has been no government compensation for other nuclear tests. • China: China has undertaken highly secretive atomic tests in remote deserts in a Central Asian border province. Anti-nuclear activists say there is no known government program for compensating victims. ==Milestone nuclear explosions==
Milestone nuclear explosions
The following list is of milestone nuclear explosions. In addition to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the first nuclear test of a given weapon type for a country is included, as well as tests that were otherwise notable (such as the largest test ever). All yields (explosive power) are given in their estimated energy equivalents in kilotons of TNT (see TNT equivalent). Putative tests (like Vela incident) have not been included. ;Note • "Staged" refers to whether it was a "true" thermonuclear weapon of the so-called Teller–Ulam configuration or simply a form of a boosted fission weapon. For a more complete list of nuclear test series, see List of nuclear tests. Some exact yield estimates, such as that of the Tsar Bomba and the tests by India and Pakistan in 1998, are somewhat contested among specialists. ==See also==
General and cited references
• Gusterson, Hugh. Nuclear Rites: A Weapons Laboratory at the End of the Cold War. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1996. • Hacker, Barton C. Elements of Controversy: The Atomic Energy Commission and Radiation Safety in Nuclear Weapons Testing, 1947–1974. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1994. • Rice, James. Downwind of the Atomic State: Atmospheric Testing and the Rise of the Risk Society. (New York University Press, 2023). https://nyupress.org/9781479815340/downwind-of-the-atomic-state/ • Schwartz, Stephen I. Atomic Audit: The Costs and Consequences of U.S. Nuclear Weapons. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 1998. • Weart, Spencer R. Nuclear Fear: A History of Images. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985. ==External links==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com