Uranium-Filled 'Lost Nuke' Missing Since 1950 May Have Been Found (bbc.com)
Although the U.S. government "does not believe the bomb contains active nuclear material," schwit1 shares this report from the BBC:
A commercial diver may have discovered a lost decommissioned U.S. nuclear bomb off the coast of Canada. Sean Smyrichinsky was diving for sea cucumbers near British Columbia when he discovered a large metal device that looked a bit like a flying saucer. The Canadian Department of National Defence believes it could be a "lost nuke" from a US B-36 bomber that crashed in the area in 1950.... The plane was on a secret mission to simulate a nuclear strike and had a real Mark IV nuclear bomb on board to see if it could carry the payload required...
The American military says the bomb was filled with lead, uranium and TNT but no plutonium, so it wasn't capable of a nuclear explosion... Several hours into its flight, its engines caught fire and the crew had to parachute to safety... The crew put the plane on autopilot and set it to crash in the middle of the ocean, but three years later, its wreckage was found hundreds of kilometers inland.
The crew says they dumped their bomb-like cargo into the ocean first to avoid a detonation on land.
The American military says the bomb was filled with lead, uranium and TNT but no plutonium, so it wasn't capable of a nuclear explosion... Several hours into its flight, its engines caught fire and the crew had to parachute to safety... The crew put the plane on autopilot and set it to crash in the middle of the ocean, but three years later, its wreckage was found hundreds of kilometers inland.
The crew says they dumped their bomb-like cargo into the ocean first to avoid a detonation on land.
You fly a test mission, and do it using a "dummy" bomb that contains TNT and uranium???
Is it just me, or does this sound like complete bollocks?
Of course, actually telling everyone, "Oopsy, we *lost* a live nuke" would be quite embarrassing...
This sig left unintentionally blank.
I don't know why the poster/editor put in the last line "The crew says they dumped their bomb-like cargo into the ocean first to avoid a detonation on land" as it adds confusion to the story. If you read TFA, it seems like the bomb was dropped into the water to avoid the problems of the TNT exploding and not the BOMB detonating (which doesn't seem possible).
I'd be interested in finding out why the USAF didn't try to recover the bomb if they thought they knew where it was.
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
Lost nuclear bombs are also called "Broken Arrow".
>the US Department of Defense has officially recognized 32 "Broken Arrow" incidents, including but not limited to
1950 British Columbia B-36 crash
1956 B-47 disappearance
1958 Mars Bluff B-47 nuclear weapon loss incident
1958 Tybee Island mid-air collision
1961 Yuba City B-52 crash
1961 Goldsboro B-52 crash
1964 Savage Mountain B-52 crash
1965 Philippine Sea A-4 incident
1966 Palomares B-52 crash[6]
1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash
1980 Damascus, Arkansas incident
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Do you actually trust the U.S. government to be honest? It may have been a complete weapon - plutonium and all. They simply made something up to make sure people wouldn't panic (or the real motivation to lie: people would criticize the government for f'ing up. Again.). No one outside a select few has the ability to find out if it had been loaded with plutonium. If they were actually worried about safety, there would not be any TNT or uranium in it. They would have filled the bomb with something inert to give it the same mass, center of mass and maybe even moment of inertia. Nuclear bombs don't go off unless properly triggered, so the risk of a full explosion is about zero. There is a very real risk of it potentially becoming a dirty bomb.
Lying and deception are completely legit when keeping Americans safe. Doubly so for anything classified.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Shouldn't this thing be radiating radiation how could they not find it from that?
Perhaps the lead mentioned in the summary, who's purpose would likely be radiation shielding.
Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
Build a fence!
davecb@spamcop.net
Uranium emits alpha particles. A few things that stop alpha radiation include:
Tissue paper
Rubber gloves
Water
Air (centimeters)
They could detect the radiation from the uranium IF the measuring instrument were touching the uranium directly.
On the other hand, you emit some BETA radiation, which isn't stopped by air. Mostly it's the potassium in your body which makes you far more radioactive than uranium is, at any distance greater than 4 centimeters.
No, the lead was a simulator for the plutonium pit. The Depleted Uranium tamper surrounding the weapon isn't particularly radioactive. The tamper is there for two reasons, one the density and high inertia of it confines the chemical explosion long enough for the nuclear reaction to occur. Secondly, fast neutrons from the plutonium chain reaction then cause the tamper to fission, generating another portion of the weapon's energy.
As to why you're flying the aircraft with a weapon such as this, it's because it is supposed to be a live training mission, testing all the electrical interfaces, mission profiles, etc... and without the plutonium pit, the weapon is inert from a nuclear perspective. At that point, they also didn't have really viable simulators that could be used as a proxy.
...si hoc legere nimium eruditionis habes...
Interesting... Thanks for the correction and information. The low radioactivity would explain why it couldn't be detected then, I suppose. And it also explains why the military didn't bother to continue looking for it, since by your description, it doesn't seem all that dangerous (relatively speaking, as it's still a bomb).
Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
So I'm guessing the outcome of the study was that the plane can't carry the payload?
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
A famous case in point. (See page 10 in particular.)
Ezekiel 23:20
Good lord how does this crap even make it to the front page. From TFA:
But while the military and the diver believe they may have found the lost nuke of Bomber 075, Mr Septer says the diver's location is totally wrong, given what we know about the plane crash.
"It could be anything," Mr Septer said. "Whatever he found, it's not the nuke."
Now I realize that there is a long tradition on not reading TFA on /. but I had hoped that tradition didn't extend to the idiots actually posting the stories.
The Canadian military seems to think it a high enough chance to route a few ships towards it. This guy may have studied the incident and may have an opinion, but he may well be wrong. We don't have a GPS track of the plane. It happened a long time ago.
And you are completely discounting the possibility of some Godzilla-like creature slowly moving the device towards it's lair? Have you thought of that?
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
I bet somebody knew where it was but didn't bother saying anything, until Trump was elected.
Table-ized A.I.
Obligatory XKCD what-if https://what-if.xkcd.com/29
Off the coast of GA https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
A bullet may have your name on it, but artillery is addressed to " Whom It May concern"
That strange description given by the discoverer certainly doesn't sound like any nuke I've ever seen or heard of.
Even without the lead, it would be almost impossible to detect from more than a few cm away.
Water is an incredibly effective absorber of alpha/beta/gamma emissions, which is why it's being postulated as the most effective radiation shielding for biologicals (ie humans) on interplanetary trips.
The key issue was that the engines used were designed for a tractor/puller engine configuration, and were mounted on the b-36 in a pusher configuration without modifications. The result (I forget if it was overheating, freezing, or radiator issues) was that the engines had a much higher tendancy of conditions which would result in the engines backfiring and catching on fire as a result.