JSSheridan
Golden Member
- Sep 20, 2002
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We still have no radiological evidence from last reports. But, we also know that underground devices are not going to show gases in Australia (I was trying to figure out why they even mentioned the Oz station in a report).Originally posted by: BrownTown
well, first off @ gsellis, it was a nuke, not conventional explosives, stop with the conspiracy theories. Also the fact you don't even know the name of the country and call it "NKPR" doesnt help your case. Its DPRK .. Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea.
Originally posted by: f95toli
The main reason why it is not very likely that is was a conventional device is that 500 000 tons of TNT is still a VERY large pile of explosives meaning you would
A) Need a very large cave that would need to be excavated.
B) You would also need good infrastructure in order to be able to transport the explosives to the cave.
Now, DPRK is under constant satellite surveillance and AFAIK there are no reports of that kind of activity in that region, a project of that magnitude would have been impossible to hide.
However, moving a nuke into an old coal mine without being detected is probably quite easy.
True enough, but this is North Korea.Originally posted by: BrownTown
Trying to go directly to a staged thermonuclear device would be idiotic,
-snip-
They are supposed to have heavy water reactors. Never worked on figuring how to get Li deuteride from it, but heavy water is the piece they would also need. Tritium is created as part of the reaction from the fission bomb IIRC.Originally posted by: BrownTown
Trying to go directly to a staged thermonuclear device would be idiotic, and to my knowledge North Korea has no ability to do so. Where is your sources suggesting they have enough uranium, tritium, and deuterium to even build such a device if they even knew how? Anyways, its alot easier to simply try to make a boosted bomb which gets you a lot better yield per KG of plutonium than a simple fission bomb does. However, normally you would try to see if you can get the simple one to work BEFORE building the ones that are more complex.
Didn't the first bomb designed by Lawrence Livermore labs fizzle?Originally posted by: BrownTown Having a bomb fizzile mean you screwed up, and I have never seen an example of a test that any other country carried out that failed. I'm sure its probably happened, but you have to suck pretty bad at making bombs to not get a nuke to work once you have the correct materials.