A while back I talking with some friends about just how difficult it would be to design a nuke.
I was arguing that if we limit ourself to a 15-20 kT uranium bomb using a canon to shoot the two pieces of the core together (similar to the Hiroshima-bomb) it is a fairly simple design.
A plutonium bomb is much more complicated because of the implosion problem (but I guess that is much easier to solve today with the help of a computer), hydrogen bombs are even more complicated.
My point was that a group of regular engineers and physicist should be able to design a working atomic bomb using only public sources of information, my estimate was that it would take one year at most.
AS far as I understand (I took a course in subatomic physics a few years ago) there is no real "secret" to an uranium bomb (I think there even was a sketch in one of the books we used, in the chapter about applicatios) , the real problem is producong enough uranium.
Am I wrong? That is, is there some big "problem" with uranium bombs that I am unaware of.
I was arguing that if we limit ourself to a 15-20 kT uranium bomb using a canon to shoot the two pieces of the core together (similar to the Hiroshima-bomb) it is a fairly simple design.
A plutonium bomb is much more complicated because of the implosion problem (but I guess that is much easier to solve today with the help of a computer), hydrogen bombs are even more complicated.
My point was that a group of regular engineers and physicist should be able to design a working atomic bomb using only public sources of information, my estimate was that it would take one year at most.
AS far as I understand (I took a course in subatomic physics a few years ago) there is no real "secret" to an uranium bomb (I think there even was a sketch in one of the books we used, in the chapter about applicatios) , the real problem is producong enough uranium.
Am I wrong? That is, is there some big "problem" with uranium bombs that I am unaware of.