silverpig
Lifer
- Jul 29, 2001
- 27,703
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Originally posted by: Vic
Next up, terrorists stockpile watches!* :Q
Tritium is an isotope of hydrogen. A normal hydrogen atom has only a proton and an electron. A tritium has that plus 2 neutrons. In making nuclear bombs, tritium is commonly used as a 'booster' because the additional neutrons can be freed relatively easily and then go on to further additional fission reactions, boosting the yield. In fact, I'd wager that just about every nuclear bomb made by any of the major nations contains some tritium for this purpose. So how exactly is this a 'dirty' bomb as opposed to a regular bomb? And how exactly are these terrorists going to make one of these bombs without plutonium or uranium-235?
* glow-in-the-dark watch faces are one of the most common commercial usages of tritium
A dirty bomb is not a type of nuke. A dirty bomb contains radioactive material that is dispersed in a conventional explosion, the sole purpose of which is to spread radioactive material around an area.
I've got a little tritium filled cylinder on my keychain. It's neat.
