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Thermonuclear weapon

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Thermonuclear weapon

A thermonuclear weapon, fusion weapon or hydrogen bomb (H-bomb) is a second-generation nuclear weapon, utilizing nuclear fusion. The most destructive weapons ever created, their yields typically exceed first-generation nuclear weapons by twenty times, with far lower mass and volume requirements. Characteristics of fusion reactions can make possible the use of non-fissile depleted uranium as the weapon's main fuel, thus allowing more efficient use of scarce fissile material. Its multi-stage design is distinct from the usage of fusion in simpler boosted fission weapons. The first full-scale thermonuclear test (Ivy Mike) was carried out by the United States in 1952, and the concept has since been employed by at least the five NPT-recognized nuclear-weapon states: the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, China, and France. The design of all thermonuclear weapons is believed to be the Teller–Ulam configuration. This relies on radiation implosion, in which X-rays from detonation of the primary stage, a fission bomb, are channelled to compress a separate fusion secondary stage containing thermonuclear fuel, primarily lithium-6 deuteride. During detonation, neutrons convert lithium-6 to helium-4 plus tritium. The heavy isotopes of hydrogen, deuterium and tritium, then undergo a reaction that releases energy and neutrons. For this reason, thermonuclear weapons are often colloquially called hydrogen bombs or H-bombs. Additionally, most weapons use a natural or depleted uranium tamper and case. This undergoes fast fission from fast fusion neutrons and is the main contribution to the total yield and radioactive fission product fallout. Thermonuclear weapons were thought possible since 1941 and received basic research during the Manhattan Project. The first Soviet nuclear test triggered an all-out pursuit of a thermonuclear weapon in the US, despite initial opposition by many former Manhattan Project scientists. The Teller-Ulam configuration, named for its chief contributors, Edward Teller and Stanisław Ulam, was outlined in 1951, with contribution from John von Neumann. Operation Greenhouse investigated thermonuclear reactions before the full-scale Mike test. Multi-stage devices were later developed and tested, largely independently, by the Soviet Union (1955), the United Kingdom (1957), China (1966), and France (1968). There is not enough public information to determine whether India, Israel, or North Korea possess multi-stage weapons. Pakistan is not considered to have developed them. After the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan became the first and only countries to relinquish their thermonuclear weapons, although these had never left the operational control of Russian forces. Following the 1996 Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, most countries with thermonuclear weapons maintain their stockpiles and expertise using computer simulations, hydrodynamic testing, warhead surveillance, and inertial confinement fusion experiments.

Thermonuclear weapons are the only artificial source of explosions above one megaton TNT. The Tsar Bomba was the most powerful bomb ever detonated at 50 megatons TNT. As they are the most efficient design for yields above 50 kilotons of TNT (210 TJ), and with decreased relevance of tactical nuclear weapons, virtually all nuclear weapons deployed by the five recognized nuclear-weapons states today are thermonuclear. Their development dominated the Cold War's nuclear arms race. Their destructiveness and ability to miniaturize high yields, such as in MIRV warheads, defines nuclear deterrence and mutual assured destruction. Extensions of thermonuclear weapon design include clean bombs with marginal fallout and neutron bombs with enhanced penetrating radiation. Nonetheless, most thermonuclear weapons designed, including all current US and UK nuclear warheads, derive most of their energy from fast fission, causing high fallout.

Tables

· Compression of the secondary › Comparing implosion mechanisms
Ivy Mike
Ivy Mike
Mechanism
Ivy Mike
Pressure (TPa)
W80
Radiation pressure
Radiation pressure
Mechanism
Radiation pressure
Pressure (TPa)
7.3
Pressure (TPa)
140
Plasma pressure
Plasma pressure
Mechanism
Plasma pressure
Pressure (TPa)
35
Pressure (TPa)
750
Ablation pressure
Ablation pressure
Mechanism
Ablation pressure
Pressure (TPa)
530
Pressure (TPa)
6400
Mechanism
Pressure (TPa)
Ivy Mike
W80
Radiation pressure
7.3
140
Plasma pressure
35
750
Ablation pressure
530
6400
· History › First tests
Fission
Fission
Country
Fission
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Year
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Boosted fission
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Year
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Multi-stage
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Year
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Multi-stage above one megaton
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Year
United States
United States
Country
United States
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Trinity
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1945
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Greenhouse George
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1951
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Greenhouse George
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1951
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Ivy Mike
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1952
Soviet Union
Soviet Union
Country
Soviet Union
First tests by nuclear weapon design
RDS-1
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1949
First tests by nuclear weapon design
RDS-6s
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1953
First tests by nuclear weapon design
RDS-37
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1955
First tests by nuclear weapon design
RDS-37
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1955
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
Country
United Kingdom
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Operation Hurricane
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1952
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Mosaic G1
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1956
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Grapple 1
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1957
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Grapple X
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1957
China
China
Country
China
First tests by nuclear weapon design
596
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1964
First tests by nuclear weapon design
596L
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1966
First tests by nuclear weapon design
629
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1966
First tests by nuclear weapon design
639
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1967
France
France
Country
France
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Gerboise Bleue
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1960
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Rigel
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1966
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Canopus
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1968
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Canopus
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1968
India
India
Country
India
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Smiling Buddha
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1974
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Shakti I (unconfirmed)
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1998
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Shakti I (unconfirmed)
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1998
First tests by nuclear weapon design
n/a
Pakistan
Pakistan
Country
Pakistan
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Chagai I
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1998
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Chagai I
First tests by nuclear weapon design
1998
First tests by nuclear weapon design
n/a
First tests by nuclear weapon design
n/a
North Korea
North Korea
Country
North Korea
First tests by nuclear weapon design
#1
First tests by nuclear weapon design
2006
First tests by nuclear weapon design
#4 (unconfirmed)
First tests by nuclear weapon design
2016
First tests by nuclear weapon design
#6 (unconfirmed)
First tests by nuclear weapon design
2017
First tests by nuclear weapon design
n/a
Israel
Israel
Country
Israel
First tests by nuclear weapon design
See Nuclear weapons and Israel § Nuclear testing
First tests by nuclear weapon design
n/a
South Africa
South Africa
Country
South Africa
First tests by nuclear weapon design
See South Africa and weapons of mass destruction § Nuclear weapons
First tests by nuclear weapon design
n/a
Country
First tests by nuclear weapon design
Fission
Year
Boosted fission
Year
Multi-stage
Year
Multi-stage above one megaton
Year
United States
Trinity
1945
Greenhouse George
1951
Greenhouse George
1951
Ivy Mike
1952
Soviet Union
RDS-1
1949
RDS-6s
1953
RDS-37
1955
RDS-37
1955
United Kingdom
Operation Hurricane
1952
Mosaic G1
1956
Grapple 1
1957
Grapple X
1957
China
596
1964
596L
1966
629
1966
639
1967
France
Gerboise Bleue
1960
Rigel
1966
Canopus
1968
Canopus
1968
India
Smiling Buddha
1974
Shakti I (unconfirmed)
1998
Shakti I (unconfirmed)
1998
n/a
Pakistan
Chagai I
1998
Chagai I
1998
n/a
n/a
North Korea
2006
(unconfirmed)
2016
(unconfirmed)
2017
n/a
Israel
See Nuclear weapons and Israel § Nuclear testing
n/a
South Africa
See South Africa and weapons of mass destruction § Nuclear weapons
n/a

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