APS April Meeting 2016
Volume 61, Number 6
Saturday–Tuesday, April 16–19, 2016;
Salt Lake City, Utah
Session C7: Modernizing Nuclear Weapons
1:30 PM–3:18 PM,
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Room: 150G
Sponsoring
Unit:
FPS
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.APR.C7.1
Abstract: C7.00001 : U.S. Nuclear Weapons Modernization -- the Stockpile Life Extension Program
1:30 PM–2:06 PM
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Abstract
Author:
Donald Cook
(Former Deputy Adminstrator for Defense Programs, NNSA)
Underground nuclear testing of U.S. nuclear weapons was halted by President
George H.W. Bush in 1992 when he announced a moratorium. In 1993, the
moratorium was extended by President Bill Clinton and, in 1995, a program of
Stockpile Stewardship was put in its place. In 1996, President Clinton
signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). Twenty years have
passed since then. Over the same time, the average age of a nuclear weapon
in the stockpile has increased from 6 years (1992) to nearly 29 years
(2015). At its inception, achievement of the objectives of the Stockpile
Stewardship Program (SSP) appeared possible but very difficult. The cost to
design and construct several large facilities for precision experimentation
in hydrodynamics and high energy density physics was large. The practical
steps needed to move from computational platforms of less than 100
Mflops/sec to 10 Teraflops/sec and beyond were unknown. Today, most of the
required facilities for SSP are in place and computational speed has been
increased by more than six orders of magnitude. These, and the physicists
and engineers in the complex of labs and plants within the National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA) who put them in place, have been the basis
for underpinning an annual decision, made by the weapons lab directors for
each of the past 20 years, that resort to underground nuclear testing is not
needed for maintaining confidence in the safety and reliability of the U.S
stockpile. A key part of that decision has been annual assessment of the
physical changes in stockpiled weapons. These weapons, quite simply, are
systems that invariably and unstoppably age in the internal weapon
environment of radioactive materials and complex interfaces of highly
dissimilar organic and inorganic materials. Without an ongoing program to
rebuild some components and replace other components to increase safety or
security, i.e., life extending these weapons, either underground testing
would again be required to assess many changes at once, or confidence in
these weapons would be reduced. The strategy and details of the U.S.
Stockpile Life Extension Program will be described in this talk. In brief,
the strategy is to reduce the number of weapons in the stockpile while
increasing confidence in the weapons that remain and, where possible,
increase their safety, increase their security, and reduce their nuclear
material quantities and yields. A number of ``myths'' pertaining to nuclear
weapons, the SSP, and the Stockpile Life Extension Program will be explored.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.APR.C7.1