APS April Meeting 2018
Volume 63, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, April 14–17, 2018;
Columbus, Ohio
Session C06: Nuclear Weapons and Ballistic Missile Defense
1:30 PM–3:18 PM,
Saturday, April 14, 2018
Room: B130
Sponsoring
Unit:
FPS
Chair: Joel Primack, University of California, Santa Cruz
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.APR.C06.3
Abstract: C06.00003 : US Nuclear Weapons Modernization
2:42 PM–3:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Roy Schwitters
(Univ of Texas, Austin)
The US last detonated a nuclear weapon in 1992 in an underground test in
Nevada. By 1994, the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security
Administration (NNSA) launched its science-based stockpile stewardship
program (SSP) designed specifically to ensure the safety, security, and
effectiveness of US nuclear weapons without underground nuclear testing.
Today, 24 years later, the scientists and engineers at NNSA's national
laboratories and associated facilities, have succeeded at this task by a
thorough modernization of tools, methods, and ideas about stewarding nuclear
weapons. Key enablers were development and employment of specific new
experimental capabilities, creation of modern, 3D weapon simulation codes,
and investment in high-end supercomputers. This was also a period when
cold-war stockpiles declined in size and military requirements for nuclear
performance were stable.
Looking ahead to the next generation of SSP, issues of responsiveness,
agility, and efficiency of the nuclear weapons enterprise led the
departments of Defense and Energy to seek a stockpile with fewer weapon
types, while maintaining current capabilities. Called the ``3$+$2''
strategy, it envisages three sets of ``interoperable'' nuclear components
serving both Air Force ICBMs and Navy SLBMs, and two air- delivered weapons.
However, nuclear threats worldwide are quite different today compared to
1992-94, with more players and, potentially, greater threats. Nuclear policy
is being reexamined by the new administration. Will ``3$+$2'' remain the
program of record or be replaced? What is known is our SSP approach, without
nuclear testing, works. High performance computing may experience limits to
growth, while new experimental approaches may be coming into focus to
address key performance questions definitively in non-explosive nuclear
experiments. Continuous improvement--- modernization---of SSP will remain
crucial to US deterrence and, perhaps someday, control of these threats to
humanity.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.APR.C06.3