GOV/MIL Feds: Hydrogen Bomb Physicist's Book Reveals Too Much

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.newsmax.com/US/hydrogen-bomb-physicist-book/2015/03/23/id/632032/

Feds: Hydrogen Bomb Physicist's Book Reveals Too Much

Monday, 23 Mar 2015 06:46 PM
By Sean Piccoli

A physicist who worked on the first hydrogen bomb more than 60 years ago has published a memoir about the project that contains details the U.S. government ordered him to delete, but he is unlikely to face punishment as a result, The New York Times reports.

Kenneth W. Ford, 88, argued that cuts demanded last year by the Department of Energy would "eviscerate" his book, "Building the H Bomb: A Personal History," which he said reveals nothing about thermonuclear weaponry that isn't already in the public sphere.

The book is available in electronic form now, and is due in print in May.

Ford, who spent his career in academia after working on the hydrogen bomb in 1950-1952, told the Times that he submitted the manuscript to DOE for a security review, and that they demanded he cut about 10 percent of it.

The book's discussion of "design nuances of a successful thermonuclear weapons program" would "encourage" aspiring nuclear powers, a DOE official wrote to Ford in 2014.

Ford objected, writing back that the agency's requested cuts would "destroy the book" and excise material already out in the open.

The two sides haggled for several months until January, after which Ford authorized his publisher, World Scientific in Singapore, to release an e-book version with some minor changes and deletions demanded by the federal government, but with most of the original material still in place.

Department of Energy officials declined to discuss the book, the Times reports, noting that "atomic pioneers and other insiders — in talks, books, articles and television shows — have divulged many nuclear secrets over the decades and have rarely faced any consequences."

Developed during the Cold War, the hydrogen bomb is estimated to be 1,000 times as powerful as the atomic bombs the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II.

Ford told his motive for telling the story wasn't humanitarian: "I just wanted to get my book published."
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/24/s...ook-runs-afoul-of-energy-department.html?_r=0

Hydrogen Bomb Physicist’s Book Runs Afoul of Energy Department

By WILLIAM J. BROAD
MARCH 23, 2015

PHILADELPHIA — For all its horrific power, the atom bomb — leveler of Hiroshima and instant killer of some 80,000 people — is but a pale cousin compared to another product of American ingenuity: the hydrogen bomb.

The weapon easily packs the punch of a thousand Hiroshimas, an unthinkable range of destruction that lay behind the Cold War’s fear of mutual annihilation. It was developed in great secrecy, and Washington for decades has done everything in its power to keep the details of its design out of the public domain.

Now, a physicist who helped devise the weapon more than half a century ago has defied a federal order to cut from his new book material that the government says teems with thermonuclear secrets.

The author, Kenneth W. Ford, 88, spent his career in academia and has not worked on weapons since 1953. His memoir, “Building the H Bomb: A Personal History,” is his 10th book. The others are physics texts, elucidations of popular science and a reminiscence on flying small planes.

He said he included the disputed material because it had already been disclosed elsewhere and helped him paint a fuller picture of an important chapter of American history. But after he volunteered the manuscript for a security review, federal officials told him to remove about 10 percent of the text, or roughly 5,000 words.

“They wanted to eviscerate the book,” Dr. Ford said in an interview at his home here. “My first thought was, ‘This is so ridiculous I won’t even respond.’ ”

Instead, he talked with federal officials for half a year before reaching an impasse in late January, a narrative he backs up with many documents laid out neatly on his dining room table, beneath a parade of photographs of some of his seven children and 13 grandchildren.

World Scientific, a publisher in Singapore, recently made Dr. Ford’s book public in electronic form, with print versions to follow. Reporters and book review editors have received page proofs.

The Department of Energy, the keeper of the nation’s nuclear secrets, declined to comment on the book’s publication.

But in an email to Dr. Ford last year, Michael Kolbay, a classification officer at the agency, warned that the book’s discussion of the “design nuances of a successful thermonuclear weapons program” would “encourage emerging proliferant programs,” a euphemism for aspiring nuclear powers.

In theory, Washington can severely punish leakers. Anyone who comes in contact with classified atomic matters must sign a nondisclosure agreement that warns of criminal penalties and the government’s right to “all royalties, remunerations and emoluments” that result from the disclosure of secret information.

Continue reading the main story

Inside an H-Bomb

At its simplest, a hydrogen bomb uses an atomic primary stage to trigger a more powerful thermonuclear stage.

PRIMARY


SECONDARY


Conventional explosives compress plutonium in the primary, creating a critical mass in which atoms begin to split apart and release nuclear energy.


Radiation from the primary flows down the length of the bomb casing ahead of the primary blast.


SECONDARY


The radiation vaporizes the lining of the casing and radiates back toward the secondary, compressing it and heating it to fusion temperature.


Thermonuclear fusion releases huge amounts of energy, and the fireball bursts out of the casing.


Source: “Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb,” by Richard Rhodes



By The New York Times
But the reality is that atomic pioneers and other insiders — in talks, books, articles and television shows — have divulged many nuclear secrets over the decades and have rarely faced any consequences.

The result is a twilight zone of sensitive but never formally declassified public information. The policy of the Energy Department is never to acknowledge the existence of such open atomic secrets, a stance it calls its “no comment” rule.

Continue reading the main story

Yet in preparing his book, Dr. Ford deeply mined this shadowy world of public information. For instance, the federal agency wanted him to strike a reference to the size of the first hydrogen test device — its base was seven feet wide and 20 feet high. Dr. Ford responded that public photographs of the device, with men, jeeps and a forklift nearby, gave a scale of comparison that clearly revealed its overall dimensions.

Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists, a private group in Washington, said he had received page proofs of Dr. Ford’s book and expected that many of its details had run afoul of what he characterized as the agency’s classification whims.

“There are probably real issues intertwined with spurious bureaucratic nonsense,” Mr. Aftergood said.

He added that it would not be surprising if the Department of Energy did nothing in response to the book’s publication. “Any action,” Mr. Aftergood said, “is only going to magnify interest.”

In 1979, the department learned that the hard way when it tried to block a magazine’s release of H-bomb secrets; its failure gave the article a rush of free publicity.

Photo



Kenneth W. Ford at home in Philadelphia. He recently wrote his memoir: “Building the H Bomb: A Personal History.” Credit Mark Makela for The New York Times

A main architect of the hydrogen bomb, Richard L. Garwin, whom Dr. Ford interviewed for the book, describes the memoir in its so-called front matter as “accurate as well as entertaining.”

In an interview, Dr. Garwin said he recalled nothing in the book’s telling of hydrogen bomb history that, in terms of public information, “hasn’t been reasonably authoritatively stated.” Still, he said, his benign view of the book “doesn’t mean I encourage people to talk about such things.”

Hydrogen bombs are the world’s deadliest weapons. The first test of one, in November 1952, turned the Pacific isle of Elugelab, a mile in diameter, into a boiling mushroom cloud.

Today, Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States are the only declared members of the thermonuclear club, each possessing hundreds or thousands of hydrogen bombs. Military experts suspect that Israel has dozens of them. India, Pakistan and North Korea are seen as interested in acquiring the potent weapon.

Though difficult to make, hydrogen bombs are attractive to nations and militaries because their fuel is relatively cheap. Inside a thick metal casing, the weapon relies on a small atom bomb that works like a match to ignite the hydrogen fuel.

Dr. Ford entered this world by virtue of elite schooling. He graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy in 1944 and Harvard in 1948. While working on his Ph.D. at Princeton, he was drawn into the nation’s hydrogen bomb push by his mentor, John A. Wheeler, a star of modern science.

Dr. Ford worked in the shadow of Edward Teller and Stanislaw Ulam, bomb designers at the Los Alamos lab in New Mexico. Early in 1951, they hit on a breakthrough idea: using radiation from the exploding atom bomb to generate vast forces that would compress and heat the hydrogen fuel to the point of thermonuclear ignition.

Photo



Dr. Ford at Princeton in 1952. His work on the development of the hydrogen bomb involved calculating the likelihood that the compressed fuel would burn thoroughly and estimating the bomb’s explosive power.

Continue reading the main story Continue reading the main story

Continue reading the main story

From 1950 to 1952, Dr. Ford worked on the project, first at Los Alamos and then back at Princeton. Among other things, he calculated the likelihood that the compressed fuel would burn thoroughly and estimated the bomb’s explosive power.

He received his doctorate in 1953, and remained in academia, teaching at such schools as Brandeis; the University of California, Irvine; and the University of Massachusetts Boston.

In the interview at his home, he said he was researching his H-bomb memoir when a historian at the Department of Energy suggested that he submit the manuscript for classification review. He did so, and in August, the agency responded.

“Our team is quite taken with your manuscript,” an official wrote. “However, some concerns have been identified.”

In late September, Dr. Ford met with agency officials. Afterward, in an email, he told them that he remained convinced the book “contains nothing whatsoever whose dissemination could, by any stretch of the imagination, damage the United States or help a country that is trying to build a hydrogen bomb.”

On Nov. 3, Andrew P. Weston-Dawkes, director of the agency’s office of classification, wrote Dr. Ford to say that the review had “identified portions that must be removed prior to publication.”

The ordered cuts, 60 in all, ranged from a single sentence to multiple paragraphs, and included endnotes and illustrations.

Photo



The first hydrogen bomb in its construction shed on Elugelab, which was later vaporized by the bomb’s blast in 1952. Credit Los Alamos National Laboratory

“Were I to follow all — or even most — of your suggestions,” Dr. Ford wrote in reply, “it would destroy the book.”

In December, he told the department he would make a few minor revisions. For instance, in two cases he would change language describing the explosive yields of bomb tests from “in fact” to “reportedly.” After much back and forth, the conversation ended in January with no resolution, and the book’s publisher pressed on.

The government’s main concern seems to center on deep science that Dr. Ford articulates with clarity. Over and over, the book discusses thermal equilibrium, the discovery that the temperature of the hydrogen fuel and the radiation could match each other during the explosion. Originally, the perceived lack of such an effect had seemed to doom the proposed weapon.

The breakthrough has apparently been discussed openly for years. For instance, the National Academy of Sciences in 2009 published a biographical memoir of Dr. Teller, written by Freeman J. Dyson, a noted physicist with the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. It details the thermal equilibrium advance in relation to the hydrogen bomb.

At his home, Dr. Ford said he considered himself a victim of overzealous classification and wondered what would have happened if he had never submitted his manuscript for review.

“I was dumbfounded,” he said of the agency’s reaction to it.

Dr. Ford said he never intended to make a point about openness and nuclear secrecy — or do anything other than to give his own account of a remarkable time in American history.

“I don’t want to strike a blow for humankind,” he said. “I just want to get my book published.”


Correction: March 23, 2015
An earlier version of this article misspelled the surname of the director of the Department of Energy’s office of classification, who wrote to Dr. Ford in November. He is Andrew P. Weston-Dawkes, not Weston-Davis.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Heck, if I remember correctly you can see all of the documented design info at any "Repository" Library around the country, like Clarkson, MIT, CalTech, etc.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
IMHO, the bigger national security threat is the mating of deliverable atomic bombs (non-thermonuclear) to reliable missiles with solid state (ring laser or fibre optic gyroscope) based guidance systems backed up with GPS/GLONASS/Galileo/Beidou satellite navigation systems and terminal guidance/MARV technology.

All are steps needed for a credible strategic weapons force, but that when put together negate the need for higher yield (and more complex) weapons.

ETA: As examples look at the Pakistani and Indian programs and the end point of the Apartheid South African program.
 
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Dobbin

Faithful Steed
The tooth past is already out of the tube and there is no way to put it back in.

Richard Rhodes "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" and his subsequent work dealing with the Hydrogen Bomb.

Both interesting books.

Dobbin
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Ya, gotta have a note from yer mother


http://www.progressive.org/images/pdf/1179.pdf



The above URL tells you how to build your own H-Bomb but it might not be wise to leave it on your computer too long.
Hydrogen bombs are triggered by fission bombs of at least the size of those that were used by the Americans against Japan hence the radioactive fallout from unconsumed Plutonium will be just as great.
The proportion of casualties caused by radioactivity is quite low most people are either blown to pieces or burnt to death!

http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=25003.0
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Richard Rhodes "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" and his subsequent work dealing with the Hydrogen Bomb.

Both interesting books.

Dobbin

The Los Alamos Primer: The First Lectures on How To Build an Atomic Bomb Hardcover – March 2, 1992
by Robert Serber (Author), Richard Rhodes (Editor, Introduction)
http://www.amazon.com/Los-Alamos-Pr...8&qid=1427197952&sr=8-13&keywords=atomic+bomb


Atom Bombs: The Top Secret Inside Story of Little Boy and Fat Man Spiral-bound – 2002
by John Coster-Mullen (Author)
http://www.amazon.com/Atom-Bombs-Se...8&qid=1427198076&sr=8-37&keywords=atomic+bomb


The Titan II Handbook: A Civilian's Guide to the Most Powerful ICBM America Ever Built Paperback – 2008
by Chuck Penson (Author)
http://www.amazon.com/The-Titan-II-...d_sim_b_3?ie=UTF8&refRID=0566HGQ8YW1ER9M4FH7N

Nuclear Weapons 101
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?453252-Nuclear-Weapons-101
 
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