What's Being Done About Nuclear Security 161
KrisCowboy writes "Wired.com has an interesting article about Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham's speech about the defensive measures being taken at the Nuclear Energy warehouses. 'Atomic storehouses, vulnerable to terrorist attack, will be emptied of their radioactive loads,' he promises. Keeping in mind the recent Slashdot story about a
Hafnium bomb, more security measures are needed, and fast."
Whatever (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmph, to put it where exactly? [doe.gov]
Re:Whatever (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, it could stay in New Mexico, but they don't want it either. Well, I guess it's time to talk about sending it into the Sun!
Re:Whatever (Score:1)
But it could blow up on the way there! Remeber Challenger?
Re:Whatever (Score:5, Informative)
1. Challenger was not carrying nuclear materials.
2. Depleted nuclear materials cannot blow up.
3. Non depleted fissionable materials cannot blow up without being packed inside a traditional explosive.
4. Fissionable materials are stored in neutron inhibiting material to prevent fission.
5. Accidental fission results in lots of heat and radiation. No boom.
6. Old style reactors could experience boiler explosions. (e.g. Chernobyl) This is on the order of an industrial disaster rather than a nuclear bomb.
7. Fission bombs need to be carefully shaped and triggered by explosives to blow up.
8. Fusion bombs (e.g. H-Bombs) require a fission bomb + a closed neutron reflector + a container of hydrogen/tritium. Remove any of these and fusion cannot occur.
Any questions?
Re:Whatever (Score:1)
So are you saying that if the Chalenger or a similar spacecraft were to explode with nuclear material on board there would be no danger?
Re:Whatever (Score:3, Insightful)
That depends. If it was carrying something like an RTG, then no, no danger. RTGs are packed in nearly indestructible casings that have been tested in multiple launch failures.
If it were carrying unprotected nuclear materials, then there is a danger of it raining down and causing several cases of cancer. However, I can't think of any reason for the shuttle to do this. Eve
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
2. Allthough they are made to withstand a train crash or a plane crashlanding, I don't think they can take a Challenger style explosion and then a free fall from 5000+ meters. I remember reading something about them beeing vulnerable to certain angles of impact.
Re:Whatever (Score:3, Informative)
That's sort of the point.
2. Allthough they are made to withstand a train crash or a plane crashlanding, I don't think they can take a Challenger style explosion and then a free fall from 5000+ meters. I remember reading something about them beeing vulnerable to certain angles of impact.
No, these are designed for unprotected reentry, unlike the "black box
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
Yeah.
Just don't eat the 3-headed fish.
Re:Whatever (Score:2, Interesting)
Hey, kiddies. We're worried about the evilbadnasty terrorists getting their hands on rogue nukes from the former USSR that might be floating around out there, or worse, constructing their own 'dirty bomb' with internet-fueled recipies, sneak it into the land of the Great Satan and start nuke-
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
A dedicated Boy Scout could easily make either a low-yield nuclear bomb using enough 'spent' uranium to make a subcritical mass (remember, Mouseketeers, that 'spent' fuel rods are still highly radioactive and it just takes a lot more to reach subcritical mass than ordinary uranium)
You can't make depleted uranium fission. All the fissionable materials have already been used up. Even if you could force it to fission, it's not pure enough to be a bomb. You'll simply make t
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
Industrial disasters tend to be that way. Many towns even in the US have been evacuated from accidents such as major chemical spills. One town in Colorado even has an underground coal fire that will continue burning for the next hundred years or so. Very comparable damage.
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
And this is good how?
Stay away and you don't die. (Radiation falls off at the same rate as heat and light. i.e. The inverse of the distance.) With a nuclear warhead, things go BOOM and you die no matter where you are.
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
Answers in order of power:
1. Pulsed Nuclear Rocket (Orion)
2. Nuclear Salt Water Rocket
3. Nuclear Thermal Rocket (e.g. NERVA, Gas Core)
4. Nuclear Electric Ion Propulsion
All of the above (save for development needed for NSWR) are existing technology.
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
What does geological significance have to do with it? The most important part is to send the transport into a trajectory towards the Sun. So long as there is enough power to break from earth (and the moon's) orbit where it goes after that is really no concern... If it takes half a billion years before entering the sun's outer core, I don't think it
Re:Whatever (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
Re:Whatever (Score:1, Insightful)
It would go from a small problem of a potential terror target to a large one if we moved it haphazardly (and some went up missing). This kind of thing takes time. But the worst thing that we can do is try to rush it because its a target (this isn't an excuse to sit on it forever though).
Re:Whatever (Score:1)
Re:Whatever (Score:2)
*hides from the impending thrown knives heading his way!*
Re:Whatever (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Whatever (Score:2, Funny)
Isn't the current plan to put it into bunker busters and rain it indescriminately on any country with oil?
So much for RTOFA.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So much for RTOFA.... (Score:2)
oxymoron (Score:1, Funny)
Re:oxymoron (Score:5, Funny)
Re:oxymoron (Score:1)
Ironically... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ironically... (Score:1)
Although, with something like nuclear materials, does it matter if only one out of hundreds of targets are attacked?
The results could still be rather dramatic.
Re:Ironically... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ironically... (Score:3, Interesting)
Considering a
Re:Ironically... (Score:3, Informative)
If you believe the problem is the rifle, you are in for a big surprise. Preventing access to those rifles will stop nothing. Any group that is willing to hijack a truck full of nuclear waste is probably more than capable of assembling a small machine shop and building their own weapons.
If I wanted to crack one of these waste caskets
Re:Ironically... (Score:3, Informative)
yeah. Many targets.
A copper plate with a fair bit of rdx / tnt behind it would also work. 1 pound accelerated to mach 4 or so should do about enough damage to anything to make it leak.
Re:Ironically... (Score:3)
Having said that, there are standard safetly precautions set for transport of hazardous materials, such as:
n Type B packages for materials with the highest levels of radioactivity--such as used nuclear fuel. They are designed to provide radioactive protection and nuclear safety under accident conditions. These packages must survive simulated accid
Re:Ironically... (Score:2)
Also, they will be going a great distance to a known destination, so it should be pretty easy to figure out where they will be, etc.
Also, all these tests are assuming "accident conditions", being broadsided, etc by large objects, not tiny objects at high speed (i.e. bullets, metal plates accelerated to ma
Re:Ironically... (Score:4, Informative)
Okay, I've read a couple of your responses, and you really need to check your facts [nmcco.com] before posting.
So basically, a 50 caliber projectile won't do shit to these containers.Re:Ironically... (Score:2)
Re:Ironically... (Score:2)
Re:Ironically... (Score:3)
What are they going to do after they stop the vehicle? It's escorted by armed guards, and tracked by satellite [doe.gov].
Re:Ironically... (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps if we used some sort of nuclear weapon to break open the container.
What we'll need is materials to build a nuclear weapon, then we can move it by truck close enough to the convoy. Once in position, we can set off the nuclear weapon, breaking open the container of spent fuel!
Then all we'd have to do is gather up the spent fuel and we'd have the makings of a dirty bomb. It's foolproof!
Re:Ironically... (Score:2)
Re:Ironically... (Score:2)
Transportation? (Score:5, Insightful)
Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Re:Transportation? (Score:2)
If people are willing to commit suicide runs (as is the case), it is a bitch to secure stuff like this, there are oodles of thing that someone can think
Re:Transportation? (Score:2)
There was not nuclear explosion in Chernobil...
Re:Transportation? (Score:2)
Airborne material carried by smoke and prevailing winds would be bad though.
Re:Transportation? (Score:2)
Hafnium bombs? You're worried about hafnium bombs? (Score:5, Informative)
Talk about going off-topic. Isotope bombs, which are not even feasible at this point and require a pretty massive technological base to even think about playing with, really aren't what we should be worried about regarding storage of nuclear research materials. In fact, I'd say the nuclear materials and research inside the US are probably better locked-down than just about anywhere else.
Hell, the most-likely nuclear terrorism scenario in my estimation is someone purchasing a radiation-therapy machine and randomly zapping people with lethal doses from inside a truck-mounted setup. Given a cool million to purchase some used medical equipment, you don't even need to try to steal nuclear material from federal facilities.
Re:Hafnium bombs? You're worried about hafnium bom (Score:2)
I do believe isotope bombs are quite feasible indeed [portchicago.org]. It is the isoMER bomb which I posted a story [slashdot.org] on that is now in question. Nuclear isotopes contain varying numbers of neutrons with identical numbers of protons in the nucleus. Nuclear ISOMERS contain the same of both but have excitiations of the spins of the nucleons' constituant neutrons and protons.
Re:Hafnium bombs? You're worried about hafnium bom (Score:2)
Re:Hafnium bombs? You're worried about hafnium bom (Score:1)
A few years ago, someone said "650KB ought to be enough for anybody" (for off-topic discussion, see more of this here [thocp.net]). We are now in an age where sending stuff to mars is about to become a routine exercise to the governments. So, we are not far away from building a golfball-sized hafnium bomb that would cause rather devastating effects. It's time for all the nuclear-p
Re:Hafnium bombs? You're worried about hafnium bom (Score:2)
First, no, he didn't. That's not even what he was purported to say. Depending on who you ask, it was either 64K or 640K, both of which were common at some point. 650K never was, so at least get your inaccurate quotes right. I'd be willing to bet that you've never even seen a computer with less than a Meg of memory. Second, what does that have to do with anything? It's not like a bunch of rogue terrorists got together and breached th
Re:Hafnium bombs? You're worried about hafnium bom (Score:1)
Free Radiation Therapy Machines in 3rd World (Score:5, Interesting)
It's worse that you think. A number of years ago (maybe 10 to 20?), the radiation detectors at Los Alamos went off when a delivery of patio furniture passed by. Turns out the cast iron in the furniture contained Cobalt-60. Tracing the shipment back, they found that the furniture had been made in Mexico from scrap metal. Someone in Mexico had sold a radiation therapy machine as scrap.
Re: Free Radiation Therapy Machines in 3rd World (Score:2, Funny)
> It's worse that you think. A number of years ago (maybe 10 to 20?), the radiation detectors at Los Alamos went off when a delivery of patio furniture passed by. Turns out the cast iron in the furniture contained Cobalt-60. Tracing the shipment back, they found that the furniture had been made in Mexico from scrap metal. Someone in Mexico had sold a radiation therapy machine as scrap.
Great for tanning both sides at once, eh?
Re:Free Radiation Therapy Machines in 3rd World (Score:2)
Re:Free Radiation Therapy Machines in 3rd World (Score:2)
On the other hand, radiation therapy accelerators are capable of delivering lethal doses in an astonishingly short time while remaining inert the rest of the time-- do a google search on "Therac-25 Accidents [vt.edu]" an
The real question is .... (Score:4, Interesting)
To the powers that be in: China; France; India; Israel; Pakistan; Russia; The United Kingdom; and the United States.
What else are you doing to prevent the unthinkable happening?
A serious question to which the rest of the world expects a serious answer.
And the real answer is... (Score:5, Interesting)
No matter how much you do, some fraction of your vital infrastructure will always be vulnerable to a sufficiently powerful and well-organised attack. If you protected every critical piece of infrastructure in a country -- all the power stations, water supplies, transport routes, government hubs, etc. -- then you'd expend far more resources than are practical on security, and having so many people in the system would cause weak links anyway.
Ultimately, you can't prevent an unknown enemy from committing an unknown act forever. All you can do is your best to stop it (and that's better done starting from intelligence rather than raw defensive power at every vulnerable point) and your best to clean up the mess (e.g., by having back-up generators in key places like hospitals in case the power does go out).
A more serious question that I'd pose, given the above harsh-but-true assessment, is how much could quality of life in general be improved if all the resources being diverted in the name of "fighting terrorism" were invested in hospitals, schools, etc. in the first place.
Re:And the real answer is... (Score:1)
Sir, I would ask you to think about what you've asked here. Certainly you would agree that we need to defend the country against militants of any sort, yes? (This includes terrorists, armies, etc.) I don't believe that the best use of
Re:And the real answer is... (Score:2)
As much as is possible, of course. But it's a game of dimishing returns. And notice that a lot of the most successful crime-reducing measures in recent times haven't involved more policemen with bigger guns. They've involved getting into the communities, finding out what the real motivations are and addressing them. Often, that's as simple as providing a worthwhile education for the children and teenagers so
IP on one side, "security" on another (Score:3, Insightful)
fearmongering (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:fearmongering (Score:4, Insightful)
You think India -- the world's largest democracy (in terms of population) and a generally civilised and well-educated society -- is a security risk because they (may) have nuclear weapons? Would it be inappropriate at this point to remind you which is the only country in the world ever to have dropped one for real, and also the country that supplied a rather large proportion of the serious firepower so-called rogue states now possess?
Re:fearmongering (Score:4, Interesting)
Your point about the US supplying a large proportion of the serious firepower that so called rogue states now possess is well taken, in fact historically the US seems to have most of its trouble from places where they have meddled in the past. If not for the Afghan debacle a CIA operative called Usama Bin Laden would never have gotten as far off the ground as he did. But then we'd have had a - god forbid - communist Afghanistan (for about 8 years or so until the USSR imploded). See Iran, Korea, Iraq (ask the British about that one) and so on.
Re:fearmongering (Score:4, Informative)
May have??
India conducted it's first nuclear test in 1974 [mtholyoke.edu].
SB
Re:fearmongering (Score:2)
1974 was a long time ago. India and Pakistan both claim to have conducted underground nuclear tests much more recently than that. Strangely, none of my friends in the world-class geophysics lab down the road detected the side effects their instruments would show on an unmissable scale had such an event really occurred, however.
It wouldn't surprise me if India did have significant quantities of weapons-grade materials, or indeed if they had weapons ready to fire, but you shouldn't believe everything you re
Re:fearmongering (Score:2)
http://www.clw.org/pub/clw/coalition/brief16.ht m
(India and Pakistan nukes - lot more than just "claims")
http://www.nautilus.org/fora/security/17B_Thakur
(India's "stability")
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/onefive.htm
(tests aren't "unmissable" )
Considering the Islamic extremist terrorism activity in India/Pakistan that I've been hearing so much about in the last year or so, I'd hardly consider the countries "stable"; remember, too, that their "cold war
Re:fearmongering (Score:4, Interesting)
The UN?!?!? Please no!
These are the same assholes that grafted billions in the Oil-for-food programme, and put Syria on the Human Rights Commission. What a joke organization. I wouldn't trust them with anything more lethal than a police baton and a water cannon.
Equivalancy among nation-states is an illusion. Not all states have equal power, resources, nor equitable governments. As such, defaulting to the UN is rarely a solution.
Re:fearmongering (Score:2)
--Oh, and sunblock. Definitely sunblock.
Re:fearmongering (Score:1)
While yo
Re:fearmongering (Score:2, Informative)
And then there is always this [cbsnews.com] to worry about.
The 2nd Amendment guarantees my right to nukes. (Score:4, Interesting)
What George Orwell wrote in 1946 (Score:3, Insightful)
Considering how likely we all are to be blown to pieces by it within the next five years, the atomic bomb has not roused so much discussion as might have been expected. The newspapers have published numerous diagrams, not very helpful to the average man, of protons and neutrons doing their stuff.... But curiously little has been said, at any rate, in print, about the question that is of most urgent interest to all of us, namely, "How di
Re:The 2nd Amendment guarantees my right to nukes. (Score:2)
I doubt it, since the last one died quite a while ago...
End of the world (Score:4, Funny)
Not "nuclear" (Score:3, Funny)
As far as powerplants go.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Ok, that's all well and fine, as much as I hate the nanny state, that's what they're there for, and we have to deal with it.
So, these security upgrades, required by the NRC if we are to continue generating nuclear power, where initially scheduled to be done by this coming october.
This was a reasonable timeframe at the initial order.
Except every month or two, they'd increase or change the theoretical attack our security would have to be able to repel.
And then never move the completion date back to allow time to make adjustments for their continual meddling.
So now, at my plant, we have a huge security capital project that needs to be done in 5 months, because the NRC just finished up their requirements, finally, two months ago. The engineering and construction firms obviously need time to design a system to meet the NRC standards, and prepare for it's construction.
So basically we're spending 15 million dollars on a rush job because the NRC has no fucking clue how businesses work, and allow no time adjustment for their indecision.
And the funny part is that even if a team of terrorists got past our already substantial security (both physical and personell), they'd have no fucking clue how to cause any damage that would extend beyond the plant or spread radiation to the public- figuring out such a thing requires years of studying the plant's most intimate workings.
Fuckin NRC.
Re:As far as powerplants go.... (Score:2)
Re:As far as powerplants go.... (Score:2)
Do you mean "spread radiation", or do you mean spread a dangerous amount of radiation?
The operators at Three Mile Island were able to release radiation outside the plant and cause a panic without even trying.
Re:As far as powerplants go.... (Score:2)
They did release radiation to the public, but it was such a ridiculously small amount that the projected increase in cancer deaths was 0.6- and thousands of people where potentially exposed.
There have been lawsuits, of course, but all thrown out of court because of a complete inability to prove that the accident caused any harm.
Oh, and the operators did try- well, not to release radiation, but they shut down a number of accident mitigation systems because they misunde
Any bets? (Score:2)
so concerned about a lab in the US (Score:2)
Wow (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know where to begin with this. We should be more afraid because of technology we don't even have yet (and may never have) might get into the hands of terrorists? Do they have some massive R&D lab hidden in the mountains near Pakistan? And what does a theoretical isotope bomb have to do with our current nuclear stockpile?
On Site Suicide Bomb (Score:1, Interesting)
Sorry Guys... (Score:1, Funny)
An interesting story (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:An interesting story (Score:3, Insightful)
Secure Airspace yeah right (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Secure Airspace yeah right (Score:2)
Whether they try some fancy mid-air take-over special-ops godlike coolness, or just blow the plane to kingdom come, those no-fly zones are gonna start working soon.
A Cessna wouldn't cut it either (Score:2)
It didn't do that much damage. Those things are light. So you add a bomb, lets say you load it overweight, against how many feet of steel reinforced concrete?
Re:Secure Airspace yeah right (Score:2)
I think not. Yes, spent fuel assemblies release heat for a long time, but by the time you get them out of the core and into a storage facility the output is not high enough to cause "instant overheating and subsequent fire." I expect you'd have to provide a powerful explosion or a large/hot fire if you wanted to produc
Re:An interesting story (Score:3, Interesting)
At my powerplant, there's a manned guardhouse with a few jersey barriers you have to weave around before you get anywhere security even remotely cares about. You come in unexpected, 999 times out of 1000, the guard politely turns you around at the gaurdhouse and gives you the best directions he can.
If you go barrelling past the guardhouse (no gates at the outer perimeter of the site) then you'd get that kind of response. Of course, only people who where trouble- cert
Nuclear weapons are just too much hassle... (Score:3, Informative)
Los Alamos Eyballing (Score:1)
This is not waste we're talking about. (Score:1)
Hafnium Bomb. (Score:3, Insightful)
mix bureacracy and atomics and get... (Score:2)
bureaucrat2: can't tell Utah that we're putting dangerous stuff there - tell them it's a replacement for Fort Knox
bureaucrat1: Hey - I love it!
time passes - large, iron clad, secure bunker-style building with lots of military and police all around is built in Lindon. Stuff starts arriving from all over and put inside
bureaucrat1: now it's all in one place, we can rest easy.
r
Re:What about the missing nukes? (Score:1)
Waterproof geiger counter? (Score:2)