Reliable Replacement Warhead

Reliable Replacement Warhead

The Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW) is a controversial new American nuclear warhead design and bomb family that is intended to be simple, reliable and to provide a long-lasting, low maintenance future nuclear force for the United States. It is also the project name for the ongoing United States Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) design project, started in 2004, to develop those designs.

On March 2, 2007, a design from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory was selected as the first RRW program warhead design, which will now enter a "Phase 2A" definition and cost analysis development phase, and receive a warhead model designation number in 1-2 years.

Background

During the Cold War, the United States, in an effort to achieve and maintain an advantage in the nuclear arms race, invested large amounts of money and technical resources into nuclear weapons design, testing, and maintenance. Many of the weapons designed required high-upkeep costs, justified primarily by their Cold War context and the specific and technically sophisticated applications they were created for. With the end of the Cold War, however, nuclear testing has ceased in the United States, and new warhead development has been significantly reduced. As a result the need for high technical performance of warheads has decreased considerably and the need for a longer lasting and reliable stockpile has taken a high priority.

Prior nuclear weapons produced by the U.S. had historically become extremely compact, low weight, highly integrated, and low-margin designs which used exotic materials, in many cases toxic or unstable materials. A number of older US designs used high explosive types which degraded over time, some of which became dangerously unstable in short lifetimes (PBX-9404 and LX-09). [ [http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/systems/w68.htm W68 warhead at globalsecurity.org] Accessed 2006-05-03] [ [http://www.banthebomb.org/archives/trisaf/ch5.htm Warhead Accidents at Banthebomb.org] Accessed 2006-05-03] [ [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Nwfaq/Nfaq4-1.html#4.1.6.2.2.5 Explosives section in nuclear weapons FAQ] Accessed 2006-05-03] [ [http://www-training-1.llnl.gov/training/hc/Explosive/Accidents.html LLNL explosives accident training web page] Accessed 2006-05-03] [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9905EED91539F930A35753C1A967948260 Relatives of 3 Killed in Blast At Nuclear Plant Lose Suit] from Oct 3, 1981 New York Times, Accessed 2006-05-03] Some of these explosives have cracked in warheads in storage, resulting in dangerous storage and dissassembly conditions. [ [http://www.dnfsb.gov/pub_docs/pantex/wr_20040116_px.pdf DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD - Pantex Plant Activity Report for Week Ending January 16, 2004] Accessed 2006-05-03]

Most experts believe that the insensitive explosives (PBX-9502, LX-17) currently in use are highly stable and may even become more stable over time. [ Highs Explosives in Stockpile Surveillance Indicate Constancy. Science and Technology Review. Dec. 1996. http://www.llnl.gov/str/pdfs/12_96.2.pdf ]

The use of beryllium and highly toxic beryllium oxide material as neutron reflector layers was a major health hazard to bomb manufacturer and maintenance staff. The long term stability of plutonium metal, which may lose strength, crack, or otherwise degrade over time is also a concern. (See Nuclear weapons design and Teller-Ulam design for technical context.)

The question of whether the plutonium used in the cores of the weapons suffered from aging has been a major topic of research at the weapons laboratories in recent decades. Though many at the labs still insist on scientific uncertainty on the question, a study commissioned by the National Nuclear Security Administration to the independent JASON group concluded in November 2006 that "most plutonium pits have a credible lifetime of at least 100 years." [JASON group, [Pit lifetime] (20 November 2006), online at http://www.nukewatch.org/facts/nwd/JASON_ReportPuAging.pdf.] The oldest pits currently in the US arsenal are still less than 50 years old.

Concept

The concept underlying the RRW program is that the US weapons laboratories can design new nuclear weapons that are highly reliable and easy and safe to manufacture, monitor, and test. If that proves to be possible, designers could adapt a common set of core design components to various use requirements, such as different sized missile warheads, different nuclear bomb types, etc.

NNSA officials believe the program is needed to maintain nuclear weapons expertise in order to rapidly adapt, repair, or modify existing weapons or develop new weapons as requirements evolve. They see the ability to adapt to changing military needs rather than maintain additional forces for unexpected contingencies as a key program driver. [ [http://www.nnsa.doe.gov/docs/congressional/2006/2006-04-05_HASC_Transformation_Hearing_Statement_(DAgostino).pdf Statement of Thomas P. D’Agostino] ] However, Congress has rejected the notion that the RRW is needed to meet new military requirements. In providing funds for 2006, the Appropriations Committee specified, "any weapons design under the RRW program must stay within the military requirements of the existing deployed stockpile and any new weapon design must stay within the design parameters validated by past nuclear tests." [ U.S. Congress. House. Making Appropriations for the Energy and Water Development for the Fiscal Year Ending September 30, 2006, and for Other Purposes. H.Rept. 109-275. p. 159.]

According to a Task Force of the Secretary of Energy's Advisory Board (SEAB), [cite web| url=http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/report/2005/nwcitf-rept_13jul2005.pdf| format=PDF| accessdate=2006-05-03| title=Report of the Nuclear Weapons Complex Infrastructure Task Force: Recommendations for the Nuclear Weapons Complex of the Future| date=July 13, 2005| author=Secretary of Energy Advisory Board| publisher=U.S. Department of Energy] the RRW program and weapon designs should have the following characteristics:
* Support an adaptable 1,700-2,200 weapon sustained force level (3.1)
** Resolve an issue with the weapons stockpile within 12 months
** Adapt a weapon to a new requirement in 18 months
** Design a new weapon within 36 months
** Be ready for full production within 48 months
** Be capable of conducting an underground nuclear test within 18 months
* Produce all new weapons using Insensitive High Explosive (see TATB and Plastic bonded explosive) and replace all existing weapons which use other explosives (3.1.2)
* Produce new weapons with the full spectrum of security and use control safety features available today, some of which are intrinsic to the basic design of a weapon and cannot possibly be retrofitted into the design of an existing weapon (3.1.3)
* Designs which trade off higher weight and larger volume to maximise: (3.1.4)
** Certification without nuclear testing
** Inexpensive manufacture and disassembly
** Ease of maintenance, surveillance, and disposition
** Modularity (primaries, secondaries, non-nuclear) across systems
** Maximizing component reuse and minimizing life-cycle costs
* Comparable or improved levels of reliability to existing designs, using larger margins and simpler components (3.1.5)
* Lower cost (3.1.6)
* Designs which can be designed and certified without necessarily undergoing nuclear testing (3.1.7)
* Consolidation of many nuclear weapon production and maintenance functions to one site (4.1)
* (in passing) Designs avoiding the use of Beryllium or Beryllium Oxide in the weapon fission reflector (4.6)

However, the full SEAB disavowed the Task Force's recommendations regarding the RRW, because the Task Force did not consider the program's potentially adverse impacts on U.S. nonproliferation objectives, which were beyond its expertise.

The RRW program has not to date publicly announced that it has developed any new nuclear weapon designs which are intended to be placed into production. Presumably, once that occurs, the weapons will receive numbers in the US warhead designation sequence, which currently runs from the Mark 1 nuclear bomb (aka Little Boy) to the W91 nuclear warhead, which was cancelled in the 1990s. RRW designs would presumably receive designations after that number, though new RNEP nuclear bunker buster weapons could conceivably be type-standardized and numbered prior to any RRW reaching that point, if the RNEP program does proceed.

elected design

On March 2, 2007, the NNSA announced that the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory RRW design had been selected for the initial RRW production version. [http://www.nnsa.doe.gov/docs/newsreleases/2007/PR_2007-03-02_NA-07-06.htm Design Selected for Reliable Replacement Warhead] , NNSA Press release, March 2, 2007.]

One of the selection reasons given was that the LLNL proposed design was more closely tied to historical underground tested warhead designs. It was described by Thomas P. D'Agostino, acting head of the National Nuclear Security Administration, as having been based on a design which was test fired in the 1980s, but never entered service. [ [http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-New-Warhead.html Govt. Picks Design for Nuclear Warhead] , NY Times / AP, March 2, 2007]

LLNL staff have previously hinted in the press that LLNL was considering a design entry based on the tested but never deployed W89 design. [ [http://www.mindfully.org/Nucs/2006/H-Bomb-Project6feb06.htm Scientists Dream Up New Nukes] , Ira Hoffman, Alameda Times-Star, Feb 6, 2006. Accessed March 2, 2007] This warhead had been proposed as a W88 warhead replacement as early as 1991. [http://www.fas.org/resource/08062004142243.pdf An Assessment of US Nuclear Weapons and related Nuclear Test requirements: a post-Bush analysis] , URCL-LR-109503, R.E. Kidder, 1991. Accessed March 2, 2007] [http://www.fas.org/resource/08062004142529.pdf Report to Congress: Assessment of the Safety of US Nuclear Weapons and Related Nuclear Test Requirements] , URCL-LR-107454, R.E. Kidder, 1991, Accessed March 2, 2007] The W89 design was already equipped with all then-current safety features, including insensitive high explosives, fire-resistant pits, and advanced detonator safety systems. The W89 was also reportedly designed using recycled pits from the earlier W68 nuclear weapon program, recoated in Vanadium to provide the temperature resistance. ["Pit Tubes and Pit Re-Use at Pantex", in [http://www.bredl.org/sapc/Pu_ReportIII.htm Plutonium: the last Five Years] , Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League, 2001, accessed March 2, 2007] The W89 warhead was test fired in the 1980s. It had entered Phase 2A technical definition and cost study in November, 1986, and Phase 3 development engineering and was assigned the numerical designation W89 in January 1988. [ [http://scipp.ucsc.edu/~haber/UC_CORP/jendrese.htm University of California 1989 nuclear weapons labs status report] ]

The W89 warhead design was a 13.3 inch diameter by 40.8 inch long weapon, with a weight of 324 pounds and yield of 200 kilotons. [ [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Weapons/Allbombs.html Allbombs.html] at the Nuclear Weapon Archive at [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org nuclearweaponarchive.org] ] As noted above, major safety features inherent in the tested W89 design include:
* Insensitive and fire-resistant LX-17 Polymer-bonded explosive, a type of high explosive using TATB as its main explosive ingredient (see Insensitive munitions)
* Fire-resistant pit
* Type D Permissive Action Link [ [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Weapons/Pal.html Permissive Action Links] at the [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org nuclearweaponarchive.org] website, accessed March 5, 2007]
* Strong link weak link detonation chain safety mechanisms [ [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Weapons/Pal.html Principles of Nuclear Weapons Security and Safety] , Carey Sublette, 1997, at [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org nuclearweaponarchive.org] , accessed March 11, 2007]
* Two-point explosive lens assembly

Modifications for the RRW design would probably have included replacing Beryllium neutron reflector layers with another material, and increased performance margins throughout the design, possibly including more fissile material in the pit and a thicker radiation case or Hohlraum (see Teller-Ulam design#Basic design).

History

2006

In an April 15, 2006 article by Walter Pincus in the Washington Post, [cite journal| url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/14/AR2006041401705.html| title=U.S. Prepares to Overhaul Arsenal of Nuclear Warheads| first=Walter| last=Pincus| journal=Washington Post| month=April 15| year=2006| pages=A01| accessdate=2006-05-03] Linton F. Brooks, administrator of the US National Nuclear Safety Administration, the US nuclear weapon design agency within the United States Department of Energy, announced that two competing designs for the Reliable Replacement Warhead were being finalized by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory, and that a selection of one of those designs would be made by November 2006, to allow the RRW development program to be included in the Fiscal 2008 US government budget.

The article confirmed prior descriptions of the RRW, describing the weapons in the following terms:

:"The next-generation warheads will be larger and more stable than the existing ones but slightly less powerful, according to government officials. They might contain "use controls" that would enable the military to disable the weapons by remote control if they are stolen by terrorists."

Based on prior weapons programs, the RRW should be assigned a numerical weapon designation when the design selection is made.

On December 1, 2006, the NNSA announced that it had decided to move forwards with the RRW program after analyzing the initial LLNL and LANL RRW proposals. [http://www.nnsa.doe.gov/docs/newsreleases/2006/PR_2006-12-01_NA-06-47.htm Nuclear Weapons Officials Agree to Pursue RRW Strategy] , Dec 1, 2006, accessed Feb 11, 2007] At that time, NNSA's Nuclear Weapons Council had not selected which of the two designs to proceed forwards with.

2007

According to the FY 2008 NNSA budget (pp 88), [http://www.cfo.doe.gov/budget/08budget/Content/Volumes/Vol_1_NNSA.pdf the 2008 NNSA budget] , accessed Feb 11, 2007] the RRW program is described as:::The NWC approved the RRW Feasibility Study that began in May 2005 and completed in November 2006. The goal of the RRW study was to identify designs that will sustain long term confidence in a safe, secure and reliable stockpile and enable transformation to a responsive nuclear weapon infrastructure. The joint DOE/DoD RRW POG was tasked to oversee a laboratory design competition for a RRW warhead with FPU goal of FY 2012. The POG assessed the technical feasibility including certification without nuclear testing, design definition, manufacturing, and an initial cost assessment to determine whether the proposed candidates met the RRW study objectives and requirements. The POG presented the RRW study results to the NWC in November 2006 and the NWC decided that the RRW for submarine launched ballistic missiles is feasible and should proceed to complete a Phase 2A design definition and cost study. In addition, the NWC determined that the RRW is to be adopted as the strategy for maintaining a long term safe, secure and reliable nuclear deterrent and as such also directed the initiation of a conceptual study for an additional RRW design. The next steps include detailed design and preliminary cost estimates of the RRW to confirm that the RRW design provides surety enhancements, can be certified without nuclear testing, is cost-effective, and will support both stockpile and infrastructure transformation. Once this acquisition planning is completed and if the NWC decides to proceed to engineering and production development, outyear funding (FY 2009 - FY 2012) to support an executable program will be submitted.

And (pp 94)::Reliable Replacement Warhead::The increase funds the startup of activities in support of a NWC decision to have RRW proceed to engineering and production development. Activities include design, engineering and certification work such as finalization of requirements, material studies, technology demonstrations, detailed design and concurrent engineering with the production plants, and modeling, simulation and analysis in support of certification without additional nuclear testing.

Funding is listed as $25 million for FY 2006, $28 million for FY 2007, and $89 million for FY 2008.

As defined in an earlier UC report, [ [http://scipp.ucsc.edu/~haber/UC_CORP/jendrese.htm REPORT OF THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF THE ACADEMIC SENATE ON THE UNIVERSITY'S RELATIONS WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY (DOE) LABORATORIES] , Nov 21, 1989, accessed Feb 11, 2007] , nuclear weapons engineering phases are:::*phase 2 = competitive feasibility study; phase 2A = design definition and cost study by the lab to which DOE awarded the project; phase 3 = development engineering (at beginning of this phase warhead is assigned a #); phase 4 = production engineering; phase 5 = first production; phase 6 = quantity production and stockpiling. Note: Projects entering phase 1 (concept study) and phase 7 (=retirement) have not been included.

The FY08 RRW budget therefore indicates that one of the RRW designs has been approved and is entering the design definition and cost study phase. The document does not state which of the RRW designs has been selected.

Historically, the weapon's nuclear series identification is assigned at the entrance to phase 3, and if the design proceeds forwards to complete phase 2 and enter phase 3 this can be expected in 1-2 years.

The design is intended for first production unit (FPU) delivery by the end of 2012.

On March 2, 2007, the NNSA announced that the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory RRW design had been selected for the initial RRW production version.

2008

The National Defense Authorization Act of 2008, H.R. 4986, Section 3111, forbids the expenditure of funds for the RRW program beyond Phase 2A; in effect, this prevents the RRW program from going forward without explicit Congressional authorization. Section 3121 Subsection 1 requires the study of the reuse of previously manufactured plutonium cores in any RRW warheads, so as to avoid the manufacture of additional plutonium cores. Section 3124 reaffirms the commitment of the U.S. to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and encourages the mutual reduction in armament of the U.S. and Russia through negotiation.

Criticisms of the program

Opponents of the RRW program believe it has nothing to do with making US weapons safer or more reliable, but is merely an excuse for designing new weapons and maintaining jobs at the weapons laboratories.cite web| url=http://www.trivalleycares.org/TVC_RRW_FNL.pdf|title=The Reliable Replacement Warhead Program: A Slippery Slope to New Nuclear Weapons| publisher=Tri-Valley CAREs| first=Robert| last=Civiak| month=January | year=2006|format=PDF] [Editorial, "Busywork for Nuclear Scientists", "New York Times" (15 January 2007): A18.] They note that the Secretaries of Defense and Energy have certified that the existing nuclear weapons stockpile is safe and reliable in each of the last nine years. The existing stockpile was extensively tested before the US entered the moratorium on nuclear weapons tests. According to Sidney Drell and Ambassador James Goodby, "It takes an extraordinary flight of imagination to postulate a modern new arsenal composed of such untested designs that would be more reliable, safe and effective than the current U.S. arsenal based on more than 1,000 tests since 1945." [ [http://www.armscontrol.org/pdf/USNW_2005_Drell-Goodby.pdf Drell_Goodby_fnl.indd ] ]

The RRW program is contrary to the "general and complete disarmament" of atomic weapons required by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which the USA has signed. The US government has always maintained, however, that no nuclear power signed the NPT with the intention of not producing new warheads if needed for national security, and has also at times implied that more reliable warheads would allow the government to reduce its total stockpile.

Critics maintain that this innocuous-sounding program could significantly damage US national security. Critics believe an expansive RRW program would anger US allies as well as hostile nations. They worry it would disrupt the global cooperation in nonproliferation that is vital to diplomacy with emerging nuclear powers such as Iran and North Korea and to controlling clandestine trafficking in nuclear materials and equipment.

Additionally, critics question whether or not the RRW program would force the United States to once again resume nuclear testing, as the US is unlikely to consider the new warheads "reliable" enough unless they have been tested at least once.

ee also

* Nuclear weapon design
* List of nuclear weapons

References

External links

* [http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/dod/jason/pit.pdf Pit Lifetime]
* [http://cstsp.aaas.org/content.html?contentid=899 United States Nuclear Weapons Program: The Role of the Reliable Replacement Warhead]
* [http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/systems/rrw.htm Reliable Replacement Warhead] page at [http://www.globalsecurity.org globalsecurity.org]
* [http://www.nnsa.doe.gov/Transforming_the_Stockpile.pdf DOE argument for the RRW]
* [http://www.clw.org/policy/nuclearweapons/rrw/ "Concerns about the Reliable Replacement Warheads Program"]
* [http://www.cdi.org/PDFs/crs%20report%20on%20RRW.PDF "Nuclear Weapons: The Reliable Replacement Warhead"] Congressional Research Service, updated March 9, 2006
* [http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/nuke/RL32929.pdf "Nuclear Weapons: The Reliable Replacement Warhead"] Congressional Research Service, updated February 8, 2007, via Federation of American Scientists
* [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v442/n7098/full/442018a.html "Nuclear weapons: The next nuke"] By Geoff Brumfiel, "Nature", July 6, 2006 (subscription required)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Reliable Replacement Warhead — Der Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW) ist ein seit 2004 in der Entwicklung befindlicher US amerikanischer Atomwaffensprengkopf. Sein Hauptbestandteil ist Plutonium. Entgegen den bisherigen Prioritäten ist der RRW auf Sicherheit und… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nuclear weapon design — The first nuclear weapons, though large, cumbersome and inefficient, provided the basic design building blocks of all future weapons. Here the Gadget device is prepared for the first nuclear test: Trinity. Nuclear weapon designs are physical,… …   Wikipedia

  • Nuclear weapons and the United States — United States Nuclear program start date 21 October 1939 First nuclear weapon test 16 July 1945 …   Wikipedia

  • W89 — The W89 was an American thermonuclear warhead design intended for use on the AGM 131 SRAM II air to ground nuclear missile.What was to become the W89 design was awarded to the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the mid 1980s. It entered… …   Wikipedia

  • Teller–Ulam design — The basics of the Teller–Ulam design. Radiation from a primary fission bomb compresses a secondary section containing both fission and fusion fuel. The compressed secondary is heated from within by a second fission explosion. The Teller–Ulam… …   Wikipedia

  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory — Infobox Laboratory name = Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory motto = Science in the national interest established = 1952 by the University of California director = George H. Miller city = Livermore, California budget = US$1.6 billion type =… …   Wikipedia

  • Armes nucléaires aux États-Unis — Armes nucléaires des États Unis Armes nucléaires des États Unis Pays États Unis Date où le programme nucléaire a été lancé 21 octobre 1939 Premier test d arme nucléaire 16 juillet 1945 Premier test de bombe H 1er novembre 1952 Dernier test d arme …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Armes nucléaires des Etats-Unis — Armes nucléaires des États Unis Armes nucléaires des États Unis Pays États Unis Date où le programme nucléaire a été lancé 21 octobre 1939 Premier test d arme nucléaire 16 juillet 1945 Premier test de bombe H 1er novembre 1952 Dernier test d arme …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Armes nucléaires des États-Unis — États Unis Arsenal nucléaire Programme Date de lancement 21 octobre 1939 Premier essai nucléaire 16 juillet 1945 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • États-Unis et armes de destruction massive — Armes nucléaires des États Unis Armes nucléaires des États Unis Pays États Unis Date où le programme nucléaire a été lancé 21 octobre 1939 Premier test d arme nucléaire 16 juillet 1945 Premier test de bombe H 1er novembre 1952 Dernier test d arme …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”