The Blind Spots In the Nuclear Test Monitoring System 39
Lasrick writes The International Monitoring System managed by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization relies on detecting one or more of four distinct signatures from a nuclear explosion. Seismic detectors continuously listen for the shock waves passing through the earth from underground nuclear tests. Hydro-acoustic monitors listen for sound waves in the oceans from underwater tests. Infrasound detectors scan for pressure waves in the atmosphere. The fourth kind of signal involves radioactive gases generated by a nuclear explosion and released into the atmosphere. Ulrich Kuhn and Michael Schoeppner describe the system in detail, and point out that there are blind spots, particularly in the area of noble gas detection: "Our research has found that the noble gas detection part of the International Monitoring System is unlikely to work as it should because of the limited distribution of noble gas stations, neglect of important meteorological patterns in some areas, and the radionuclide background from emissions from the commercial production of medical isotopes." Kuhn and Schoeppner go on to describe possible fixes, and call on the 183 states that have signed the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty and the CTBTO to provide the resources to build extra monitoring stations where they are required and to curb activities that might limit the global capability to monitor possible nuclear tests.
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No, this kind of blind spot [www.news.az].
Expect Russia to become even more paranoid and trigger happy than usual.
(This is, of course, what happens when you try to modernize every last system in your arsenal at once even when you're *not* under sanctions.. almost all of these programs can be expected to be behind schedule and underdeliver)
happy to comply! (Score:2)
My country will be happy to comply. We will spend whatever it takes to assure the world that we are not a nuclear threat. We know that when we do *not* have nuclear ambitions, we will benefit from the generosity of the nuclear powers and prosper in the years to come.
Ha, ha! Look around--the only countries who get any attention / financial support are those who are at the brink of being nuclear threats. We will threaten the shit out of you until you meet our demands!
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Blind spots don't matter; new nuclear powers want their stutus, prestige, saber-rattling ability. They'll be sure to let everyone know.
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My country
The Duchy of Grand Fenwick?
Neutrino detectors (Score:2)
An array of these should be able to detect a pulse of neutrinos produced by nuclear bombs.
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Evidently the behavior of nuclear weapons is fairly well quantified neutrino wise - you get 1.3e23 MeV neutrinos per kiloton yield spread over 4pi steradians of a sphere.
The sub-GeV neutrino-nucleon cross section is about 1e-44m^2. At the Super-K neutrino detector presents a detection volume that contains roughly 3e31 nucleons, which means we need about 3 neutrinos to pass through a square .55 micrometers on a side to hit the cross section it presents to get 3 counts at once and sound the alarm.
The result i
The moon (Score:2)
Another blind spot is the dark side of the moon.
http://security.blogs.cnn.com/... [cnn.com]
The US launched a satellite to check if the Russian were doing nuclear weapons testing on the dark side of the moon.
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I assume you mean "far side", not "dark side". The moon is tidally locked to the Earth, not the sun.
Legalize testing. (Score:1)
If there is anything we've leatned from the War on Drugs, we've learned that bans don't work.
All they do is support a criminal underclass which serves no purpose.
Thus the solution is to repeal the ban and allow everyone to decide in a free market manner what nuclear testing they want.
It's like vaccines and traffic rules. Do you really want the government deciding for you? Or for your children? If you want to send your child to the middle of a busy highway to test your home made fusion bomb, should some b
Blind spot? (Score:3)
So if the other 3 detectors can detect the explosions under ground, under the sea, and in the atmosphere. Where exactly does that leave for a covert test that this gas sampling might miss?
Oh I see he thinks we need a world wide network of monitors to confirm what the other 3 sensors pick up. Gee if only there was some way to stick those gas detectors on something mobile.....
WC-135 Constant Phoenix [wikipedia.org]
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with that kind of population why would anyone need to invade if it would be in worse condition than a war would bring just from rioting due to loss of electricity?
puh plze what would be the benefit anyhow? and would these two unknown effect nukes somehow stop the retaliation?
what's stopping russians from doing it then? ...seriously, much worse condition than combined ground attack from rest of the world? what the fuck man, what the fuck. americans are not that kind of gods and hundred million+ troops would
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with that kind of population why would anyone need to invade if it would be in worse condition than a war would bring just from rioting due to loss of electricity?
You are allowed to use proper punctuation and such to allow others to parse your sentences (or whatever you call them).
puh plze what would be the benefit anyhow?
So, nobody out there would like to see the US burn? Really? Because the news tells us the opposite every day.
and would these two unknown effect nukes somehow stop the retaliation?
So, with domestic conditions deteriorating and more military personnel out of the US than in, rather than stabilizing the country, you think the first priority would be to retaliate? I am glad you aren't in charge of anything larger than picking which shoe goes on which foot every
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You are vastly overstating the effects an EMP would have.
By about a million-fold. Do some research on the subject that isn't two-bit apocalypse fan-fiction.
Yes, power distribution and some communications would be offline. Some of it would need replacement, some not. Most electronics would not notice, aside from the lack of power. At worst, your vehicle might stop if it was running and you'd have to restart it.
Even the Tzar Bomba the Soviets let off had only MINOR effects.
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Not to mention that North Korea isn't anywhere close to a missile that could be aimed on a trajectory that could reach to Africa.
EMP would be very expensive, let's not downplay that. But it's hardly the end of the world. For power companies, it'll be as if a major storm took out hardware across a rather large area. For businesses and the public, it'll mean having to replace random non-surge-protected electronic devices (we're not talking "close enough to erase hard drives" or anything, the power grid is vul
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If NK (or any one else for that matter) launched an nuclear EMP attack there would be retaliation and China be damned. Seoul can always be rebuilt if it is destroyed. Just look what happened when 3000 people were killed on 9/11 and you can pretty much imagine the US response to a nuclear EMP attack.
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They won't. Last time I checked China does't have a mutual defense treaty with NK. Plus NK is a pain in the ass for China. NK rhetoric and vitriolic threats have weakened China's security. Thanks to NK the US has beefed up it's anti-missile batteries along the US West Coast and helped increase the military preparedness in the South Pacific region. The deployment of more anti-missile batteries to protect against a NK missile attack can also be used to intercept missiles aimed towards the US west coast. Inste
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Thanks to NK the US has beefed up it's anti-missile batteries along the US West Coast and helped increase the military preparedness in the South Pacific region. The deployment of more anti-missile batteries to protect against a NK missile attack can also be used to intercept missiles aimed towards the US west coast.
Aside from some theoretical Star Wars weapons that never left the drawing board, we have nothing that would stop an ICBM launched from NK. The worry is Scuds launched at Tokyo. Something we think is possible toda
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