Nuclear pulse. I - Awakening to the chaos factor
Abstract
The discovery of the significance of the high-voltage wave termed electromagnetic pulse (EMP), which occurs following the high-altitude detonation of a nuclear device, is discussed. The disruptions to the street lights, burglar alarms and circuit breakers of Hawaii caused by the detonation of a nuclear device 248 mi above Johnson Island in the Pacific in July, 1962 are described and attributed to the Compton electrons produced by the impact of gamma rays from the nuclear explosion on air in the upper atmosphere. It is pointed out, however, that at the time of the explosion, most communications systems were based on vacuum tube and electromechanical technology, which is about 10,000,000 times harder against EMP than integrated solid-state circuitry, and thus the threat posed by EMP to the power grid and communications capabilities was not apparent. Efforts undertaken to harden discrete (missile) and communications systems against EMP are outlined for the example of the Safeguard ABM system, and difficulties are pointed out. Soviet awareness of EMP is considered, and the discovery of vacuum tubes on board the state-of-the-art Foxbat MiG interceptor flown into Japan is noted as a possible indicator of this awareness. It is concluded that the problem of EMP will increase in significance as semiconductor electronics proliferates.
- Publication:
-
Science
- Pub Date:
- May 1981
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1981Sci...212.1009B
- Keywords:
-
- Antimissile Defense;
- Chaos;
- Electromagnetic Pulses;
- Hardening (Systems);
- Nuclear Explosion Effect;
- Radio Communication;
- Safeguard System;
- Compton Effect;
- Electromechanical Devices;
- Geomagnetism;
- Nuclear Warfare;
- Radiation Hardening;
- Semiconductor Devices;
- Vacuum Tubes;
- Communications and Radar