Drawing uncovered of 'Nazi Nuke' 639
ninjee writes "Historians working in Germany and the US claim to have found a 60-year-old diagram showing a Nazi nuclear bomb.
It is the only known drawing of a "nuke" made by Nazi experts and appears in a report held by a private archive.
The researchers who brought it to light say the drawing is a rough schematic and does not imply the Nazis built, or were close to building, an atomic bomb.
But a detail in the report hints some Nazi scientists may have been closer to that goal than was previously believed.
The report containing the diagram is undated, but the researchers claim the evidence points to it being produced immediately after the end of the war in Europe. It deals with the work of German nuclear scientists during the war and lacks a title page, so there is no evidence of who composed it.
One historian behind the discovery, Rainer Karlsch, caused a storm of controversy earlier this year when he claimed to have uncovered evidence the Nazis successfully tested a primitive nuclear device in the last days of WWII. A number of historians rejected the claim.
The drawing is published in an article written for Physics World magazine by Karlsch and Mark Walker, professor of history at Union College in Schenectady, US."
Forget it. (Score:5, Informative)
Second, if you look at the diagram you'll see that it is initiated a gun-type trigger, something that is impossible for Pu. This makes the diagram look like the work of someone that doesn't know what they are doing. Maybe this was deliberate (though rather obvious) misinformation by a scientist who didn't want Hitler to get the bomb.
Third, it is undated, and unnamed, from an unknown source. Not worth even reading.
In any event, Germany had no means of effectively delivering such a weapon. They lacked the heavy aircraft which the USA used. The V2 rocket only had a fraction of the payload capacity needed. The best they could have done is load it on a cargo vessel and attempt to sail into someone's harbour. Or leave it behind in a city like Paris after retreating. Neither of which would have been terribly impressive, since they would be ground-bursts and not much different from a few tons of dynamite.
Re:Forget it. (Score:2, Interesting)
The effect would be more local. Instead of flattening an entire city, it would pollute a small area. But the demoralising on troops would be quite effective I guess.
Re:Forget it. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Forget it. (Score:4, Funny)
Be PC. Its an "unclean" bomb vs the clean type that reduces to dust particles.
Re:Forget it. (Score:4, Insightful)
They had more fatal stuff to worry about.
Re:Forget it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Forget it. (Score:5, Insightful)
It wouldn't be. The problem is that no one would understand the effects and hence, be scared of it.
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
Re: Dirty bomb (Score:5, Interesting)
In 1945 the Germans put their supply of uranium on a submarine, with the intention of delivering it to the Japanese. I imagine a dirty bomb would have been the most likely purpose. More information here [uiuc.edu].
Re: Dirty bomb (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Forget it. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Forget it. (Score:5, Insightful)
If dynamite caused radiation sickness and cancer, this would be exactly right. As it stands, however, even a Nazi dirty bomb would have had at least a huge psychological effect, if not a very large military one.
It might have opened our eyes to the true dangers of radiation sooner, but I don't think so. It could be an interesting jumping-off point for an alternative history story: What if it gave other groups the idea to make their own dirty bombs in the unsettled postwar years?
Re:Forget it. (Score:2, Insightful)
You're also talking about an era where governments (US, UK and AUS amongst them) exposed their own soldiers to nuclear tests to see how they would react, so I'm not sure about the psychological effects being that profound.
Mind you, we also had radioactive toothpaste and people bought it!
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
I think it goes more to say that even the Nazi's wouldn't have thought about using this tactic, as WW2 was not one of psychological warfare on a populace, but total miltaristic warfare.
Domination, defense, and blitzkrieg style warfare does not go hand in hand with guerilla style annoyance tactics.
charred earth tactics not withstanding, but the fact "Dirty bombs" (i even hate saying th
You forget (Score:5, Interesting)
So the appeal of the atomic bomb wasn't it's additonal features, those were unknown. It was just thought to be a really big bomb. Rather than needing to send hundreds of bombers and dropping tens of thousands of bombs, you could send in just one bomber and drop one bomb. You'd risk a lot less assets, eliminate targets much faster, and save lives (yours at least) and money.
You also have to remember that, even had it been known what a direty bomb was, nobody would have been impressed. For one thing direty bombs are pretty fucking worthless militarily. Most radio active elements, but particularly the ones we are tlaking about here (uraunium and plutonium) are very, very heavy materials. This means their airborne time is very low. Well if you just spread them around, you really aren't going to cause a lot of effect. They need to get inside people to do real damage, or people need prolonged exposure. Just being externally exposed to a little uranium lying somewhere near you won't do much.
Also you have to remember this was a very, very dirty war. It was pretty much no holds barred. Gas attacks of various kinds, of example, were used. Civilians died all the time just due to the nature of war. As I said, you'd take out an entire city to try and take out it's infastructure. So if you managed to make a few hundred people sick with radation poisining, oh well, big deal, people were dying all the time from the war.
Not true (Score:3, Informative)
There is a well recorded event during the nuclear research in Germany during WWII where an accident happened and many researchers died of radiation poisoning. And while I don't know for sure, I assume that the western researchers also knew of the dangers of radiation, since even Marie Curie had suffered from radiation poisoning. Most probably no one expected there to be so much from a bomb, however.
Also you have to remember this was a ve
Re:You forget (Score:3, Insightful)
Nonsense. If that were the case, there would have been no radiation safety precautions during the project, and all the scientists and workers at Los Alamos, Hanford, and other Manhattan sites would have rapidly died of acute radiation poisoning.
Long-term effects of varying levels of exposure were not understood, but it was certainly known that neutron activation will render materials radioactive, and that the bomb would produce signif
Re:You forget (Score:3, Informative)
another link here [mainichi.co.jp]
Germany used gas to kill thousands of Jews.
It didn't happen nearly as often but it did happen.
Re:Forget it. (Score:4, Insightful)
Is it possible it was a design "speculated" from spy reports from the allies? It does capture two crucial design decisions (gun assembly and plutonium core), but manages to mix them up in a single entity. Which would be an easy mistake to make if one was relying on shaky intelligence from someone close to the Manhattan project, but not too close.
The design still looks approximated though, and does not take into account the scale or space requirements of a v2-type rocket.
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
on the tops of large buildings etc i imagine , Wiping out a fair few places and soldier and most likely half of germany rather than letting it fall into allied hands
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
Hitler meets Priory of Sion? (Score:2)
Top secret documents mysteriously discovered in forgotten archives! History as we know it must be revised! Read all about it, etc.
For all I know, the document found could of course be both genuine and significant. But when it sounds a little to good to be true,...
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
Re:Forget it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Not worth reading, yes, but for the weak minded, it will suffice. Am I the only foil-hatted one to suspect this piece of yellow journalism was timed to sow some additional fear/causus belli over the Iranian bomb program?
When I heard the soundbite over ABC Radio, there was absolutely no question by the news people as to its veracity, only a verbatim repeat of whatever the original source was. Thanks for nothing, press.
An
You underestimate German rocketry (Score:5, Interesting)
Ballistic missiles are known by everyone because of the cold war hype, but with that era's technology and bearing in mind that they didn't need to go all the way to america with it, a cruise missile is where it's at. I.e., a rocket with wings. You don't have to launch the thing upwards with a rocket to hit Britain from France, you can just as well launch it horizontally or on a flat arc and use wings to provide the needed lift. Like the V-1 did, for example.
And they did research and build just that too: rockets with wings.
The Me-163 Komet for example was an interceptor aircraft with a liquid-fuel rocket (not turbojet) engine. It reached a speed of approximately 600 mph (almost 1000 km/h) and had a maximum range of about 80 km.
Nasty thing and more dangerous for the pilot than for the enemy, but to chuck a small bomb without a pilot across the channel it would have worked outstandingly.
And I have no doubt that, if they absolutely needed to chuck a 4 ton bomb (the weight of the hiroshima bomb), they could have slapped 2, 3 or 4 of those engines on an airframe with bigger wings.
It's a lot easier to design such a one-shot contraption, when you don't have to worry about being able to land safely, or about structural damage during flight. It can, for all you care, come apart at the end, as long as it does it on the other side of the channel.
Re:Forget it. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Forget it. (Score:3, Interesting)
Not your fault, but Thanks BBC. The partial picture on the news story is closer and has more detail, the enlarge picture (which BBC has linked and you link to directly) is of a lower quality, thus I can't read ANYthing on it...
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
Come on. It's a gun-type trigger.
Re:Forget it. (Score:3, Informative)
Even more interesting, it seems to be hooked up to a wire ("Reißleine"), probably connecting plane and bomb with each other. After the bomb travelled enough distance from the plane, the rope would trigger the parachute mechanism.
The part labels from top to bottom:
Re:Forget it. (Score:2)
Assuming the bomb would be the Hiroshima bomb size. Their calculations assumed something like 200 ton as the weight of the bomb though. Any plane of that time capable to carry that much cargo?
Re:Not a trigger (Score:3, Insightful)
Incidentally, the other German bomb design in the Physics World article (the one supposedly te
Maybe in 60 years... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe in 60 years... (Score:2, Funny)
All of which giving first proof that the UK was already a vengeful island full of vindictive alien hating super scientists.
Re:Maybe in 60 years... (Score:2)
Scary to think (Score:2)
They most likely would have still lost the war , but the face of europe would be a very difrent one than it is today.
I suppose it is about time for another "What if " ww2 movie
No, thank you (Score:2)
I really don't think so. The US would have tested their A-bombs on Hamburg and Bremen instead of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. War ends, a few years pass, Germans and US-Americans are best buddies. (Cue Bob Dylans "With God On Our Side")
I suppose it is about time for another "What if " ww2 movie
Thanks, but no, thanks.
Kind regards, Udo Schmitz, Bremen, Germany
Re:Scary to think (Score:2)
Suchetha
Re:Scary to think (Score:2, Insightful)
The material and manpower advantage of the allied armies and the Soviet Union in particular was utterly overwhelming by 1945.
Re:Scary to think (Score:2)
I dont think it would of intentionaly been to spread radiation , only to wipe out a few troops as some last ditch vengance , but considering the way the bomb was going to be made its likely that it would of had the side effect of radiation poisoning
Definantly wouldnt have changed the outcome of the war (i worded that badly in my origional post)
Good Point and Chemical Weapons (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Scary to think (Score:3, Funny)
"If the Nazis had completed work on the nuclear bomb / rocket nuke then the world would be a very difrent place than it is today."
This is why we should all be glad that Captain Kirk allowed Edith Keeler to be run over by that car.
Re:Scary to think (Score:2)
Besides Hitler probably wouldn't have used an a-bomb anyway. Germany had best chemical weapons developed but used none during WW2. Hitler thought Allied forces had chemicals too and feared a chemical retaliation. He also thought they are not powerful enough to change course of war. If he had an A-bomb too late in the game or he was
Re:Scary to think (Score:2)
Re:Scary to think (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Scary to think (Score:2)
What was neat to see was the F-117 painted in Nazi markings(with the cross + numbers).
Heisenberg (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Heisenberg (Score:4, Informative)
There are transcripts and tapes of British debriefings at Farm Hall [nybooks.com] after captured German scientists were informed about Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and most express complete incredulity that the US scientists had succeeded.
Re:Heisenberg (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Heisenberg (Score:3, Interesting)
By all accounts Nazis were closer to developing a working flying saucer [unrealaircraft.com] than a working nuclear bomb...
Re:Heisenberg (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Heisenberg (Score:2)
Fermi was not Jewish, but his wife was.
What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:2, Interesting)
RE: What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:3, Informative)
Like land mines in Vietnam and Cambodia?
Re:What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:4, Interesting)
If you drop hundreds of thousands of various types of ordnance onto an industrialised area then as much as 20% will not explode. Even ordnance flung into Baghdad some 60 years later didn't all explode on impact.
I doubt this was intentional.
Re:What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:2)
Re:What about the Schlechter Wolf bombs? (Score:2)
Either that, or the United Nations Intelligence Taskforce [unit.org.uk] is using a terribly effective Javascript-based [unit.org.uk] password system.
I would appear to have hacked into the site. Wahey!
(Goes off to launch some ICBMs...)
Germans had no nuke (Score:2)
The German nuclear scientists were rounded up and kept for a few weeks at Farm Hall where they were secretly recorded. The transcripts of this were de
Re:Germans had no nuke (Score:2)
Heisenberg was not an engineer and he did not get along with engineers. Typical of most European academentia at the time (and even now) . There were very few people to actually take the "ideas" and make them "tick" on the German nuclear team.
This is in sharp contrast with both American and Russian efforts which were done in a much more practical manner.
Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2)
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2)
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2)
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2)
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2)
Again, class, here we have yet another an object lesson in why it's a Bad Idea to let a religious position dictate the progress of Science.
Kansas, are you paying attention? Take that opposable thumb out of your mouth this minute, and take your bipedally-evolved feet off the desk. So help me, if I see you flicking spitwads at the Separation of Church and State one more time...
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:3, Interesting)
They overestimated the amount of material needed, by at least an order of magnitude.
If this thing detonated near some observation bunker, all the audience would most likely evaporate. And even if they didn't, Hitler would try to lug the bombs by trains to Russia and by seaships (not u-boots) to US coasts. They would be far too big for a plane.
Re:Germans didn't have a Nuke (Score:2)
Although the idea of Hitler and his gang accidentally nuking themselves while testing their masterstroke against the Allies does have a certain je ne sais quoi...
Achtung! Alles Schrägstrichpunkten! (Score:5, Funny)
>
> We would have: SCHRAEGSTRICHPUNKT! Nachrichten für Sonderlingen! Sachen von Bedeutung! instead. Ayeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
Das Schrägstrichpunkt is nicht fuer das portmangritten und goatseposten. Ist easy droppenpacket der routers und machen sie 503-errorn mit der trollenpost unt der Soviet-reversen. Ist nicht fuer gewerken bei das dumbkopfen. Das craksmoken moderateren keepen das mausclicken hans in das pockets muss! Relaxen und watchen das blinkenlights.
Translation of labels? (Score:2)
Thanks.
Re:Translation of labels? (Score:2)
Nuclear Armaments (Score:5, Informative)
He claims to have stopped the scientists from developing the bomb any further - not because he was opposed to the concept if such a weapon (he certainly wasn't). The reason was that it was clear it would need much more time than was available in order to complete the work.
What was considered feasible was the idea of an "energy producing Uranium motor" for use in vehicles, and research was switched in that direction around 1944.
Antony Beevor's excellent book on the fall of Berlin also makes it clear that the Germans' nuclear research facilities were well known to the Russian's and were a major influence on Stalin's tactical decisions regarding Berlin. He was determined to obtain the fruits of this research.
The book also makes clear that Heisenburg did not try to sabotage the programme but was eager to succeed. This view is also backed up by the famous meeting between Heisenburg and Nils Bohr in Copenhagen in 1941 and Hesinburg's views at that time.
Of course even though one new where Heisenburg was in 1941 you could never tell what direction he was taking at that time.
Re:Nuclear Armaments (Score:2)
Re:Nuclear Armaments (Score:2)
since everyone agrees (Score:2)
how about a theocracy with nuclear bombs (tehran)?
or a tyrant with nuclear bombs (pyongyang)?
what will it take for the world to do something decisive about these regimes and their (soon to be) nuclear arsenals? a nuclear signature over los angeles or madrid?
i fear that to be the case
Re:since everyone agrees (Score:2)
Re:since everyone agrees (Score:2)
Re:since everyone agrees (Score:2)
Re:since everyone agrees (Score:2)
There were people screaming for blood on both sides, talking about how the other side was evil and needed to be stopped, etc etc. But, people with cooler heads prevailed, and the cold war ended in time. The nuclear threat remains- the genie is out of the bottle and can never be put back in. The only thing we can do is to encourage countries not to develop nukes.
Its scary, but you should really st
Wartime, the best time for scientific progress? (Score:2)
So what I wonder: Isn't it strange that wartime is the best time for scientific progress? Do we really need war to focus our minds and resources in this way?
Re:Wartime, the best time for scientific progress? (Score:2)
Yes we do. In a major war, losing is really, really bad. So you have an all out push to gain any advantage you can. People volunteer for, and can be directed into projects they otherwise might not have pursued. And given a blank check to get it done.
No war? You can take your time on things. Writing papers, doing endless experiments to get it 'just right'.
Fear is a gr
Re:Wartime, the best time for scientific progress? (Score:2)
Jet engines, also in the 30's developed in Britain (and other places)
Get your facts str8 moron.
Under "A Brief History of the Microwave Oven" [smecc.org]
Like many of today's great inventions, the microwave oven was a by-product of another technology. It was during a radar-related research project around 1946 that Dr. Percy Spencer, a self-taught engineer with the Raytheon Corporation, noticed something very unusual. He was testing a new vacuum tube cal
Translation of the labels? (Score:5, Interesting)
From what I can tell, it looks to be a straightforward version of the "gun design" used in the Hiroshima bomb, which a) is so obvious that I think even I could have figured out the basic concept, and b) won't work with real plutonium as Pu-240 contamination will cause the weapon to blow itself to bits before enough of the plutonium has fissioned. So, even if it was true, they had a very long way to go before they could have made a bomb.
An implosion design, by contrast, would be a much bigger deal, though as I understand it just having the idea is a very long way from making it work.
Two final things: one of the reasons why the Nazis never got very far on their nuclear weapons project is that they could never get a reactor working; one of the key reasons for that was their supply of heavy water was kept from them by Norwegian partisans working with British SOE. Their story is a pretty amazing one [wikipedia.org].
And finally, while it's not possible to make a plutonium gun bomb now; it should be possible in the very distant future. Pu-240 (the contaminant) has a much shorter half-life (about 6500 years) than Pu-239 (about 24,100 years). So, over (lots of) time, the proportion of the Pu-240 should gradually reduce. So maybe these Germans were just a little ahead of their time...
Re:Translation of the labels? (Score:2)
Rainer Karlsch (Score:2, Informative)
It looks dated to me (Score:3, Insightful)
If you look at the diagram on this page [physicsweb.org], there seems to be what looks like a date on the upper right side. It seems to say "Halteose fur AS/12/44". Any ideas what that means?
Also, the associated article states that the bomb appears to be a hybrid fission/fusion device, which was far more advanced than the two fission-only devices used on Japan.
Re:It looks dated to me (Score:2)
Re:It looks dated to me (Score:2)
The date is probably the mark of the parachute type. Nothing more.
Re:It looks dated to me (Score:2)
Re:It looks dated to me (Score:2)
ALSOS project disproved this (Score:4, Interesting)
My physics professor at the University of Nevada Reno, the late Samuel Goudsmit (best known as co-discoverer of the electron's spin), was technical lead on the ALSOS project [wikipedia.org] immediately after World War II. His team went into Berlin and certain other areas shortly after the Allies captured them, in order to sieze any Nazi nuclear material and atom bomb research. They found lots of stuff, then spent a few months studying it closely.
As described in the Wikipedia article (and in Goudsmit's 1947 book, ALSOS: The failure of German science), the Germans never got even remotely close to developing an A-bomb. Their approach to the physics was fundamentally mistaken and would never have led to anything workable. Good news for civilization, bad news for alternate-history writers and sensationalist journalists, but in any case conclusively settled. Goudsmit was a smart guy and knew his stuff.
It's Goodwin and it's slightly different (Score:2)
And I am an speling nazi (*narf*)
FAQ (Score:2)
This is incredible! Someone obviously has the FAQ [faqs.org]
--
Don\'t fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU! [bobpaul.org]
Re:FAQ (Score:4, Funny)
Re:does anyone else wonder (Score:2, Informative)
Excellent book
Re:does anyone else wonder (Score:2)
Re:does anyone else wonder (Score:2)
Think before you speak.
Re:does anyone else wonder (Score:3, Insightful)
It's pretty easy to guess based on that they did before hand, and what they wrote about. Mass extermination of Jews, Gypsies, Communists, homosexuals and the handicapped. An unelected government, state control of media and commerce, propaganda, police state, slave labour of the non-Aryans, using land outside Germany as living space.
I'm sure it would be have full employment, low crime and the trains run on time, though most people wouldn't see that as much of a trade off.
It probably wouldn't have been di