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The Military Canada

Uranium-Filled 'Lost Nuke' Missing Since 1950 May Have Been Found (bbc.com) 107

Although the U.S. government "does not believe the bomb contains active nuclear material," schwit1 shares this report from the BBC: A commercial diver may have discovered a lost decommissioned U.S. nuclear bomb off the coast of Canada. Sean Smyrichinsky was diving for sea cucumbers near British Columbia when he discovered a large metal device that looked a bit like a flying saucer. The Canadian Department of National Defence believes it could be a "lost nuke" from a US B-36 bomber that crashed in the area in 1950.... The plane was on a secret mission to simulate a nuclear strike and had a real Mark IV nuclear bomb on board to see if it could carry the payload required...

The American military says the bomb was filled with lead, uranium and TNT but no plutonium, so it wasn't capable of a nuclear explosion... Several hours into its flight, its engines caught fire and the crew had to parachute to safety... The crew put the plane on autopilot and set it to crash in the middle of the ocean, but three years later, its wreckage was found hundreds of kilometers inland.

The crew says they dumped their bomb-like cargo into the ocean first to avoid a detonation on land.
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Uranium-Filled 'Lost Nuke' Missing Since 1950 May Have Been Found

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  • WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by YuppieScum ( 1096 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @01:43PM (#53272139) Journal

    You fly a test mission, and do it using a "dummy" bomb that contains TNT and uranium???

    Is it just me, or does this sound like complete bollocks?

    Of course, actually telling everyone, "Oopsy, we *lost* a live nuke" would be quite embarrassing...

    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Informative)

      by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @02:01PM (#53272215) Homepage

      Uranium is nearly twice as dense as lead. The test run was apparently to "see if it could carry the payload required" which means you'd want the right weight/size/shape. They took the most dangerous bit out, at least.

    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @02:04PM (#53272237)

      When you get to the point of heavy metals (such as the uranium in this instance), you start running into problems with simulating stuff made from them - you cant have a precise physical replica because the weight will be off, and quite often you cant add more mass because then you have something that is physically larger than the original.

      In aircraft, weight and balance issues can affect performance considerably - so when you need to run simulation flights to test performance you couldnt really get a truly accurate result if you used a replica as it would either be too light or it would put weight in the wrong place on the aircraft due to the increase in size. You cant add ballast outside the weapon for the same reasons.

      So the only way to run these tests back then was to use a proper weapon. Of course the core was removed, but on these aircraft they were always removed for take off, landing and cruise - a crew member literally had to insert the core into the weapon en route because the safety systems were still not trusted at that point, so keeping the core on board but separate would still result in an accurate test flight.

      • so keeping the core on board but separate would still result in an accurate test flight.

        So this highly radioactive core is still at the bottom of the ocean somewhere?

        • Yes. There are dozens of these things around - and some of them arent at the bottom of an ocean, some of them are "missing" on land.

        • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by chill ( 34294 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @04:15PM (#53272797) Journal

          Boy, are you going to be surprised when you figure out how the Soviet Union used to dispose of nuclear reactors from ships and submarines. At least with the U.S. one it was an accident.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decommissioning_of_Russian_nuclear-powered_vessels [wikipedia.org]

          A Russian government report acknowledged in March 1993, that "during the period of 1965 to 1988 the Northern Fleet had dumped four reactor compartments with eight reactors (three containing damaged fuel) in the Abrosimov Gulf in 20 to 40 meters of water." Six other compartments, containing nine reactors in all, had also been dumped into the water in the 1960s and 1970s.

          • The interesting thing is that those dumped reactors (and a couple of downed nuke subs) are monitored closely and NO radioactivity can be detected in their vicinity. It's only when you get closer than about 2 metres that anything can be detected at all.

            For that reason it's been deemed safer to leave them where they are than to try and pull them out of the water.

            The BBC ran a documentary on these reactors and the monitoring processes about a decade ago. It's worth looking at if you can find it.

            • by Anonymous Coward

              I guess it's better to be lucky than good?

        • Re:WTF? (Score:4, Informative)

          by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer@noSPAm.earthlink.net> on Saturday November 12, 2016 @09:42PM (#53274033)

          So this highly radioactive core is still at the bottom of the ocean somewhere?

          If this was in fact a training mission then the radioactive core would not likely be on board. That is a very expensive and militarily sensitive part of the weapon. The rest of the weapon, the nearly 5 ton case, while still an expensive and sensitive piece of equipment is not nearly as easily lost, stolen, or capable of being simulated for a training mission.

          Also, the plutonium used in the core has a half life of over 24000 years, not something many would consider "highly radioactive". Such material is regularly handled with only gloved hands, which is what the crew would have to do to arm the weapon while in flight.

        • Unexploded nukes aren't "highly radioactive". Even the cores (in fact one of the big problems with cores was keeping the highly radioactive contaminants _out_)

          You could sleep on a uranium mattress without ill effects.

          On the other hand, uranium and plutonium are a biologically toxic metals regardless of radioactivity so you don't want them in the environment if you can avoid it.

          I'd be much more worried about the stability of the TNT after all this time underwater.

        • So you didn't actually read the fucking article. The central core ("pit") of the bomb was removed before flight leaving the considerably less dangerous and less radioactive outer parts of the bomb (but most of the mass.

          You probably don't know much about radioactivity, so you probably can't use the half lives of the isotopes (U-238 ~ 4470000 thousand years; U-235 ~ 700000 thousand years; Pu-239 24 thousand years) to calculate the (relative) activity. You'd probably be terrified if I gave you a shot of fine

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Cramer ( 69040 )

        You do realize there's a difference between weapons grade, enriched uranium and depleted uranium, right? To accurately gauge the weapon carrying capabilities, it would be loaded with a "dummy load" which means no actual nuclear fuel. It gets loaded with depleted uranium to match the mass and weight distribution. In other words, the small ball of plutonium that actually makes the giant kaboom, isn't on the plane. (i.e. everything but the core. "In tonights test, the part of plutonium will be played by a ball

    • The bomb would contain a layer of depleted uranium surrounding the plutonium core. Depleted uranium is not particularly radioactive and can't go critical on it's own, but assists the plutonium reaction.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        Edit: Other sites are reporting this was a dummy bomb packed with lead. No idea why a dummy would have uranium, maybe BBC is in error.

        In any case it wouldn't be the fissile variety. Depleted uranium is still toxic, though.

        • Uranium is nearly twice as dense as lead, so a lead bomb wouldn't make a hugely accurate dummy.

        • Depleted uranium is still toxic, though.

          And lead isn't?

          My question isn't why it would be packed with uranium, since uranium is rather unique in it's density and there is little else that would be of equivalent density and be as cheap. My question is, why would a dummy bomb be packed with TNT?

          If it's packed with TNT then it is most certainly a live bomb. It might not be a nuclear weapon at this point but it can still "go boom" with considerable force if given a cross look.

          As I understand nuclear weapon design the use of DU as a casing is benefic

      • It has been a while since I built a early version of a plutonium fission bomb, but if I recall correctly, the depleted uranium jacket was there as an inertial mass to help concentrate the implosion energy inward. It was not directly involved in the fission reaction.

        • The U238 casing is used as a fission booster in "H-bombs" (and is where most of the explosion actually comes from - the fusion bomb boosts the fission bomb, etc.

          But this isn't an H-bomb. It's one of the early crude fatman designs and you're right.

          For those wondering about why a bomb complete with explosives was used for test flights:

          This was early 1950s US Military. Safety and commonsense weren't high on the list of requirements back then, which is why there were a number of nuclear incidents including seve

    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @02:25PM (#53272369) Homepage Journal

      The uranium in this case was unenriched, and incapable of going critical. It was part of the device's "tamper" -- a kind of shield that delayed the expansion of the material in the pit during explosion, thus boosting efficiency. It was used mainly for its phsyical density, not its nuclear properties.

      The mark IV bomb was designed to be transported and loaded on the aircraft without the "physics package", which contained the actual fissile material. As such this particular bomb is no more dangerous than a small conventional bomb. There is no particular reason not to use one in a training exercise.

      Which is not to say there weren't some hair-raising incidents over the years. The closest we came to a real disaster was the Goldsboro [wikipedia.org] incident, in which two thermonuclear weapons were ejected from a disintegrating airplane with nearly all of their safety mechanisms too damaged to operate.

      • The uranium in this case was unenriched, and incapable of going critical. It was part of the device's "tamper" -- a kind of shield that delayed the expansion of the material in the pit during explosion, thus boosting efficiency. It was used mainly for its phsyical density, not its nuclear properties.

        Technically, a uranium tamper is still fissioned with fast neutron flux, so it is partly there for its nuclear properties, isn't it?

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Technically, a uranium tamper is still fissioned with fast neutron flux, so it is partly there for its nuclear properties, isn't it?

          Yes, the tamper does fission a little and adds somewhat to the bomb's yield, which is why I said "mainly". I didn't want to obscure the important point, which is that that the uranium in this bomb cannot be made to explode by any means without installing the pit.

          "Natural uranium" (meaning unenriched) is reasonably safe to handle; if you look up the MSDS for natural uranium metal the main hazards are ingestion and inhalation. You can handle it with disposable gloves.

        • Technically, a uranium tamper is still fissioned with fast neutron flux, so it is partly there for its nuclear properties, isn't it?

          That's my understanding as well. It's the choice of materials for this outer casing that, as far as I can tell, is what separates a high yield three stage device (uranium), a low or medium yield two stage device (lead or steel), and enhanced radiation weapons (AKA a neutron bomb or salted bomb, using some other material).

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        • by nojayuk ( 567177 )

          Technically, a uranium tamper is still fissioned with fast neutron flux

          Not quite. Uranium-238, the main component of depleted and also naturally occurring uranium doesn't fission. It WILL breed up into Pu-239 through neutron capture via an intermediate product and that will fission and produce energy if hit by neutrons.

          Natural uranium has about 0.6% U-235 which will fission so it's a better tamper than depleted uranium which is usually about 0.2%-0.3% or so, providing more bang for your buck as it only ta

    • It makes no sense to use a simulated nuke shape that actually has a radioactive, dangerous, and expensive restricted component when it can easily be simulated by replacing it with a safe, inert, and cheap substance.

      You get the volume of the entire device, the weight, and balance correct. You don't give a flying F about what the actual guts are, as you aren't building a real nuclear weapon, just something that can do the physical not explody testing part, like sitting around and dropping with the same charac
      • > when it can easily be simulated by replacing it with a safe, inert, and cheap substance.

        When manufacturing uranium, one creates a _very_ large amount of depleted uranium. It would make a great deal of sense to let the weapon makers practice casting, molding, and shaping with the much safer depleted uranium. After all that practice, I'm sure several complete or nearly complete mockups were left over, and could very easily be repurposed for cargo testing.

      • Re:WTF? (Score:4, Informative)

        by Baloroth ( 2370816 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @03:37PM (#53272659)

        It makes no sense to use a simulated nuke shape that actually has a radioactive, dangerous, and expensive restricted component when it can easily be simulated by replacing it with a safe, inert, and cheap substance.

        They removed the plutonium core (which is radioactive and expensive), and only had natural uranium, which on its own is none of those things (well, technically it's radioactive, but only barely. You could eat it without getting radiation poisoning. It'd kill you from heavy metal poisoning, but not radiation). Hell, you can buy it off Amazon. It's also almost twice as dense as lead, so you can't simulate it with lead (and anything close in density is fantastically rare and expensive, like platinum and gold). Not sure why they'd have TNT inside, though maybe they wanted to make sure it wouldn't explode during the transit process.

      • It makes no sense to use a simulated nuke shape that actually has a radioactive, dangerous, and expensive restricted component when it can easily be simulated by replacing it with a safe, inert, and cheap substance.

        It makes sense if you have an inventory of hundreds of these weapons and you want to keep their specifications a secret.

        A few questions for you. Who would build this "dummy" bomb? What would it be made of to keep the same size, weight, and shape? How far would someone want to deviate from the real thing in training or testing when considering that the success or failure could mean lives lost?

        I'll answer the last question first, when doing testing like this they'd want to have something as real as possibl

    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Informative)

      by SEE ( 7681 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @03:35PM (#53272651) Homepage

      Read the summary again. It wasn't a "dummy" bomb, it was a real Mark IV nuclear bomb.

      What it didn't have was the fissile core loaded. Which is exactly what would be expected; the Mark IV was designed to have the core loaded into the bomb by the aircrew during the flight.

      So, it certainly wasn't a dummy bomb; it was a real Mark IV, with the normal uranium and TNT in the casing. But it almost certainly wasn't a live nuclear bomb, because there would have been no reason at all for the plutonium core to have been loaded on the plane, and even if the plutonium was on the plane, no reason at all for the aircrew to load the plutonium into the bomb.

      Real bomb and no plutonium core.

    • "I don't know what's worse. The fact that this has happened, or the fact that we have a name for it."
    • In some bomb designs a shell of non-weapons grade uranium (ie U 238) is used as a 'tamper' [wikipedia.org], to increase the yield. As for the TNT, it's relatively non-sensitive compared to the fuel in the aircraft.

      If the idea of an aircraft carrying a bomb without the nuclear 'pit' inside it, I recommend you don't read Command and Control by Eric Schlosser, because you'll find out about how many times the USAF flew around with fully armed warheads, or indeed the times they crashed (eg Goldsboro [wikipedia.org]).

  • by mykepredko ( 40154 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @01:45PM (#53272147) Homepage

    I don't know why the poster/editor put in the last line "The crew says they dumped their bomb-like cargo into the ocean first to avoid a detonation on land" as it adds confusion to the story. If you read TFA, it seems like the bomb was dropped into the water to avoid the problems of the TNT exploding and not the BOMB detonating (which doesn't seem possible).

    I'd be interested in finding out why the USAF didn't try to recover the bomb if they thought they knew where it was.

    • by s.petry ( 762400 )

      I don't know why the poster/editor put in the last line "The crew says they dumped their bomb-like cargo into the ocean first to avoid a detonation on land" as it adds confusion to the story. If you read TFA, it seems like the bomb was dropped into the water to avoid the problems of the TNT exploding and not the BOMB detonating (which doesn't seem possible).

      Given our knowledge of nuclear weapons at the time, I'm guessing there was concern about TNT blowing up next to uranium causing a reaction. I'm not a weapons person, and in my ignorance wonder that possibility myself.

      I'd be interested in finding out why the USAF didn't try to recover the bomb if they thought they knew where it was.

      A saucer shaped big-ass weight would have lots of cool ways to travel. Logistics on finding it would have probably put it out of reach..

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        My guess is there was concern the TNT could detonate and spread radioactive uranium over a considerable area, not there would be a nuclear chain reaction. It could have been essentially a dirty bomb if the TNT blew.

        • Uranium makes for a very poor choice as a dirty weapon. Uranium is a toxic metal, so don't eat it, but it is not a radiation hazard. People tasked with handling it will have gloves, a mask, goggle, and maybe a rubber suit. Usually this is because they have to protect the uranium from the people. The uranium in a nuclear reactor or weapon must be very pure to work properly, a fingerprint or hair on the uranium fuel could prove to be dangerous to power plant workers, or merely expensive in fixing the redu

      • A saucer shaped big-ass weight would have lots of cool ways to travel. Logistics on finding it would have probably put it out of reach..

        Seems odd to make a bomb out of something that flies so unpredictably though right? Isn't the idea of a bomb to land at a predetermined point from where you drop it?

    • The object found was also described as saucer shaped, bigger than a king size bed, perfectly flat on top, rounded on the bottom, with a hole through it like a bagel. It takes about 2 seconds to realize that can in no way be the desctiption of a "fat man" nuclear bomb. This is a sensationalist story about a guy who found a piece of trash in the ocean and some old dude said "maybe its a nuclear bomb". I saw this movie. It's called Joe Dirt.

  • Broken Arrow (Score:5, Informative)

    by xororand ( 860319 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @01:59PM (#53272207)

    Lost nuclear bombs are also called "Broken Arrow".

    >the US Department of Defense has officially recognized 32 "Broken Arrow" incidents, including but not limited to
            1950 British Columbia B-36 crash
            1956 B-47 disappearance
            1958 Mars Bluff B-47 nuclear weapon loss incident
            1958 Tybee Island mid-air collision
            1961 Yuba City B-52 crash
            1961 Goldsboro B-52 crash
            1964 Savage Mountain B-52 crash
            1965 Philippine Sea A-4 incident
            1966 Palomares B-52 crash[6]
            1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash
            1980 Damascus, Arkansas incident

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      A lot of fires too :) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      "As experts were reviewing problems with the US nuclear force, the Air Force was withholding the fact that it was investigating damage to a nuclear-armed missile in its launch silo caused by 3 airmen" (Jan. 23, 2016)
      http://www.usnews.com/news/pol... [usnews.com]
      The internal secrecy even from top cleared US experts is also an issue. The newer accidents are just not getting reported to the public as much anymore :)
  • Trusted source? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ebonum ( 830686 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @02:05PM (#53272247)

    Do you actually trust the U.S. government to be honest? It may have been a complete weapon - plutonium and all. They simply made something up to make sure people wouldn't panic (or the real motivation to lie: people would criticize the government for f'ing up. Again.). No one outside a select few has the ability to find out if it had been loaded with plutonium. If they were actually worried about safety, there would not be any TNT or uranium in it. They would have filled the bomb with something inert to give it the same mass, center of mass and maybe even moment of inertia. Nuclear bombs don't go off unless properly triggered, so the risk of a full explosion is about zero. There is a very real risk of it potentially becoming a dirty bomb.

    Lying and deception are completely legit when keeping Americans safe. Doubly so for anything classified.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • Re:Trusted source? (Score:5, Informative)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @02:32PM (#53272407) Homepage Journal

      While you can't trust the military to report honestly to the public on an accident, in this case there is every reason to believe this bomb is quite safe. The Mark IV bomb had a hinge on it so you can open it up and load the fissile pit into it in flight, during an actual bombing run.

      During a training mission there would be no reason to have the fissile pit on the aircraft.

    • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: Someone set us up the bomb.
      Quebec Premier Phillippe Couillard (Operator) : Tabernak! Main screen turn on
      Poutine on screen: All your base are belong to us/
      Poutine on screen: You have no chance to survive. Make your time.
      Minister of National Defence Harjit Sajjan: Take off every zig!
      Minister of National Defence Harjit Sajjan For great justice!
      President-elect Trump: I welcome our poutine-munching overlords.
      President-elect Trump: I love poutine.
      President-elect Trump: I wil

  • by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Saturday November 12, 2016 @03:24PM (#53272607) Homepage Journal
    So I'm guessing the outcome of the study was that the plane can't carry the payload?
    • So I'm guessing the outcome of the study was that the plane can't carry the payload?

      With the extra 4 jet engines in addition to the 6 piston engines it could fly with only 3 of its 6 piston engines, but not a smart move when they're on fire. (That's right - 10 engines).

    • No, it's really a test to see if anyone would read TFA.

      The plane's engines caught on fire.

  • I bet somebody knew where it was but didn't bother saying anything, until Trump was elected.

  • That strange description given by the discoverer certainly doesn't sound like any nuke I've ever seen or heard of.

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

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