상세 컨텐츠

본문 제목

원자탄과 수소탄의 차이/NYT

자료/한반도 자료

by gino's 2017. 9. 13. 20:10

본문

Photo
 
Lee Mi-sun, a senior analyst at the South Korean Meteorological Administration, with charts showing the power of the North’s nuclear test on Sunday. The underground blast set off tremors felt in South Korea and China.
 
CreditJeon Heon-Kyun/European Pressphoto Agency

North Korea claimed that a nuclear blast on Sunday was a big advance from its previous five tests because it had successfully detonated a hydrogen bomb. But some experts suspect the North may have tested a “boosted” atomic bomb.

How are a hydrogen bomb and a regular atomic bomb different? And why would that matter to the United States and its allies? Here’s what the experts say.

How do nuclear weapons work?

Nuclear weapons trigger an explosive reaction that shears off destructive energy locked inside the bomb’s atomic materials.

The first atomic weapons, like those dropped by the United States on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II, did that with fission: splitting unstable uranium or plutonium atoms so that their subatomic neutrons fly free, smash up more atoms and create a devastating blast.

How is a hydrogen bomb different?

A hydrogen bomb, also called a thermonuclear bomb or an H-bomb, uses a second stage of reactions to magnify the force of an atomic explosion.

Continue reading the main story
Continue reading the main story

North Korea’s Program Is Probably at an Intermediate Phase of Development

The secret to achieving more destructive power is to increase the amount of thermonuclear fuel that an exploding atomic bomb can ignite. North Korea said that Sunday’s test was a hydrogen bomb, but analysts were skeptical of this claim.

STAGE 2

Boosted Atomic Bomb

uses a bit of thermonuclear fuel inside the atomic core

STAGE 3

Layered Atomic Bomb

uses more thermonuclear fuel outside the atomic core

STAGE 4

Hydrogen Bomb

uses lots of hydrogen fuel that the nearby atomic core ignites

STAGE 1

Implosion Atomic Bomb

uses conventional explosives to compress and ignite atomic fuel

1,000

1

3

25

Equal to Hiroshima

Explosive

layer

Atomic

bomb

Atomic fuel

Thermonuclear gas

Solid thermonuclear fuel

Solid thermonuclear fuel

That stage is fusion: mashing hydrogen atoms together in the same process that fuels the sun. When these relatively light atoms join together, they unleash neutrons in a wave of destructive energy.

A hydrogen weapon uses an initial nuclear fission explosion to create a tremendous pulse that compresses and fuses small amounts of deuterium and tritium, kinds of hydrogen, near the heart of the bomb. The swarms of neutrons set free can ramp up the explosive chain reaction of a uranium layer wrapped around it, creating a blast far more devastating than uranium fission alone.

Continue reading the main story
 

The United States tested a hydrogen bomb at Bikini Atoll in 1954 that was over 1,000 times more powerful than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. Britain, China, France and Russia have also created hydrogen bombs.

Castle Bravo
 
Video by atomcentral

What would a successful hydrogen test mean?

North Korea claimed that it successfully staged a hydrogen bomb test in January 2016, but experts were skeptical.

GRAPHIC

Can North Korea Actually Hit the United States With a Nuclear Weapon?

Six systems that North Korea needs to master to achieve a long-sought goal: being able to reliably hit the United States.

 OPEN GRAPHIC

A successful test this time would show that the North’s nuclear program has become more sophisticated and that the country is closer to making an atomic warhead that could be fitted on a long-range missile able to strike the mainland United States.

The underground blast, which caused tremors felt in South Korea and China, was the first by the North to surpass the destructive power of the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

If the North has the capability to build a hydrogen bomb, it could open the way to making warheads that pack much more destructive power in a smaller space. It could also enable North Korea to enhance the threat from its limited stocks of enriched uranium.

What will experts look for?

Analysts who advise governments on nuclear weapons will study the shock waves from the blast measured by monitoring stations. They will also look for clues from traces of nuclear gases that could float into the atmosphere.

Those traces may tell if this test was really a hydrogen bomb, or perhaps something less than a full-scale thermonuclear device. But it can take weeks for the gases to leak out and be detected.

Correction: September 3, 2017 

An earlier of version incorrectly described both deuterium and tritium as radioactive. Tritium is radioactive, but deuterium is not.

 

관련글 더보기