Scientists can now PROVE if nuclear bombs have been properly dismantled by shooting a ‘neutron beam’ at the warhead to scan for plutonium
- Plutonium isotopes are unique and were used in the bombing of Hiroshima
- Many nations are going through a process of giving up their nuclear weapons
- But proving these warheads have been fully taken offline has been impossible
- Researchers have bow created a way to test a warhead to see if it active while not giving away any confidential military secrets
Scientists believe they have created a way to detect if a nuclear warhead has been successfully deactivated.
Currently, it is almost impossible to tell if the weapon itself has been dismantled.
Experts at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have created a neutron beam which detects the telltale presence of a specific type of plutonium used in weapons.
Nuclear warheads have a distinctive material layout as well as the giveaway presence of the plutonium which is responsible for the weapon’s destructive power.
A plutonium bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima in 1945 and killed thousands of people instantly.
Experts say that this method of detection to prove if bombs have been dismantled could be used to ensure nations are not secretly stockpiling nuclear weapons.
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But experts at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have created a neutron beam which can detect the telltale presence of a specific type of plutonium in a warhead. A plutonium bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima in 1945 and killed thousands of people instantly (pictured)
Stored nuclear warheads that have not been properly dismantled could pose extreme danger if they are sold, stolen or accidentally detonated.
‘There’s a real need to preempt these kinds of dangerous scenarios and go after these stockpiles,’ says Areg Danagoulian, an MIT nuclear scientist who led the project.
‘And that really means a verified dismantlement of the weapons themselves.’
The method developed to stop these issues uses what researchers call an isotopic filter to physically encrypt the information unearthed in the analysis.
‘This encrypting filter basically covers up the intrinsic properties of the actual classified object itself,’ Dr Danagoulian explains.
The experiments that led to the breakthrough involved sending a horizontal neutron beam through a warhead.
To avoid the use of the highly-restricted plutonium, researchers instead opted to use molybdenum and tungsten substitutes as they behave similarly.
The beam’s signal is sent to a glass detector, where the data is recorded.
The test works, because the neutron beam can identify the isotope in question.
‘At the low energy range, the neutrons’ interactions are extremely isotope-specific,’ Dr Danagoulian says.
An isotope is a variation of the normal state of an element, and can become unstable due to the presence of various amounts of neutrons.
‘So you do a measurement where you have an isotopic tag, a signal which itself embeds information about the isotopes and the geometry.
‘But you do an additional step which physically encrypts it.’
The encryption process stores the data but alters some exact data, to protect any military secrets while revealing the weapon has been dismantled.
This is key in getting countries on board to willingly subject themselves to tests, the researchers say.
‘This encrypting filter basically covers up the intrinsic properties of the actual classified object itself,’ Dr Danagoulian explains.
They chose to change the physical data itself because using the laws of physics as an encryption method is more robust than that of computer, which can be fallible and fooled by hackers.
To avid the use of the highly-restricted plutonium, which was used in the ‘Little Boy’ bomb of Hiroshima (pictured) researchers instead opted to use molybdenum and tungsten substitutes as they behave similarly
Dr Danagoulian notes: ‘You could, in principle, do it with computers, but computers are unreliable. They can be hacked, while the laws of physics are immutable.’
Researchers tested the encryption to make sure the process could not be reverse engineered to undo the protection and unpick another nation’s military secrets.
His prototype is currently (15metres) long and, in future, Dr Danagoulian wants to miniaturise the apparatus and install one at all weapons sites.
The researchers published their findings in the journal Nature Communications and say far more protocols are needed to be put in place to aid the technique.