Archive for the ‘nuclear weapons’ category: Page 4
Apr 21, 2021
American Honey Still Contains Radioactive Fallout From Nuclear Tests Decades Ago
Posted by Jason Blain in categories: food, military, nuclear weapons
As expected, various samples of fruits, nuts, and other foods revealed very faint traces of cesium-137 when measured with a gamma detector, but even Kaste wasn’t prepared for what happened when he ran the same test with a jar of honey from a North Carolina farmer’s market.
Traces of radioactive fallout from nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s can still be found in American honey, new research reveals.
Nov 26, 2020
Nuclear prohibition: Changing Europe’s calculations
Posted by Sergio Tarrero in categories: geopolitics, law, military, nuclear weapons, treaties
In October, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) reached the 50 ratifications needed to become international law. Beatrice Fihn and Daniel Högsta look at how European governments can use the TPNW to advance nuclear disarmament.
Nov 10, 2020
Kosta Tsipis, MIT physicist and prominent voice for nuclear disarmament, dies at 86
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: existential risks, military, nuclear weapons, physics, treaties
In arguing against nuclear war, Dr. Tsipis said he came « to believe that reason must prevail. »
A curious boy who gazed at the stars from his mountainside Greek village and wondered how the universe came to be, Kosta Tsipis was only 11 when news arrived that the first atomic weapon had been dropped on Hiroshima, Japan.
“After the bomb went off, I sent away for a book because I wanted to understand it,” he told the Globe in 1987.
Nov 1, 2020
UN treaty banning nuclear weapons set to enter into force in January
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: geopolitics, military, nuclear weapons, treaties
In what leading campaigners are describing as “a new chapter for nuclear disarmament”, the ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons will now come into force on 22 January, after Honduras became the 50th Member State to ratify on Saturday.
Jul 4, 2020
The World’s Smallest Nuke- Detonation Clip
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: military, nuclear weapons
Many say that the Cold War didn’t accomplish anything but it did heat up the world of weapon development. The United States and Communist Russia went head to head in the race to develop the most powerful nuclear weapon. However, sometimes the most powerful weapon is not the most efficient one, so the United States took a different approach.
The result was the development of a small, powerful, portable nuclear warhead, the W54. The small nuke earned the nickname “Davey Crockett” was intended for by ground troops and operated via rocket launcher.
Continue reading “The World’s Smallest Nuke- Detonation Clip” »
Jun 13, 2020
Are AI-Powered Killer Robots Inevitable?
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: drones, military, nuclear weapons, robotics/AI, singularity
Autonomous weapons present some unique challenges to regulation. They can’t be observed and quantified in quite the same way as, say, a 1.5-megaton nuclear warhead. Just what constitutes autonomy, and how much of it should be allowed? How do you distinguish an adversary’s remotely piloted drone from one equipped with Terminator software? Unless security analysts can find satisfactory answers to these questions and China, Russia, and the US can decide on mutually agreeable limits, the march of automation will continue. And whichever way the major powers lead, the rest of the world will inevitably follow.
Military scholars warn of a “battlefield singularity,” a point at which humans can no longer keep up with the pace of conflict.
Jun 9, 2020
Russia will open nuclear disarmament talks with US
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: nuclear weapons, treaties
May 29, 2020
This Atomic Tank survived a nuclear test, then went to war
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: military, nuclear weapons
In August of 1953, a British-built Centurion tank drove through the brutal desert terrain of South Australia, its destination a parking spot a few hundred yards from an atomic bomb test. That was just the beginning of this tank’s amazing, and perhaps tragic, operational life.
Apr 22, 2020
Quantum Communication Could Make U.S. Subs Even More Deadly
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: nuclear weapons, quantum physics
University researchers have discovered that quantum communications are possible with submerged objects in turbulent water. The revelation means it might someday be possible for the National Command Authority to use quantum communications to securely communicate with underwater submarines, particularly those that make up part of the nuclear triad.