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How It Works
A nuclear weapon gets its name and its explosive power from the nucleus (core) of an atom. Atoms are tinybuilding blocks of matter much too small to see. An atomic bomb works by fissioning (splitting) the nuclei of atoms of the metals uranium or plutonium. It is sometimes called a fission weapon. A hydrogen bombworks by fusing (joining together) the nuclei of atoms of the gas hydrogen. Atomic bombs and hydrogenbombs are the two main kinds of nuclear weapons. The hydrogen bomb is far more powerful and destructive than the atomic bomb. The hydrogen bomb is like a tiny star. It works by the same process—the fusion ofhydrogen atoms—that makes the Sun and other stars shine. A nuclear weapon destroys by the power andheat of its blast. The atomic bomb dropped on Japan flattened buildings within 3 miles (5 kilometers) of the blast. Heat from the bomb caused fires and burned everything near the place it exploded. People’s skin wasburned as far as 11 miles (18 kilometers) from the blast site.A nuclear weapon also releases harmful radiation. People near the blast can die of radiation sickness even if the bomb doesn’t kill them. Peoplefarther from the blast may develop cancer and other illnesses from radiation months and years after thebomb explodes. The nuclei of some isotopes (different types of atoms of the same element) of heavy elements such as uranium and plutonium can split when they absorb a neutron. This splitting is known as nuclear fission. Nuclear fission releases a great amount of energy in the form of heat and radiation. It also expels neutrons that can be absorbed by other nuclei, which may then fission and give off more energy and neutrons, and so on. This process is known as a fission chain reaction.
Unlike in nuclear explosions, where the chain reaction happens at an extremely rapid and uncontrolled pace, in nuclear reactors, the fission chain reaction takes place slowly and in a controlled manner. The resulting energy can, therefore, be used in a nuclear power reactor to generate electricity or in a nuclear research reactor to create radioactive materials needed for medicine or industry.
Isotopes capable of fission are called fissionable isotopes. The most common fissionable isotope is uranium-238 (U-238). Large quantities of U-238 exist in nature, but U-238 does not fission very easily. For this reason, while U-238 can be used to fuel some types of nuclear reactors, it cannot be used to create a nuclear explosion. Other fissionable isotopes, such as uranium-235 (U-235) or plutonium-239 (Pu-239), fission much more easily. These isotopes are called fissile isotopes.Because they fission easily, fissile isotopes are very useful for producing energy in nuclear reactors; however, they can also be used to create a nuclear explosion. All fissile isotopes are extremely rare, and most do not exist in nature in appreciable amounts. (Natural uranium consists of 99 percent U-238 but less than 0.7 percent U-235, while Pu-239 is not found in nature.) Highly complex industrial processes are needed to increase the concentrations of U-235 and to produce and separate Pu-239, activities that probably are beyond the capabilities of terrorist organizations.
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