Mark 4 (nuclear weapon): Difference between revisions

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One of the earliest United States nuclear weapons, the '''Mark 4''' was still first-generation but a production-quality, re-engineered version of the Fat Man (nuclear weapon)|Fat Man bomb that had been used on Nagasaki.  An  fission device|implosion device, its yield of which could be varied from 1, 3.5, 8, 14, 21, 22, and 31 kt by exchanging the plutonium pits; it also contained uranium. Mark 4 was the first weapon made on an assembly line rather than by hand. 550 were produced.<ref>{{citation
One of the earliest United States nuclear weapons, the '''Mark 4''' was still first-generation but a production-quality, re-engineered version of the Fat Man (nuclear weapon)|Fat Man bomb that had been used on Nagasaki.  An  fission device|implosion device, its yield of which could be varied from 1, 3.5, 8, 14, 21, 22, and 31 kt by exchanging the plutonium pits; it also contained uranium. Mark 4 was the first weapon made on an assembly line rather than by hand. 550 were produced.<ref>{{citation
  | url = http://www.strategic-air-command.com/weapons/nuclear_bomb_chart.htm
  | url = http://www.strategic-air-command.com/weapons/nuclear_bomb_chart.htm
Line 5: Line 6:
  | publisher = StrategicAirCommand.com}}</ref>
  | publisher = StrategicAirCommand.com}}</ref>
==Relation to later devices==
==Relation to later devices==
{{seealso|Blue Danube (nuclear weapon)}}
{{seealso|Mark 6 (nuclear weapon)}}
It was among the design ancestors of the first deployed British nuclear weapon, the Blue Danube (nuclear weapon)|Blue Danube bomb. Mark 4 was also the basis of the first systematic engineering testing of United States of America|U.S. bombs since World War II, in the 1951 Operation Ranger a series of air drops over the Nevada (U.S. state)|Nevada desert. The test program explored variations in the Mark 4 core, and then tested the Mark 6 (nuclear weapon),<ref>{{citation
It was among the design ancestors of the first deployed British nuclear weapon, the Blue Danube (nuclear weapon)|Blue Danube bomb. Mark 4 was also the basis of the first systematic engineering testing of United States of America|U.S. bombs since World War II, in the 1951 Operation Ranger a series of air drops over the Nevada (U.S. state)|Nevada desert. The test program explored variations in the Mark 4 core, and then tested the Mark 6 (nuclear weapon),<ref>{{citation
  | title = Operation Ranger: 1951
  | title = Operation Ranger: 1951
  | date = 3 January 2005
  | date = 3 January 2005
  | url = http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Tests/Ranger.html
  | url = http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Tests/Ranger.html
  | publisher = Nuclear Weapons Archive}}</ref> essentially an improved, lighter-weight Mark 4.  
  | publisher = Nuclear Weapons Archive}}</ref> essentially an improved, lighter-weight Mark 4.


==Accidents==
==Accidents==
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==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

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One of the earliest United States nuclear weapons, the Mark 4 was still first-generation but a production-quality, re-engineered version of the Fat Man (nuclear weapon)|Fat Man bomb that had been used on Nagasaki. An fission device|implosion device, its yield of which could be varied from 1, 3.5, 8, 14, 21, 22, and 31 kt by exchanging the plutonium pits; it also contained uranium. Mark 4 was the first weapon made on an assembly line rather than by hand. 550 were produced.[1]

Relation to later devices

It was among the design ancestors of the first deployed British nuclear weapon, the Blue Danube (nuclear weapon)|Blue Danube bomb. Mark 4 was also the basis of the first systematic engineering testing of United States of America|U.S. bombs since World War II, in the 1951 Operation Ranger a series of air drops over the Nevada (U.S. state)|Nevada desert. The test program explored variations in the Mark 4 core, and then tested the Mark 6 (nuclear weapon),[2] essentially an improved, lighter-weight Mark 4.

Accidents

For more information, see: Nuclear weapons accidents.

The Mark 4 was the first bomb involved in an operational accident. On 10 November 1950. a B-50, in mechanical distress, jettisoned its bomb over the St. Lawrence River, approximately 300 miles northeast of Montreal, Quebec. The weapon's HE [high explosive] detonated on impact, scattering nearly 100 pounds (45 kg) of uranium. Its plutonium pit remained aboard the aircraft, which later landed safely. [3]

References

  1. Chart of Strategic Nuclear Bombs, StrategicAirCommand.com
  2. Operation Ranger: 1951, Nuclear Weapons Archive, 3 January 2005
  3. Broken Arrows: Nuclear Weapons Accidents, AtomicArchive