1. What’s more comforting is that what they said really doesn’t make much sense.
    They identified it as an H-bomb. They also said that the plutonium slug was not in the bomb when it was lost. That leaves only the tritium (the fusion part of a thermonuclear weapon).
    Tritium is very difficult to detect from a distance (nee imposible). And it decays rather quickly. So today there would be less than 1/4 of the original tritium still present.
    Finally, they said they detected it via its radiation emissions.
    That I cannot see as possible. Somewhere in that story, they are not telling us the truth.

  2. Reminds me of one of the better lines from the film “Broken Arrow”: I don’t know what’s scarier, losing nuclear weapons, or that it happens so often that there’s actually a term for it.
    Incidentally, when I was in the Navy it was true that “broken arrow” was the codeword for a lost nuclear weapon incident. Don’t know if that’s changed or not since then.

Comments are closed.