Cobalt bomb
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A cobalt bomb, a type of salted bomb, is a nuclear weapon originally proposed by physicist Leó Szilárd, who suggested that it would be capable of destroying all life on Earth. The weapon's tamper would be made of ordinary cobalt metal, rather than a fertile material like depleted uranium. This would be transmuted into the isotope 60Co upon initiation and bombardment by neutron radiation. 60Co decays into an excited 60Ni by beta decay. The excited 60Ni then transitions to a ground state 60Ni, releasing gamma radiation. 60Co has historically been used for beneficial purposes in radiation therapy.
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[edit] Weapon of global destruction
- See also: Doomsday device
The fallout would have a half-life of 5.27 years and would be intensely radioactive, a combination which caused Szilárd to suggest that such bombs could wipe out all life on the planet. One gram of 60Co contains approximately 1.85 terabecquerels (50 Ci) of radioactivity. Held at close range, this amount of cobalt-60 would irradiate a person with approximately 0.5 gray of ionizing radiation per minute. A prompt, full body dose of approximately three to four grays would kill 50% of the population in thirty days, and could be accumulated in just a few minutes of exposure to a gram of 60Co.
Smaller amounts of 60Co would take longer to kill, but would be effective over a large area. Even so, critics of the cobalt bomb concept point out that the mass needed would still be unreasonably large: 1 gram of 60Co per square kilometer of Earth's surface is 510 tonnes. The sheer size and cost of such a weapon makes it unlikely to be built, although it is technically possible because there is no maximum size limit for a thermonuclear bomb.
The significance of such a bomb is that the 5.27 year half-life of its radioactive fallout is long enough to permit worldwide dispersal of the fallout before its radioactivity decays significantly (thus making it impractical for anyone to shelter from the contamination), yet is short enough to ensure sufficient intensely lethal radiation is produced. After fifteen to twenty years, the 60Co radiation would decrease by a factor of eight to sixteen, presumably making the area habitable again. The 60Co would have decayed to stable, and thus harmless, 60Ni.
[edit] Cobalt bombs in the media
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[edit] Fiction
Inspired by Szilárd's warnings, science fiction authors have occasionally made cobalt bombs the doomsday weapons in their works:
- The Sum of All Fears by Tom Clancy describes wrapping the bomb on the plane in a cobalt jacket to poison the enemy's landscape.
- On the Beach by Nevil Shute is one of the best known of the fictional stories dealing with cobalt bombs.
- The movie Dr. Strangelove (released Jan, 29, 1964) by Stanley Kubrick describes the Soviet Union building a cobalt/thorium-G bomb.
- The movie Goldfinger (first released September 1964) features a Chinese "atomic device" which is "small, but particularly dirty." James Bond surmises that this device uses "cobalt and iodine" to irradiate the gold at Fort Knox for "57 years" (Goldfinger corrects him to 58 years).
- The film Beneath the Planet of the Apes, the first sequel to the film Planet of the Apes, includes a group of oddly mutated humans living in an underground city within the ruins of the New York Subway system that worship an Alpha-Omega bomb, a nuclear weapon with a cobalt casing that is capable of causing a chain reaction that would (supposedly) incinerate the entire Earth's atmosphere. The final voice-over in the film indicates that it was successful, as does the next film in the series, Escape from the Planet of the Apes.
- In A Taste of Armageddon, a first-season episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, a minor character refers to the use of "tri-cobalt devices" as the primary weapons of both sides in an interplanetary war.
- In Obsession, a second-season episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, Ens. Garrovick compares the yield of the anti-matter device that he and Kirk are deploying to kill the gas creature to that of a cobalt bomb.
- Adventure Comics #250 published by DC Comics featured Superboy deputized to track down a criminal from the future seeking materials to make an outlawed cobalt bomb.
- In one story of Larry Niven's Rainbow Mars, cobalt bombs make an alternate world almost unlivable following the Short War.
- In The Illuminati, a novel by Larry Burkett, Israel develops cobalt bombs but they are destroyed before they can be used.
[edit] Games
- The Damocles, a unique starship found in the computer game Weird Worlds: Return to Infinite Space, is armed with "Cobalt Thorium G" torpedoes.
[edit] News
The United Kingdom reputedly conducted a nuclear experiment involving cobalt as a radioactive tracer in 1957, at the Tadje site, Maralinga range, Australia, but it was announced to be a failure [1].
In the twenty-first century, new attention came to 60Co as a weapon of mass destruction, as the possibility of creating a dirty bomb to disperse this material might produce a swath of death downwind from it, over a significant area, as a terrorist attack. This is simpler than an actual nuclear weapon cobalt bomb, with a smaller range, though it is suggested that it could kill tens of thousands of people in a dense urban area [2].
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links
- "Dr Strangelove and the real Doomsday machine": a review in the TLS by Christopher Coker, August 8, 2007
- Types of Nuclear Weapons Cobalt Bombs and other Salted Bombs, May 1998