Morning Briefing - October 06, 2016
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October 06, 2016

Sandia Conducts Safety Test of B61-12 Nuke

By ExchangeMonitor

The Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico said Wednesday it is evaluating data from a safety test of the U.S. B61-12 nuclear gravity bomb.

In the March 9 trial, a B61-12 test unit was placed on a 10,000-foot rocket sled track that launched the fake but otherwise realistic device into a steel and concrete wall. The intent was to enable Sandia engineers to study the B61-12’s safety systems to prevent unintended nuclear explosions.

The B61-12 program is intended to extend the life of the B61 gravity bomb for 20 years at an estimated cost of $8.1 billion. Most of the design work for the refurbishment of the B61 is done at the Sandia and Los Alamos national laboratories. The weapon is deployed at several bases in Europe.

The March “abnormal environment” test was the result of more than a year of preparation. It followed “normal environment” tests in 2014 and 2015 in which a rocket sled was slammed into a simulated B61-12.

“Abnormal environment tests are performed to benchmark the performance of safety features designed into weapons,” Matt Brewer, lead test engineer, said in a press release.

The fake B61-12 was loaded with an internal data recorder to collect information from the impact and “to validate computer models,” the release says. Physical tests are paired with computer modeling to evaluate the weapon in a host of accident situations.

“We will use the models to predict how our nuclear safety components will perform in numerous postulated accident scenarios without actually conducting tests,” John Sichler, head of Sandia’s Center Bomb Subassembly Production Realization Team, said in the release. “Over the past five years we’ve been improving out models. It’s remarkable how good they have become.”

Sandia spokeswoman Sue Holmes said Wednesday she did not have any information on the cost of the accident test or the timeline for completion of safety testing for the B61-12. The program just entered its final design phase, which will incorporate data from a variety of testing, she said. The first B61-12 production units are due in 2020.

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