tlb wrote:Loren Pechtel wrote:Look at Chernobyl. While I have seen some debate as to whether the power excursion actually went prompt critical or merely came very close to it the result was an energy release far beyond what could be contained. (And note that stronger containment wouldn't have helped--if you somehow kept it from going boom it would have kept on generating ever more power until the reaction poisoned itself. The power excursion would have gone into large h-bomb levels.)
Likewise, if you're containing a lot of very hot plasma you simply can't build a reactor that can guarantee to contain it against all forms of battle damage.cthia wrote:A hydrogen bomb type explosion never could have occurred. The structure would have destroyed itself.
Should that be atomic bomb, rather than hydrogen bomb; since we are talking about a fission reaction and not a fusion one?
Power of a h-bomb, even though the reaction is fission. Chernobyl contained far more fuel than the largest of atomic bombs. The essence of an atomic bomb is to make a supercritical mass and extract as much power as you can before the energy involved blows it apart. Since you have no way to contain the energy this means the reaction must go very, very fast--all the fancy engineering is to convert a subcritical mass into a mass with as high a multiplication factor as possible and to do it very, very quickly.
However, if you can put your fission reaction in an unobtaininum box that can hold it the supercritical mass won't disassemble itself in microseconds, the reaction continues until either the box breaks or the reaction is poisoned enough to stop.
(Note that you can also see very large fission blasts when you don't have to worry about assembly--note the fission-fusion-fission bomb design. Jacket an h-bomb in uranium (it need not be enriched, even depleted works fine), while the uranium can't sustain a reaction it's quite capable of fissioning from the neutrons thrown off by the fusion stage. It's a cheap way to boost an h-bomb or even make a dial-a-yield device. (Put the U-238 plates on if you want the bigger boom, or make the bomb jettison them before detonation if the smaller yield is desired.) For the ultimate example, consider Tsar Bomba. As dropped it was 53 megatons, but the U-238 was replaced with something inert. Put the U-238 on and it would be about 100 megatons--thus a 50 megaton fission yield.)