Previous installment here.
Now we come to the interesting part: propulsion.
Those Magnificent Men and their Atomic Machines
▼
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Monday, March 23, 2015
Two Links
I'm all over the place! Specifically, my article "Alternate Nuclear Wars" can now be read at Alternate History Weekly Update. In addition, my previous blog post on third-generation nuclear weapons can now also be read on William Black's deviantart. Although most of you have probably already read that, you should check out his gallery anyway; Mr. Black is an extremely talented digital artist, who has contributed many of the images of Orions and other atompunk spacecraft you can see in such places as Atomic Rocket.
Sadly, I must warn you not to get used to this pace of updates. A bunch of projects just happened to be completed at once.
Sadly, I must warn you not to get used to this pace of updates. A bunch of projects just happened to be completed at once.
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Third-Generation Nuclear Weapons
I ran into this stuff while working on something else, and thought it was interesting enough to be worth sharing. I may or may not do a longer article on this at some point; getting more information on this is likely to be very difficult, given that the US government holds this stuff pretty close to its chest (as it should).
So what, exactly, is a third-generation nuclear weapon?
So what, exactly, is a third-generation nuclear weapon?
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Building a Spaceship in Dungeons and Dragons
Why? Because we can, that's why.
D&D
space travel has been done before, usually with teleportation magic
(or Spelljammers).
What I'm setting out to do here, though, is to build an actual
spaceship,
that actually traverses the space it crosses. Specifically, I want
to design a spaceship that can be built at the lowest level possible
– most of the components are actually fairly cheap since the
designers weren't expecting you to apply physics to them. The ship
will be designed for a 1-man crew, but should be readily adaptable to
larger crews.
In case it isn't obvious, I'm well aware this is deeply silly. For
those of you here for the nuclear history, don't worry. This blog
is still about history; this is just a momentary diversion. So if you
don't like D&D just skip this and come back later.
Sunday, March 8, 2015
The Philosopher's Bomb, Part 3
Those
Magnificent Men and their Atomic Machines
The
Philosopher's Bomb: The AEC Effort to Create New Elements with
Nuclear Explosions
Part
III
With Special Thanks to
Dr. Stephen A. Becker and Dr. David W. Dorn
DURYEA through
VULCAN
The AEC fired four more
heavy element tests in the spring of 1966: DURYEA (April 14 1966, 70
kT, LRLL), CYCLAMEN (May 5 1966, 12 kT, LASL), KANKAKEE (June 15
1966, 20 to 200 kT, LRLL), and VULCAN (June 25 1966, 25 kT,
LRLL).[GURC][Be2] DURYEA was a failure, but I haven't
been able to find out anything else about it. The other shots left
more concrete records.
Partial List of US Scientific Nuclear Tests
I'm posting this as a separate post, prior to posting Part 3 of The Philosopher's Bomb, because there's a very common misconception about how many nuclear shots the Plowshare program fired off. Most lists of Plowshare tests do not include most of these tests, because they were officially sponsored by the AEC's Division of Military Applications as military tests, and the incorporated experiment was only an add-on. Nonetheless, if we ignore them - which almost all histories of the Plowshare program do - we're missing an important part of the story.