• NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES
  • Vol. 45, Issue 10, 100503 (2022)
Li LIU*, Shengli NIU, Jinhui ZHU, Yinghong ZUO, and Honggang XIE
Author Affiliations
  • Northwest Institute of Nuclear Technology, Xi'an 710024, China
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    DOI: 10.11889/j.0253-3219.2022.hjs.45.100503 Cite this Article
    Li LIU, Shengli NIU, Jinhui ZHU, Yinghong ZUO, Honggang XIE. Motion characteristics and laws of the debris from a near-space nuclear detonation[J]. NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES, 2022, 45(10): 100503 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Background

    The debris motion is an important phenomenon of a high-altitude nuclear detonation, which is also a foundation for the study of the geophysical phenomena such as the ionosphere effect and artificial radiation belt.

    Purpose

    The study aims to clarify the debris motion characteristics and laws from a near-space nuclear detonation.

    Methods

    Firstly, a fluid dynamics model of debris motion from a near-space nuclear detonation was established. Many influence factors were considered, such as the variation of energy dissipation, air density varies with height, gravity, air temperature rise caused by X-ray depositions and radiation cooling. Then the parameters of debris motion within the explosion equivalent of 1 kt~10 Mt and the explosion height of 30~80 km were systematically studied. The evolutions of parameters such as center height, horizontal radius, expanding velocity, ascending velocity, and shape of debris were given. Finally, the variation laws of typical characteristic parameters such as maximum ascending height and expanding radius changing with explosion height and explosion equivalent were summarized.

    Results

    When the explosion height is 30 km, the maximum rising height and the maximum horizontal radius at 5 min for a kiloton-level nuclear explosion debris are about 13~16 km and 4~5 km, the maximum rising height and the maximum horizontal radius at 5 min for a megaton-level nuclear explosion debris are about 20~40 km and 15~30 km. When the explosion height is 80 km, the maximum rising height and the maximum horizontal radius at 5 min for a kiloton-level nuclear explosion debris are about 30~50 km and 20~40 km, the maximum rising height and the maximum horizontal radius at 5 min for a megaton-level nuclear explosion debris are about 200~400 km and 110~220 km. When the explosion equivalent is small and the explosive height is low, the debris evolves into a flat ellipsoid. When the explosion equivalent is large and the explosion height is high, the debris evolves into an inverted pear shape.

    Conclusions

    The results show that the maximum height, horizontal radius, and speed of the debris cloud increase with the increase in the explosion height and explosion equivalent. The changes of the height, the horizontal radius, the rising time, and the shape of the debris obtained from the study are in good agreement with the literature estimation method. Those obtained motion parameters of debris can provide delayed radiation source information for the study of the geophysical phenomena such as the ionosphere effect and artificial radiation belt of nuclear explosion in near-space.

    Li LIU, Shengli NIU, Jinhui ZHU, Yinghong ZUO, Honggang XIE. Motion characteristics and laws of the debris from a near-space nuclear detonation[J]. NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES, 2022, 45(10): 100503
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