Davis speaks out on reliable warhead program
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.1267
Jay Davis
Davis points out that although the plutonium pits
“The proposed RRW was designed using nuclear systems that were more robust and had higher margins against failure, thus relaxing the stress on new non-nuclear systems intended for replacement and future production.”
“It is not a stalking horse for nuclear testing but would increase military and congressional confidence in weapons performance,” he says.
Davis also points out that the US is not the only nuclear power planning or working on modernizing its stockpile—the UK, France, Russia, and China all have programs in place to do so.
Gerald E. Marsh, who wrote a piece on non-proliferation
“Existing nuclear weapons are already very reliable and their safety features are adequate,” he says, and the concern over having an untested weapon in the stockpile will increase the pressure to conduct a nuclear test, he adds.
Paul Guinnessy
Related Physics Today articles Weapons experts and Congress slow warhead program
Related Physics Today articles by Davis Iraq’s secret nuclear weapons program
Related Physics Today articles by Marsh Yields of US and Soviet nuclear tests
More about the authors
Paul Guinnessy, pguinnes@aip.org