Everything about Soviet Atomic Bomb Project totally explained
The
Soviet project to develop an atomic bomb began during
World War II in the
Soviet Union. The USSR tested its first
nuclear weapon in 1949.
Nuclear physics in the Soviet Union
Soviet interest in
nuclear physics had begun in the early 1930s, an era in which a variety of important nuclear discoveries and achievements were made (the identification of the
neutron and
positrons as fundamental particles, the operation of the first
cyclotron to values of over 1
MeV, and the first splitting of the atomic nucleus by
John Cockcroft and
Ernest Walton). The mineralogist
Vladimir Vernadsky had made a number of public calls even before 1917 for a survey of Russia's
uranium deposits. But such surveys were never made, as it was discovered that the main motivation for uranium ores at the time—
radium, which had scientific as well as medical uses—could be retrieved from borehole water from the
Ukhta oilfields.
Nuclear physics wasn't strong in the country, as much of the ideology of the Soviet Union revolved around science for primarily practical and industrial applications. Fearing the possibility of something like
Lysenkoism in physics, Soviet physicists, led by
Abram Ioffe, had attempted to emphasize their commitment to strengthening the Soviet economy and industry, and were purposefully avoiding lines of research which could be accused of being too "theoretical" and "impractical," which is what nuclear physics was generally perceived to be in the 1920s and early 1930s.
After the discovery of
nuclear fission in the late 1930s, scientists in the Soviet Union, like scientists all over the world, realized that
nuclear reactions could, in theory, be used to release large amounts of
binding energy from the
atomic nucleus of uranium. As in the West, the news of fission created great excitement amongst Soviet scientists and many physicists switched their lines of research to those involving nuclear physics in particular, as it was considered a promising field of research. Few scientists thought it would be possible to harness the power of nuclear energy for human purposes within the span of many decades. Soviet nuclear research wasn't far behind Western scientists:
Yakov Frenkel did the first theoretical work on fission in the Soviet Union in 1940, and
Georgii Flerov and
Lev Rusinov concluded that 3±1 neutrons were emitted per fission only days after similar conclusions had been reached by the team of
Frederic Joliot-Curie.
Beginnings of the program
Joseph Stalin was first informed of American nuclear research because of a letter sent to him in April 1942 by
Georgii Flerov, who pointed out that nothing was being published in the physics journals by Americans, Britons, or Germans, on nuclear fission since the year of its discovery, 1939, and that indeed many of the most prominent physicists in Allied countries seemed not to be publishing at all. This nonevent was very suspicious, and accordingly Flerov urged Stalin to start a program. However, because the Soviet Union was still involved with the war with Germany on its home front, a large scale domestic effort couldn't yet be undertaken.
Administration and personnel
The administrative head of the project was Stalin's former chief of security
Lavrentii Beria, and its scientific head was the
physicist Igor Kurchatov. The project started outside
Moscow and later moved to the village of
Sarov, which then disappeared from the maps for forty-five years.
Other important figures were
Yuli Khariton,
Yakov Zeldovich and the future
dissident and lead theoretical designer of their
hydrogen bomb,
Andrei Sakharov.
Espionage
The USSR got details of British initial research, from
Klaus Fuchs and possibly
John Cairncross, though
Alan Nunn May was recruited later in Canada. Beria’s report to Stalin of March 1942 had the
MAUD report and other British documents (Rhodes page 53, 58).
The project benefited from
espionage information gathered from the
Manhattan Project, which the Soviets code-named
Enormoz. The
intelligence obtained by
Pavel Sudoplatov's agents under the control of
Lavrentiy Beria from the
Atomic Spies—
Alan Nunn May,
Klaus Fuchs,
Theodore Hall and the
Rosenbergs—was not however shared freely among the project's scientists, but was rather used as a "check" on the accuracy of their work. After the United States
used its atomic weapons on
Hiroshima and
Nagasaki,
Japan, in 1945, and published the
Smyth Report outlining the basics of their wartime program, Beria had the scientists duplicate the American process as closely as possible in terms of development of resources and factories. The reason was expedience: the goal was to produce a working weapon as soon as possible, and after Hiroshima and Nagasaki they knew that the Allied design would work.
Beria largely distrusted the scientists working under him, which was why he rarely gave them direct access to intelligence information after 1945. He was fond of having multiple teams of scientists working on the same problems, who would only find out the existence of the other team of scientists when they were brought together before Beria to explain the differences in their results with one another. Though Beria wasn't the chief of security at this time, his reputation for ruthlessness was always present, and the Soviet atomic bomb project received status as the highest priority of national security after 1945.
Scholar Alexei Kojevnikov has estimated, based on newly released Soviet documents, that the primary way in which the espionage may have sped up the Soviet project was that it allowed Khariton to avoid dangerous tests to determine the size of the critical mass: "tickling the dragon's tail," as it were called in the U.S., consumed a good deal of time and claimed at least two lives; see
Harry K. Daghlian, Jr. and
Louis Slotin.
Logistical problems the Soviets faced
The single largest problem during the early Soviet project was the procurement of
uranium ore, as it had no known domestic sources at the beginning of the project. The first Soviet
nuclear reactor was fueled using uranium confiscated from the remains of the
German atomic bomb project - eventually, however, large domestic sources were discovered.
Important Soviet nuclear tests
First Lightning
The first Soviet
atomic test was
First Lightning (
Первая молния)
August 29,
1949, and was code-named by the
Americans as
Joe 1. It was a replica of the American
Fat Man bomb whose design the Soviets knew from espionage.
Joe Four
The first Soviet test of a
hydrogen bomb was on
August 12,
1953 and was nicknamed
Joe 4 by the Americans; it was
not a "true" fusion bomb (it was more like a "
boosted" fission bomb than a staged thermonuclear device, and had a yield comparable to large fission weapons; around 90% of its yield was directly or indirectly from fission).
RDS-37
The first Soviet test of a "true" hydrogen bomb in the megaton range was on
November 22,
1955. It was dubbed
RDS-37 by the Soviets. It was of the multi-staged,
radiation implosion thermonuclear design called
Sakharov's "Third Idea" in the USSR and the
Teller-Ulam design in the USA.
Joe 1, Joe 4, and RDS-37 were all tested at the
Semipalatinsk Test Site in
Kazakhstan.
Tsar Bomba
The
Tsar Bomba (Царь бомба) was the largest, most powerful nuclear weapon ever detonated. It was a three-stage
hydrogen bomb with a
yield of about 50
megatons. This is equivalent to ten times the amount of all the explosives used in
World War II combined. It was detonated on
October 30,
1961, in the
Novaya Zemlya archipelago, and was capable of approximately 100
megatons, but was purposely reduced shortly before the launch. Although
weaponized, it wasn't entered into service; it was simply a demonstration of the capabilities of the Soviet Union's military technology at that time. The explosion was hot enough to induce
third degree burns at 100 km.
Chagan
Chagan was shot in the
Nuclear Explosions for the National Economy or Project 7, the Soviet equivalent of the US
Operation Plowshare to investigate
peaceful uses of nuclear weapons. It was a subsurface detonation (note the debris fallout in the photo), and was fired on
January 15 1965. The site was a dry bed of the Chagan River at the edge of the
Semipalatinsk Test Site, and was chosen such that the lip of the crater would dam the river during its high spring flow. The resultant crater had a diameter of 408 meters and was 100 meters deep. A major lake (10,000,000 m³) soon formed behind the 20-35 m high upraised lip, known as
Lake Chagan or
Lake Balapan.
The photo is sometimes confused with
Joe 1 in literature.
Secret cities
During the Cold War the Soviet Union created at least ten
closed cities, known as
Atomgrads, in which nuclear weapons-related research and development took place. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, all of the cities changed their names (most of the original code-names were simply the
oblast and a number). All are still legally "closed", though some have parts of them accessible to foreign visitors with special permits (Sarov, Snezhinsk, and Zheleznogorsk).
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1949 |
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1952 |
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1957 |
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Environmental impact
The hastily constructed nuclear industry providing the materials for the bomb project has caused severe environmental and health hazards by the release of radioactivity. The single most damaging incident took place at the
nuclear fuel reprocessing plant Mayak in 1957 and is considered to be the largest release of radioactivity by
accident, several times more severe than the
Chernobyl disaster.
Further Information
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