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- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!rpi!newsserver.pixel.kodak.com!ekcolor!dj
- From: dj@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com (Dave Jones)
- Subject: Re: Post-StarWars Detritus (was: Who can launch antisats?)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan5.183319.29189@pixel.kodak.com>
- Sender: news@pixel.kodak.com
- Organization: Vonnegut Tent Rentals, Inc.
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- References: <C0E1wv.I60.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Distribution: sci
- Date: Tue, 5 Jan 93 18:33:19 GMT
- Lines: 28
-
- F.Baube x554 (flb@flb.optiplan.fi) wrote:
- > Doug Mohney <sysmgr@king.eng.umd.edu> writes:
- > > Actual use of a nuclear weapon .. would result in ..
- > > EMP problems you'd cause for commercial sats and
- > > (possibly) electronics on the ground.
- > > It would be bad. And a waste of good fissionables
- > > for other purposes.
- >
- > There could also be megabits of nugget-sized space
- > junk to ventilate any later space vehicles. But also,
-
- Nope. The warhead wouldn't be in orbit and its doubtful if any fragments
- would attain orbital velocity of any kind during the explosion.
-
- > if plutonium warheads are "destroyed" by Smart Pebbles
- > (or whatever they're being called now), couldn't the
- > atmosphere be filled with enough plutonium dust to
- > give every person on the planet bone cancer ?
- >
- A lot of interception technology is based on giving the target enough of
- a shock to disable the high-tech firing mechanisms and/or guidance systems.
- Nuclear warheads don't explode when intercepted. They just don't go off
- when they get to the target, if they get there at all. You just wind up
- with a lot of small, very dangerous impact craters on the ground.
-
- --
- ||------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ||Dave Jones (dj@ekcolor.ssd.kodak.com)|Eastman Kodak Co. Rochester, NY |
-