Nuclear Attack
By Tia Ghose, Senior Writer
North Korea has successfully
miniaturized a nuclear warhead that could be fitted onto an intercontinental
ballistic missile, and has now threatened to attack Guam, a U.S. territory,
according to several news reports.
In response, President Donald Trump
used some apocalyptic rhetoric of his own.
"North Korea best not make any more threats to the
United States," Trump told
reporters on Tuesday at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, according to
news reports. "They will be met with
fire and fury like the world has never seen."
The saber rattling has raised concerns
about the possibility of a nuclear attack on U.S. soil and heightened fears of
doomsday.
But is a global nuclear winter just
around the corner?
While the effects of a detonation on
American soil would certainly be scary and could set off a larger global
catastrophe, one nuclear attack in itself isn't a certain death sentence, as
many people assume, said Michael May, a professor emeritus at the
Engineering-Economic Systems and Operations Research Center for International
Security and Cooperation at Stanford University.
In addition, survival rates depend on
whether the weapons are deployed by a well-armed hostile nation like Russia; a
country, like North Korea, that has with a limited nuclear arsenal; or a
terrorist group, he said.
It also depends on how far people are
from the epicenter, May said.
Likeliest attacks
When most people
think of nuclear war, they imagine a Cold War-type, mutually assured
destruction scenario in which two countries lob a flurry of nuclear weapons at each other, decimating each other's
military, food and power infrastructure and raining radioactive fallout on
large swaths of the world.
But despite the current tensions with
Russia, a terrorist attack using a dirty bomb — a nuclear weapon patched
together from explosives and radioactive nuclear waste — or a lone attack from
a country such as North Korea is slightly more likely, May said.
While the United States has a prototype
nuclear missile-defense shield, this technology doesn't work very well, Live
Science previously reported.
Still, the likeliest scenario would be
one detonation, rather than the hundreds that would leave America a
post-apocalyptic wasteland, May said.
"If it's a lone, single weapon, [then] outside that
central area, there's a pretty good chance of survival," May told Live Science.
Even Cold War analyses that forecasted
a complete war of annihilation between Russia and the United States would
likely result in "only" 40
million casualties on American soil, said May.
Of course, the food and water
infrastructure would likely be destroyed in such a scenario, leading to
catastrophe, he added.
Immediate blast zone
The worst effects
would likely be felt in the heart of an urban blast zone, May said.
For instance, for a 10-kiloton nuclear
weapon, equivalent to the size of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs, would
immediately kill about 50 percent of the people within a 2-mile (3.2
kilometers) radius of ground detonation, according to a 2007 report from a
Preventive Defense Project workshop.
Some of these people would be injured
by pressure from the explosion, while most would be exposed to injuries from
collapsed buildings or from flying shrapnel; most buildings in a 0.5-mile (0.6
km) radius of the detonation would be knocked down or heavily damaged.
Injuries to extremities would be
extremely common, according to the Preventive Defense Project study.
A few people would be injured by
thermal burns caused by the fireball after the detonation.
People in this area may also be exposed
to extremely high levels of radioactivity, and many first responders and
search-and-rescue workers would have to wait to enter these areas until the
radiation levels had dropped, meaning assistance would be limited.
People with subsurface basements in the
primary blast zone may be able to survive the primary blast, assuming there's only
one, May said.
Even those who are a mile away from the
epicenter of the explosion may have time to increase their survival odds; the
light flash from the detonation travels much faster than the pressure and shock
waves, meaning people may have a bit of time to close their eyes, move away
from windows, duck and cover themselves, according to the Preventive Defense
Workshop report.
Radioactive fallout
The next immediate
hazard to deal with is the radioactive fallout.
When a nuclear bomb explodes, it
pulverizes thousands of tons of earth, comingling that material with
radioactive particles from the explosion.
This process forms the iconic mushroom
cloud, and as those thousands of tons of radioactive bits of ash, rock and dust
float toward the ground, they emit radioactivity.
The largest, heaviest particles of this
nuclear snow settle first and are mostly contained in the initial blast
area.
Smaller particles may float higher and
farther and reach 10 to 20 miles (16 to 32 km) downwind, but the bulk of their
radioactivity rapidly decays over time and they often take a long time to
settle back to ground level.
In the absence of snow or rain - which
would help to pull the fallout to the ground faster - far-flung particles may
have minimal radioactivity by the time they float to Earth, according to the
handbook "Nuclear War Survival Skills" (Oak Ridge National Laboratory, 1987)
By 48 hours after the blast, an area
that is initially exposed to 1,000 roentgens per hour of radiation will
experience only 10 roentgens per hour of radiation, according to "Nuclear
War Survival Skills."
About half of the people who experience
a total radiation dose of about 350 roentgens over a couple of days are likely
to die from acute radiation poisoning, according to the handbook.
(A typical abdominal computed
tomography scan may expose people to less than one roentgen.)
Those in the blast area can take some
measures to protect themselves, if they have some warning.
For example, they can go into a heavily
reinforced building and stay away from windows; fall to the ground and cover
their bodies (duck and cover), waiting at least 30 seconds after the blast for
the shock wave to hit; and remain in a shelter until word comes that it's safe
to evacuate.
After the blast, people should remove
their outer clothing and shower if possible to remove radioactive particles.
In a full-scale nuclear war, there may
be more long-term contamination of the food supply.
For instance, fallout may land on
croplands and be taken up by the food supply, which could then cause
longer-term problems such as cancer, May said.
Radioactive iodine, in particular,
could be a problem, he said.
"Cows are concentrating the iodine in the milk, and
children concentrate the iodine in the milk into the thyroids," leading to thyroid cancer, May said.
EMPs
Nuclear
detonations also cause electromagnetic pulses (EMP’S) that can damage a wide range of
electrical and communications equipment, especially within a radius of 2 to 5
miles (3.2 to 8 km) from a ground-level, 10-kiloton explosion.
Vehicles could stall, communications
and cell towers would be disrupted, computers would be destroyed, and the water
and electrical grid could also be destroyed.
First responders that come in from
outside the area with unaffected electronics should still be able to operate
their devices, according to the 2007 report.
Preparing for a blast
Among preparatory
steps people can take, the coordination and planning of first responders would
likely have the biggest effect on casualty levels, but individuals can also
take a few easy preventive steps, May said.
The ultrawealthy may build high-end
bomb shelters, but even the average person can take steps to minimize risks, he
said.
Some of those steps - such as having
extra food, water and first-aid supplies available — will work for other
emergencies, too.
Other steps may be unique to a nuclear
attack. For instance, respiratory protection, such as cheap face masks or even
cloths held over the nose and mouth, can help reduce radiation exposure,
according to the workshop report.
Nuclear attacks would also necessitate
equipment for measuring radiation.
People who are waiting to emerge from
their shelter after a blast will want to know which areas have dangerous levels
of radiation.
"You might get yourself a radiation meter. They
don't cost very much," May told Live Science.
Other safety tips: Keep a radio to
maintain communications with the outside world.
This radio can be placed in a metal
storage box to protect it against EMPs, along with a sealed, large plastic bag
for containment to protect against humidity, according to the "Nuclear War
Survival Skills" handbook.
Originally
published on Live Science
Tia Ghose,
Senior Writer
Tia
has interned at Science News, Wired.com, and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and
has written for the Center for Investigative Reporting, Scientific American,
and ScienceNow. She has a master's degree in bioengineering from the University
of Washington and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University
of California Santa Cruz.
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