Chicago Sun-Times

North Korea’s nuke blast under scrutiny

Experts skeptical that H-bomb was detonated

- Jim Michaels

The United States and its allies should be able to determine within weeks whether North Korea’s nuclear test involved a hydrogen bomb — as it claimed — through a network of seismic and other devices that detect and measure nuclear explosions.

“They have pretty much surrounded North Korea” with such devices, said Greg Thielmann, an analyst at the Arms Control Associatio­n and former State Department intelligen­ce analyst. “My guess is within a couple weeks the U.S. will have reached some conclusion­s.”

Experts will analyze both the size of the explosion and the radioactiv­e particles emitted by the detonation, Thielmann and other analysts said.

Hydrogen bombs are far more powerful and complex than atomic bombs and difficult to make because they require fusion, or the fusing of atoms, rather than fission, the splitting of atoms that creates the power of atomic bombs.

Experts already are skeptical that North Korea detonated a hydrogen bomb, despite claims from the capital Pyongyang.

Initial reports suggest the North Korean test yielded a 6-kiloton explosion, which would be significan­tly smaller than a hydrogen bomb would typically produce, said Michaela Dodge, an ana- lyst at Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based think tank. The yield is more comparable to North Korea’s previous atomic bomb tests.

Devices that measure seismic activity, called the Internatio­nal-Monitoring System, have been establishe­d around the world as part of the internatio­nal Comprehens­ive Test Ban Treaty.

The treaty organizati­on has encouraged countries to allow monitors to be placed within their borders.

In addition, the United States has independen­t technical monitoring systems to measure such tests, including spy satellites and aircraft that can scoop up particles discharged by nuclear explosions.

“Much can be learned by the type of particles that are released,” Thielman said. “That is what would definitely tell those countries monitoring what the bomb was made of.”

 ?? KNS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Aphoto released by Korean Central News Agency shows people in Pyongyang reacting to news of a hydrogen bomb test the government claims it has conducted.
KNS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Aphoto released by Korean Central News Agency shows people in Pyongyang reacting to news of a hydrogen bomb test the government claims it has conducted.

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