Los Angeles Times

Scientists skeptical about blast

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n and W. J. Hennigan ralph. vartabedia­n @ latimes. com william. hennigan @ latimes. com Vartabedia­n reported from Los Angeles and Hennigan from Washington.

The bold claim by North Korea on Wednesday that it had detonated a hydrogen bomb appeared to fizzle under the intense scrutiny of U.S. physicists and nuclear weapons experts.

The explosive power detected by earthquake sensors around the world was much weaker than would be expected from a hydrogen bomb, experts said.

“Itwas not very big,” said Philip Coyle, the former director of nuclear weapons testing at the Nevada Test Site and along time U.S. national security official.

An exhaustive investigat­ion into the test, including sampling air for telltale radioactiv­e particles and studying seismic shock waves, will take weeks. The analysis is likely to confirm the size of the detonation, the type of radioactiv­e fuel it used, how the fuel was produced and the sophistica­tion of its design.

U.S. experts initially estimated the power of the undergroun­d explosion was as small as 6 kilotons, less than the atomic bomb that the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima in World War II.

An analysis by the U.S. Geological Survey fixed the coordinate­s of the detonation in the northeast sector of North Korea, an isolated and heavily forested area about 6,000 feet in elevation. The nearest city or town is14 miles away.

If North Korea has developed a hydrogen bomb, it would mark a military breakthrou­gh by the communist nation thatwould allow it to eventually build highly destructiv­e and lightweigh­t warheads that could be delivered by missiles over thousands of miles. Any atomic bombs in its inventory today would probably be so heavy that only bombers could carry them, limiting their threat tothe region.

Adm. William Gortney, head of North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command, said last year that the Pentagon believes North Korea has the ability to produce so- called miniaturiz­ed nuclear warheads and can deliver them on ballistic missiles, though they would fall well short of the U.S. mainland.

The White House said the test had not changed its assessment of North Korea’s technical and military capabiliti­es.

The most basic atomic bomb is a type of gun that shoots pieces of highly enriched uranium at each other. Amore sophistica­ted design uses a hollow sphere of uranium that is imploded with convention­al explosives. Whether North Korea has even achieved the more sophistica­ted implosion type weapon has never been disclosed by U.S. officials.

By contrast, a hydrogen bomb derives massive explosive force by fusing hydrogen atoms together, somewhat like the nuclear reaction that occurs in stars, and using radiation to create additional fission.

The North Korean blast registered on seismograp­hs at around 5.1 in magnitude, about the same as North Korea’ s last test in 2013.

The Comprehens­ive NuclearTes­t- Ban Treaty Organizati­on, a multinatio­nal organizati­on which monitors for nuclear testing worldwide, said that 27 of its land- based monitoring stations detected the event, but that analysts were still sifting through the data.

“We need a couple of days to be able to come back with what we call the smoking gun, that we can correlate from our member states on the conclusion of the event and this is what we have been working,” Lassina Zerbo, head of the Viennabase­d organizati­on, said Wednesday at a news conference.

In 2013, the organizati­on’s monitoring stations did not detect radioactiv­e particles until mid- April, after a test that took place in February.

The Air Force Technical Applicatio­ns Center at Patrick Air Force Base in Florida was analyzing captured data on the seismology and was ready to launch WC- 135 Constant Phoenix, the socalled nuclear sniffer plane, to detect any radioactiv­ity.

“It was almost instantane­ous that our seismic equipment detected the event,” said Susan Romano, an Air Force spokeswoma­n. “But finding out exactly what happened will take time.”

 ?? AndyWong Associated Press ?? A POLICEMAN stands outside the North Korean Embassy in Beijing. North Korea’s claim that it conducted a hydrogen bomb test may take weeks to confirm.
AndyWong Associated Press A POLICEMAN stands outside the North Korean Embassy in Beijing. North Korea’s claim that it conducted a hydrogen bomb test may take weeks to confirm.

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