hydrogen bomb

     

The Teller–Ulam esign is a nuclear weapon design which is used in megaton-range thermonuclear weapons, and is more colloquially referred to as "the secret of the hydrogen bomb". It is named after two of its chief contributors, Hungarian-born physicist Edward Teller and Polish-born mathematician Stanisław Ulam, who developed the design in 1951. The idea is thought to pertain specifically to the use of a fission bomb "trigger" placed near an amount of fusion fuel, known as "staging", and the use of "radiation implosion" to compress the fusion fuel before igniting it. There are a number of other additions and variations to this idea posited by different sources.

Trivia about hydrogen bomb

  • This weapon that vaporized an island in a Nov. 1, 1952 test was Edward Teller's brainchild
  • Einsteinium was discovered in 1952 in the debris produced by one of these
  • On Nov. 1, 1952 Eniwetok Atoll was the first place on Earth to face the wrath of one of these bombs
  • In the largest man-made explosion in history, the USSR detonated a 50-megaton one of these in 1961

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