W88 (nuclear weapon): Difference between revisions

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The '''W88 (nuclear weapon)''' intermediate yield strategic  warhead used on the [[UGM-133 Trident D5]] [[submarine-launched ballistic missile]]. Packaged in a conical reentry vehicle (RV) less than six feet tall with a base diameter of only 22 inches,  its shape lends itself to high accuracy. It is hardened against defensive nuclear weapons, but omits certain safety mechanisms, used in the W87 warhead of the [[LGM-30 Minuteman|LGM-30 Minuteman III]] land-based missile, which are pointless in a submarine-launched missile.  These safety tradeoffs allow the W88 to be more weight-efficient than the W87, although safety was increased as part of an overall redesign to meet the requirements of the START [[arms control]] treaty. <ref>{{citation
| url = http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Weapons/W88.html
| title = The W88 Warhead: Intermediate yield strategic SLBM MIRV warhead
| date = 1 October 1997
| journal = Nuclear Weapons Archive}}</ref>
 
[[Richard Garwin]] speculated that there was a considerable weight penalty to putting it into this shape, <ref name=Garwin1999>{{citation
| journal = Arms Control Today | date = April/May 1999
| title = Why China Won't Build U.S. Warheads
| author = [[Richard Garwin]]
| url = http://www.fas.org/rlg/rgam99.htm}}</ref> but it was later revealed that the fission Primary section is non-spherical, allowing a much more efficient arrangement inside the reentry vehicle. Earlier warheads needed to put spherical Primaries at the bottom of the RV cone, but the W88 primary, called "oblate" or resembling the shape of an American football, can go into the forward part of the cone without requiring additional ballast.
 
Yield is almost certainly variable; maximums have been described as between 350 and 500 kilotons, with 475 KT a frequently cited value. This is the highest yield of any operational U.S. missile warhead.<ref>{{citation
| url = http://www.nrdc.org/nuclear/nudb/datab11.asp
| title = Table of US Strategic Nuclear Forces, 2002
| publisher = [[National Resources Defense Council]]}}</ref>
 
Some details of the design were obtained by China, although Garwin argues that it was insufficient to build a weapon, and that a weapon with the W88 special characteristics did not suit Chinese missile warhead needs.
==References==
{{reflist|2}}

Revision as of 23:01, 2 February 2010

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The W88 (nuclear weapon) intermediate yield strategic warhead used on the UGM-133 Trident D5 submarine-launched ballistic missile. Packaged in a conical reentry vehicle (RV) less than six feet tall with a base diameter of only 22 inches, its shape lends itself to high accuracy. It is hardened against defensive nuclear weapons, but omits certain safety mechanisms, used in the W87 warhead of the LGM-30 Minuteman III land-based missile, which are pointless in a submarine-launched missile. These safety tradeoffs allow the W88 to be more weight-efficient than the W87, although safety was increased as part of an overall redesign to meet the requirements of the START arms control treaty. [1]

Richard Garwin speculated that there was a considerable weight penalty to putting it into this shape, [2] but it was later revealed that the fission Primary section is non-spherical, allowing a much more efficient arrangement inside the reentry vehicle. Earlier warheads needed to put spherical Primaries at the bottom of the RV cone, but the W88 primary, called "oblate" or resembling the shape of an American football, can go into the forward part of the cone without requiring additional ballast.

Yield is almost certainly variable; maximums have been described as between 350 and 500 kilotons, with 475 KT a frequently cited value. This is the highest yield of any operational U.S. missile warhead.[3]

Some details of the design were obtained by China, although Garwin argues that it was insufficient to build a weapon, and that a weapon with the W88 special characteristics did not suit Chinese missile warhead needs.

References