Posted on 06/14/2005 8:10:08 AM PDT by SmithL
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. - The government is offering a rare glimpse of the massive machines used to enrich uranium for the "Little Boy" bomb - the first atomic weapon used in war, dropped 60 years ago in August on Hiroshima, Japan.
Inside the high-security Y-12 nuclear weapons plant remain the last of 1,152 calutrons that once filled nine buildings. The machinery was part of the top-secret bomb-building Manhattan Project, which turned this rural countryside about 30 miles west of Knoxville into a "secret city" of 75,000 people between 1942 and 1945.
"Don't you know the people in Knoxville wondered what in the world was going on out here," Department of Energy guide Ray Smith said Monday. "All this material was coming in, truckload after truckload, and nothing ever left."
About 50 kilograms of highly enriched uranium were produced in Oak Ridge over a year's time for the Little Boy bomb - all carried in briefcases by plainclothes couriers to Los Alamos, N.M., where the bomb was partially assembled before being moved to Tinian in the Northern Marianas Islands and loaded onto the B-29 Enola Gay for the bomb run over Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945.
Many of those questions remain in this still highly classified environment, where today nuclear warhead parts are dismantled and refurbished and bomb-grade uranium is stockpiled.
For the first time, the public will be allowed to see the old calutron machines - devices used for separating out fissionable uranium for reactor fuel or bombs - in tours this weekend as part of Oak Ridge's annual Secret City Festival.
The tours quickly filled in advance with more than 600 people signing up.
Even many who worked here didn't know exactly what they were working on until the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, killing more than 100,000. Japan surrendered less than a month later.
"I wouldn't have known what an atomic bomb was. I had never heard of it," said Gladys Owens, 80, of Harlan, Ky., who was among scores of young women hired to control electric current in the calutrons on orders from the engineers.
The calutrons separated fissile Uranium 235 for the bomb using huge magnets and vast quantities of electricity from the government-owned Tennessee Valley Authority.
Owens, who was 19 and just out of high school when she worked here from January until August 1945, said she didn't piece together her place in history until she attended the festival last year, saw her picture in the historical displays and was given a private tour.
Her reaction?
"Mostly, I thank God the state of Tennessee is still on the map," she said, with a laugh. "Because I was right here at the controls. At 19 years old."
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Y-12 plant: http://www.y12.doe.gov/bwxt/y12.html
ba-dum-ting!
ping
Things that make you go boom.
Our mission is to safeguard our country and the world. Y-12s Nuclear Nonproliferation programs play a critical role in securing our nation and the globe and in combating the spread of weapons of mass destruction. Our contributions include the following:
Global Threat Reduction Y‑12 is uniquely qualified to assist in removing and securing special nuclear threats around the globe. These Y‑12 skills and assets can provide a comprehensive response to radiological and nuclear material vulnerabilities anywhere in the world on short notice. Y‑12 has supported activities in Kazakhstan, Republic of Georgia, Russia, Libya and other countries. For more information, email Morris Hassler or call 865-576-8136. PDF article; PDF article
Material for Peaceful Uses Y‑12 creates innovative solutions that use weapons‑grade enriched uranium for peaceful uses (e.g., commercial nuclear power, material science, and medical applications). One converted nuclear warhead used in commercial nuclear power can produce enough electricity to power every American home for 2 hours. For more information, email Morris Hassler or call 865-576-8136. PDF article
Material Disposition In 1994 the United States declared 174 metric tons of highly enriched uranium as surplus to national security needs. The HEU Disposition Program Office at Y‑12 provides technical support, program planning and implementation of the down blending of surplus HEU for the NNSA Office of Fissile Materials Disposition. For more information, email George Singleton or call 865-241-3854.
Highly Enriched Uranium Disposition Program Office The end of the Cold War left a legacy of weapons‑capable fissile material. As a commitment to nonproliferation, the President of the United States announced on March 1, 1995, that approximately 200 metric tons of fissile material was excess to national security needs. In a subsequent announcement on February 6, 1996, the Secretary of Energy declared that approximately 174 metric tons of the excess fissile material was highly enriched uranium (HEU). This quantity of HEU could theoretically produce nearly 4,300 nuclear warheads. When converted to peaceful use, by down blending to low‑enriched uranium (LEU), this material could supply electricity to every household in the U.S. for a full year. The DOE Office of Fissile Materials Disposition (MD) was created by Congress to oversee the final disposition of surplus fissile material. Soon thereafter the HEU Disposition Program Office (HDPO), located at the Y‑12 National Security Complex, was named the "Lead Lab" supporting DOE in this program. The material disposition program is now part of the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).
The purpose of the HEU disposition program is to make the surplus HEU unusable for weapons, and to dispose of it in a safe, secure, and environmentally acceptable manner. Because of the huge amount of recoverable energy stored in the HEU, and its great economic value, HDPO plans to convert approximately 85% (over 155 MTU) of the available HEU to commercial or research reactor fuel. The remaining 15% of the surplus HEU is not usable as fuel for commercial use and will be disposed of as waste.
HDPO is responsible for project management and technical integration of the HEU Disposition Program. Responsibilities include strategic and tactical planning, oversight, technical analyses, regulatory coordination, business development and marketing, and coordination of interfaces among key participants and stakeholders. HDPO provides primary support in assisting MD in planning and implementing the disposition program. Major projects are under way to transfer on‑spec HEU to the United States Enrichment Corporation (USEC), and to produce fuel made from off-spec HEU for the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). The Savannah River Site (SRS) provides field and logistical support, as needed, to facilitate the Off‑Specification Fuel Project with TVA. PDF article
International Nonproliferation Program Y‑12 has made significant contributions to nonproliferation initiatives that are critical to international security. Over the last few years, Y‑12 has had business arrangements and supported nonproliferation missions in more than 25 countries. For more information, email Ken Williams or call 865-576-7850.
The INP includes the following organizations:
The RTI Program provides program management and technical assessment activities for the Initiatives for Proliferation Prevention Program and the Nuclear Cities Initiative Program. IPP engages former Soviet weapons of mass destruction (WMD) scientists, engineers and technicians to redirect their expertise to peaceful, civilian work through long-term business partnerships with U.S. companies. NCI reduces WMD complexes by downsizing facilities, creating sustainable civilian alternatives for the displaced workforce, and establishing nonproliferation partnerships with other U.S. and international programs. PDF article
The EWGPP Program provides technical assistance for replacing fossil‑fuel energy in Russia, which will allow the shut down of three weapons‑grade plutonium production reactors.
The IS Program includes activities relative to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), assisting countries in safeguarding nuclear materials and confirming adequate protection.
The IMP&C Program works with countries of concern to secure nuclear weapons and weapons‑usable nuclear materials by assisting the upgrade of security at their nuclear sites.
I used to drive past the facility every day on my way to work at a company that was working at cleaning up all the legacy waste at the site. Oak Ridge is my home town - I know several people that were involved in the Project - go to church with a few of them as well. My home was built for the project in 1944 - pre-cast concrete and cinderblock. No airconditioning, but it has heated floors. Some people collect WWII uniforms - some people collect military vehicles. I went and bought a house that was part of the war effort. And yes - I'll be at the Secret City Festival next weekend.
Thanks for the information.
Back when we lived I knoxville, I attended classes in Oak Ridge. We also took the kids to the museum there - very awesome stuff.
The machine is currently making opener shanks for planting equipment. We call it our "Swords to Plowshares" machine.
I was talking to one of the machinists out at the weapons plant when I worked at CoorsTek. He was telling me about the criticality tolerances they would achieve on their mills - surfaces parallel within a millionth of an inch across the body of the mill work - and the working surfaces would be several inches apart on the body they were milling. Pretty amazing (but then, I was doing data analysis, not millwork - but it seemed pretty amazing to me).
The enrichment process at Oak Ridge used 10% of all electricity in the U.S. in 1945.
And we thought the purpose of TVA was to light up the hills.
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