
Stockpile surveillance: Past and future
Author(s) -
Kelvin Johnson,
Jeffery Keller,
Carl Ekdahl,
R. Krajcik,
Leopoldo Rodríguez Salazar,
Emma Kelly,
Richard A. Paulsen
Publication year - 1996
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/197796
Subject(s) - stockpile , nuclear weapon , engineering , reliability (semiconductor) , forensic engineering , environmental science , political science , physics , law , power (physics) , quantum mechanics
The US nuclear weapon stockpile is entering a different era. Continuous introduction of new weapons into the stockpile, a large production capacity, and underground nuclear testing played important roles in how the nuclear weapons stockpile was managed in the past. These are no longer elements of the nuclear weapons program. Adjustments need to be made to compensate for the loss of these elements. The history of the stockpile indicates that problems have been found in both nuclear and nonnuclear components through a variety of methods including the Stockpile Evaluation Program, stockpile management activities, underground nuclear tests, and research activities. Changes have been made to the stockpile when necessary to assure safety, performance, and reliability. There have been problems found in each of the weapon types expected to be in the stockpile in the year 2000. It is reasonable to expect problems will continue to arise in the stockpile as it ages beyond the original design expectations