Nuclear winter: implications for US and Soviet nuclear strategy
In November 1983 Dr. Carl Sagan and his colleagues reported to press on the results of their study of the atmospheric consequences of nuclear war. The TTAPS study found that for a wide range of possible U.S. -Soviet nuclear exchanges, including relatively small ones, the fires from nuclear detonations would inject into the stratosphere quantities of dust and soot that would obscure sunlight for months. Under the cloud, which would spread over most of the Northern Hemisphere, temperatures might drop scores of degrees, well below the freezing point of water; thus, nuclear winter. The TTAPS team's findings suggested that the consequences of a nuclear war might be even more gruesome than previously supposed, and the long-term climatic and biological results might be nearly as severe for a war of 100 megatons as for 5,000. From the point of view of informing policymakers and the public concerning the consequences of wars involving nuclear weapons, the politicization of the nuclear winter issue is unfortunate. We can hope that in the next few years the criticism and defense of the initial TTAPS work will give rise to significant additional analyses, to illuminate the question. Realistically, further study will probably include both confirmations and contradictions of the original findings, without necessarily resolving the issue. Sadly, the surrounding political atmosphere may obstruct sober consideration of the policy implications of the possibility of nuclear winter.
- Research Organization:
- RAND Corp., Santa Monica, CA (USA)
- OSTI ID:
- 5316433
- Report Number(s):
- AD-A-154861/9/XAB; RAND-P-7009-RGI
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Implications of the nuclear winter thesis. Technical report, 1 May 1984-1 June 1985
Soviet exploitation of the nuclear winter hypothesis. Technical report, 8 May 1984-4 June 1985
Related Subjects
29 ENERGY PLANNING
POLICY AND ECONOMY
NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
NUCLEAR WINTER
CLIMATES
FIRES
FREEZING
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
NUCLEAR MEDICINE
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
POLITICAL ASPECTS
SOOT
STRATOSPHERE
USA
USSR
WATER
ASIA
EARTH ATMOSPHERE
EASTERN EUROPE
EUROPE
EXPLOSIONS
HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
MEDICINE
NORTH AMERICA
OXYGEN COMPOUNDS
WEAPONS
450202* - Explosions & Explosives- Nuclear- Weaponry- (-1989)
290600 - Energy Planning & Policy- Nuclear Energy