Isn't if obvious that people hide things by not acknowledging the facts & instead hiding from them.
People do not expressly deny the uncomfortable facts - that's basic instinct.
So, you just put the words in my mouth.
Be that as it may, how the hell can Swan by TN-71.
Isn't it obvious that Swan cannot be TN-71 !!?? Don't I speak of these devices as separate. Had they been the same I would have told you.
Sorry, I was rushing to leave the office, didn’t think it through.
Swan was a device developed into a series of primary physics packages. by US for their thermonukes. It was the first device with all the bells and whistles - hollow pit, DT boosted
….
ons. For example if he had ignored the Redwing Inca and instead presumed the Plumbob Whitney as the base then he would have increased the final yield by 25% at least. Then his proposal necessarily needs the yield to ratio for the core to be at 8 kt per kg (for the more complex 150kt yield/500kg proposal based on bleeding edge Swan design). You make up your confused mind if you want to believe in the tech capability of India or if you think we need to prove more.
Well, I think you are oversimplifying the issues need to be considered in the designing.
1. Boosted fission weapon is kind of upgrade of atomic bomb, of which the main yield still come from fission reaction that remains fairly inefficient, so the amount of fissile material and tritium becomes wasteful;
2. In order to make smaller fission bomb, you have use Plutonium-239 as the fuel which is highly expensive. Americans pay $5000 per gram of weapons grade Pu-239. With such a price, it is really unthinkable to build any bomb above 100k yield;
3. In order to make your bomb lighter, you have to use tritium in your fusion material. In 2003, the price of tritium was $30,000 per gram. The worst of worse, this material has a half-life of 12 years which means you have to refuel it every 12-15 years. Considering the amount of tritium required for a 150kt bomb, the maintenance cost alone will drive your financial minister crazy.
The boosted fission design is using a small amount of fusion fuel to increase efficiency of fission material to undergo fission before the core explosively disassembles. However, the amount of neutrons released by fusion not only depends on the amount of fusion material, but also upon the other factors, such as shape, structure, time, etc. So, the boosting effect of fusion may not increase as the weight of fusion and fission material proportionately.
Chinese actually have an image here in India of being smarter people but you don't leave much of an impression, in fact, to the contrary.
That is why I always like talking to the people like you who is similarly stupid as me.
I am showing you a much easier way. My singular presumption is the continuation of the …..ting up for you - of 150 kt 250 kg warhead. This proposal works right down till the 4 kt per kg of fissle core (too damn conservative). Does it not?
My logic is very simple: fusion always release more energy than fission under the same mass. If it take French 30 years to finalise a fusion bomb with 150kt at 230kg, with the same tech level, the boosted bomb should be heavier than that. Even assuming India reaches the same level as France in every technology: nuclear, material, precise processing, electronic. The boosted bomb that India can build will still be bigger than you suggest.
Now if you think you can challenge my proposal at some place, well sir, be my guest.
No, my friend, you are not a nuclear weapon designer to be challenged and I am not physicist to challenge anybody. We are here, as amateur, to discuss something interest.
If China is deterred without the nukes in our hands then surely they will be deterred with nukes in our hands, better.
As long as you feel better.