3 }) )) Blast Kills Fire At distances close enough to the explosion to cause actual ignition of wood, etc., the blast wind, com- ing within a few seconds, generally would be strong enough to blow out the flame. For this reason it would appear that relatively few of the numerous fires, which developed almost instantaneously after the atomic bombings of Japan out to distances of 4,000 to 5,000 feet from ground zero, that is, almost to the limit of severe blast damage, were directly caused by thermal radiations from the bombs. It is probable that most of the fires origimated from secondary causes, such as upsetting of charcoal or wood stoves, which were common in Japanese homes; electrical short circuits: broken fas lines, and so on, which were a direct effect of the blast wave. In several cases, fires in industrial plants were started by the overturning of furnaces and boilers, and by the collapse of buildings upon them, It is true that fire-fighting seryices and equipment were poor by American standards, but it is doubtful if much could have been achieved, under the circumstances, by more efficient fire departments. At Hiroshima, for example, 70 per cent of the fire-fighting equipment was crushed in the collapse of firehouses, and 80 per cent of the personnel were unable to respond. Even if men and machines had survived the blast, many fires would have been inaccessible be- cause of the streets being blocked with debris. 3 This consisted of a wind that blew toward the burning area of the city from all directions, reaching a maximum velocity of 30 to 40 miles per hour, two to three hours after the explosion, decreasing to light or moderate and variable in direction about six hours later. It should be noted, however, that the fire storm was by no means a special characteristic of the atomic bomb. been Similar fire storms have reported as accompanying large conflagrations in the United States, and especially afte: incen- diary bomb attacks in both Germany and Japan during World WarII. The nigh winds are produced largely by the updraft of the heated air over an extensive burning area, They are thus the equivalent, on a very large scale, of the draft that sucks air up a chimney under which a fire is burning. In addition to the flash-burns, many of the casualties from the atomic bomb explosions were caused by flame burns. In build- ings collapsed by the blast, many persons who might otherwise have survived their injuries trapped and burned. The were burns suffered were of the kind that might accompany any fire and were not especially characteristic of an atomic explosion. Burns of both types, flash and flame, were believed to be responsible for more than half of the fatal casualties and probably at least three quarters of all the cas- ualties saki. at Hiroshima and Naga- The magnitude of the problem, therefore, points to the necessity for making adequate preparations for dealing with large numbers of Another contributory factor to the destruction by fire was the failure of the water supply in both Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The burned patients in the event of an emergency. This means the train- pumping stations were not largely ing of great numbers in giving the affected, but serious damage was sustained by distributing pipes and mains. Most of the lines above most rudimentary first aid for burns, because a sufficient number ground were broken by collapsing buildings and by heat from the of doctors and nurses could not be The Fire Storm sion of nuclear radiations, consisting of gamma rays, similar in nature to X-rays, neutrons, beta particles (electrons! and a small proportion of alpha particles (nuclei provided. The explosion fires that melted the pipes. of an atomic bomb is accompanied by the emis- About twenty minutes after the detonation of the atomic bomb at Hiroshima there developed the phenomenon known as fire storm. 28 of helium atoms). Radiations emitted within a munute of the detonation are referred to as initial nuclear radiations. Those emitted after more than a minute are known as residual. The initial radiations of importance to us are the gamma rays and the neutrons Both have considerable penetrating power, so that they can reach the earth even when liberated at appreciable dis- tances away. Both can produce harmtul effects on living organisms. The energy of the gamma rays present in the instantaneous, or prompt nuclear radiation 1s about 3 per cent of the total energy lib- erated by the bomb, but only a small proportion of this, perhaps 1 per cent, succeeds in penetrating any great distance from the bomb. A somewhat similar amount is present in the gamma rays emitted by the fission products in the first minute after an atomic explosion. Nevertheless, in spite of the On the other about from radiation sickness. If part of the body were protected by a suitable shield, it is probable that a larger dose than 400 r would not prove fatal. Ordinary clothing can in no sense be regarded as protective. At less than 2,100 feet from the explosion, physical and thermal destruction are so serious in un- protected regions that radiological injury does not need consideration, At distances greater than 9,000 feet, the dosage is, in generai, too small to be of serious consequences, unless it is repeated at short intervals. At the minimum distance of 2,100 feet from the expiosion, the dosage of gamma rays in an unprotected location would be 10,000 To reduce this to below the mches of lead. A layer of some ly effective. Underground shelters could thus provide adequate pro- rection agianst the radiation hazard, Outside Shelters An outside shelter of the type used in World War II as a protection against blast bombs, covered with about twenty inches of packed nuclear radiation would probably prove fatal to 50 per cent of human beings, even if protected by twelve inches of concrete, However, beyond about 7,000 feet soil, would decrease the radiation dosage below the median lethal value at distances greater than about 3,000 feet from the explo- would be sion. For a height of burst of 2.000 feet, this would represent 2,250 virtually harmless, without protective shielding, whereas exposure to thermal radiation at this distance feet or more from ground zero. The thickness of concrete that would produce the same effect is roughly twelve inches, that of iron four inches, and that of lead about two inches, The statement that an unprotected person within 4,200 feet of an atomic explosion would receive a median tethal dose of 400 r is based on the supposition that the exposure lasts for the whole min- could produce serious skin burns. Radiation Dosage Is is thirty inches of soi] would be equal- hand, Shielding from gamma rays or neutrons is not the simple matter of shielding against thermal radiation. For example, at a distance of 3,000 feet from the explosion of a nominal atomic bomb, the initial dosage bomb require something like twenty inches of concrete or about three incendiary effect. Radiation atomic Thus a large proportion of human beings exposed to the initial gamma rays Within 4,200 feet of an atomic explosion would die median lethal dose of 400 r would nuclear radiations do not have any the nuclear radiations nominal 4,200 feet. r. energy being considerably smaller than that appearing in the form of thermal] radiation, the gamma radiation can cauSe an appreciabie proportion of the atomic bomb casualties. beings. The median lethal range of the gamma radiation from 4 measured in terms of a unit called the roentgen, or the r. It is usually accepted that a dose of 400 r of radiation over the whole body in the course of a few mintites represents the median lethal dose that would be fatal to about 50 per cent of human ute of the period of initial radia23

Select target paragraph3