G-270 -2In the October 9 experiment, code-named PAR, a specially designed nuclear explosive system containing a uranium, U-238, target was detonated at a depth of 1330 feet in the alluvium of the AEC's Nevada Test Site. The explosion had a yield of about 30 kilotons. The explosive was designed to enable the U-238 nuclei present in the target to absorb the maximum number of neutrons. Following capture of the neutrons, the uranium isotopes underwent beta-decay to form heavier elements in the periodic table. This process was first observed in the initial hydrogen bomb test, MIKE, in the Pacific in 1952. In the debris of MIKE, scientists discovered element 99, einsteinium, and 100, fermium, created by multiple neutron capture by the uranium present. Partly as a result of MIKE, cosmologists now believe that this process occurs in stars and plays an important role in the synthesis of elements in nature. Analysis of small samples of fused glass, obtained by drilling to the region involved in the explosion of PAR, shows that the explosion yielded a neutron flux approximately three times greater than that of the 1952 MIKE test. The PAR flux was twice as great as has been achieved in previous Plowshare underground experiments. A major indication of success is the concentration 1,000 times greater than previously achieved - of californium-254, element 98, in the PAR samples. Observations on the yields of CF-254 and other heavy species are in general agreement in the four laboratories studying PAR samples Lawrence Radiation Laboratories at Livermore and Berkeley, California; Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Los Alamos, New Mexico; and Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, I1llinois. So far, the scientists have observed elements as heavy as fermium-255, which requires successive captures of 17 neutrons. The scientists are looking in the samples even further up the periodic table for other isotopes, including fermium-257. The discovery of this significant isotope was reported only last month by Livermore scientists (more) a

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