a, % burst. from As the writer can testify personal observation, J and so it is greatest directly over the the explosion. Consequently, water thrown up water in the vicinity of the expio- over the center rises more rapidly sion on “Baker Day” was lighted by a luminosity that could have and for a longer time than water farther away. As a result the sides come only from the intense visible spectrum of the Ball of Fire. The general effect had the appearance of light seen through a of spray dome become steeper as the water rises. Its upward mo- tion is terminated by the effects of gravity and the resistance of by be estimated exactly because the upper part was surrounded by soon as the bubble of hot gases Phenomenon of Plume The total time of rise and maximum height attained depend on the energy of the explosion and on its depth below the surface. For a very deep burst the spray dome may not be visible at all. If the depth of the detonation of the bomb jis not too great the the air. constituting the Ball of Fire reached the surface, for then the gases were eXpelled and cooled. In the course of its rapid expan- bubbie of hot gases will remain es- sion the gas bubble, which now contains steam and its dissociation products, atomic hydrogen sentially intact oxygen, in addition to the fission jet, carrying some water by lateral entrainment, will be vented to the atmosphere, As the pressure of the bubble is released water rushes into the cavity, and the consequent complex phenomena cause the water to be thrown up as a hollow cylin- “slick,” is visible jn contrast to the der, or chimney of spray, known as the Plume. The radioactive con- undisturbed water because the ripples or small waves are partially tents of the gas bubble are vented through this hollow Plume and form a gigantic mushroom-shaped cloud at the top. calmed by the reflection of the shock wave as a rarefaction (suction) wave at the surface of the water. The part of the shock that passes into air through the water surface The Plume and its mushroom top are without doubt among the most spectacular and awe-inspiring phenomena to be seen. It was like watching the birth of a new causes the compression of the moist air. When this is followed continent rising resplendent out of the sea. by a suction wave, the conditions become favorable to the formation a spherical cloud of to point the gases, in the form of a residue, initiates a shock wave. The trace of this wave, as it moves outward from the burst, is evident, on a reasonably calm surface, aS a rapidly advancing ring, apparently darker than the surrounding water. This ring, sometimes called the of until it rises the surface of the water. At this and vapor, A photograph of the Plume, taken with a super-speed camera, knownas the cloud-chamber effect. This manifested itself almost immediately after the Bikini under- shows a smalf black smudge on its right edge. It was the 33,000-ton battleship Arkansas, lifted out of the water, suspended vertically in water burst in a dome-shaped cloud that formed over the lagoon, This great dome, set in the midst of the ring from the shock, looked like huge garland ringing the top of its crown. After the appearance of the ring, hollow Plume, moving with the wind and lasting for nearly an hour after the explosion, developed from this cloud through cloud. It was probably some 8,000 mass. In its early stages the rain was augmented by the small water mated that the maximum thick- descending from the cloud. feet, and the greatest diameter was about 2,000 feet. It is now esti- droplets, equivalent in a sense to the fall-out of an air burst, still ness of the walis of the Plume was about 300 feet, and that about a million tons of water rose in the Plume. Earlier estimates by scientists on the scene, made soon after the Were it not for the fact that base surge is highly radioactive, because of the presence of fission products, it would represent merely a curious phenomenon. Because All Debris Radioactive burst, placed the quantity of water of its radioactivity, however, which raised in the Plume at ten to fifteen million tons. The cloud, which concealed a is augmented by that of the water droplets in the fall-out, it may represent a serious hazard for a distance of several miles, especially in the downwind direction. There are reasons for believing that the base surge can be pro- large part of the upper portion of the Plume, resembled a cauliflower, rather than a mushroom, in shape. It contained some of the fission products and other bomb constituents, as wel] as water droplets. In addition, there is evidence that material sucked up from_ the bottom of the lagoon was also present, for calcarous sediment, which must have been part of the fall-out, was found on the decks of ships some distance from the burst. duced only in fairly deep water. In the event of a sufficiently deep underwater atomic burst, the hot gas bubble would lose its identity in a mass of turbulent water before it reached the surface and vented to the atmosphere. In this case, the spray dome would be relatively insignificant and no Plume would be formed. Hence there would be no formation of a The Base Surge As the column of water and spray constituting the Plume fell back into the lagoon, there developed, on the surface at the base of the column, a gigantic wave of mist about 1,000 feet in height, completely surrounding the neck of the Plume. base-surge and no appreciable fall-out. The disintegration of the gas bubble into a large number of very small bubbles, which are churned up with the water, would produce a radioactive foam or froth. When this reached the surface, a small amount of radioactive mist would be emitted, but most of the activity would be retained in the sea This wave began to form within taken less than a millisecond later, nut-shaped form. The wave or wall of dense mist, much like the spray of the base of Niagara Falls or another waterfall of considerable height, represents the initiation of what is known as the base surge. It is, in effect, a dense cloud of liquid droplets which has the property of flowing almost as if it were a homogeneous fluid. highly active foam on a near-by shore might, however, represent a hazard. It seems possible, the handbook traveled outward at high speed, it course, be very radioactive, A second photograph, at Bikini, the conical spray dome began to form at about four milliseconds (thousandths of a second) after the explosion. Its initial rate of rise Was some 2,500 feet per second, but this was rapidly dimin- ished by air resistance. 16 the which the gases vented, could not ten seconds of traveled rapidly shows no trace of the Arkansas. Like a Cauliflower In the shailow underwater burst or slick, a mound or column of broken water and spray, called the spray dome, is thrown up directly over the point of the burst by the reflection of the biast wave at the surface. The initial velocity of the water is proportional to the pressure of the incident shock wave, which eventually reached a thickness of some thousands of feet. A moderate to heavy rainfall, the air for a split second before it plunged to the bottom of the lagoon. a gigantic white derby hat with a minutes, assumed the appearance of a mass of strato-cumulus cloud, The maximum height attained ground-glass screen, the distortion from the waves on the surface of the lagoon preventing any clear view of the ball. The luminosity remained for a few thousandths of a second, but it disappeared as gradually lifted from the surface of the lagoon and, after about five A few milliseconds later, the hot gas bubble reached the surface of the lagoon and the Plume began to form, rapidly overtaking the spray dome at a height of a few thousand feet. detonation, and outward, main- taining an ever-expanding dough- As the base surge at water. The deposition of the adds, that a base surge, made up of small solid particles, rather than droplets of water, but still behaving like a fluid, might result from an atomic bomb burst below a soft terrain consisting of sand Bikini and 17 mud. The debris would, of

Select target paragraph3