Scientific American - November 2018

(singke) #1
84 Scientific American, November 2018

Bomb size

1.1–2.1 kilotons

4.6–10.4 kt

8–27 kt

8–19 kt

20–87 kt

104–150 kt

Test date

1
October 9, 2006

2
May 25, 2009

3
February 12, 2013

4
January 6, 2016

5
September 9, 2016

6
September 3, 2017

SOURCES:“THE COUPLED LOCATION/DEPTH/YIELD PROBLEM FOR NORTH KOREA’S DECLARED NUCLEAR TESTS,”
BY MICHAEL E. PASYANOS AND STEPHEN C. MYERS, IN SEISMOLOGICAL RESEARCH LETTERS. PUBLISHED ONLINE
AUGUST 8, 2018 (bomb sizes and blast depths); “ABSOLUTE LOCATIONS OF THE NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR TESTS
BASED ON DIFFERENTIAL SEISMIC ARRIVAL TIMES AND INSAR,” BY STEPHEN C. MYERS ET AL., IN SEISMOLOGICAL
RESEARCH LETTERS. PUBLISHED ONLINE AUGUST 15, 2018 (test locations); WWW.NORSAR.NO (seismograms);
“THE PUNGGYE-RI NUCLEAR TEST SITE: A TEST TUNNEL TUTORIAL,” 38 NORTH, MAY 23, 2018 http://www.38north.org/2018/05/
punggyetunnel052318 (tunnel locations); U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (earthquake magnitudes)

GRAPHIC SCIENCE
Text and Graphic by Katie Peek

Watching North Korea


Illicit nuclear detonations are anything but secret


In September 2017 North Korea tested its largest nuclear bomb yet. It was 10 times the blast
strength of any of the five previous underground detonations (map). How do we know? A global net-
work of more than 300  earthquake-monitoring stations stands sentry. After an explosion, seismom-
eters pick up two types of shock waves within minutes and alert intelligence ocers. Scientists learn
even more afterward. Since the last blast, they have combined the seismic signals with satellite imag-
es and other data to pinpoint more details, recently published, such as the precise location and bomb
size (chart). Should North Korea—or any other nation—try another bomb, the world will know.

1 km

1111
33333

2222

4 6 55

How to Tell a Blast
from an Earthquake

How to Tell a Blast
from a Cave-in

Six Nuclear Bomb Tests Compared


Test region

Mt. Mantap summit North Korea

Test loc ations
(ovals represent
uncertainties)

Tunnel entrances

Blast depth

340–480 meters

340–500 m

270–450 m

480–670 m

440–630 m

530–670 m

Seismogram

Magnitude 4.3

4.7

5.1

5.1


  1. 3

  2. 3


Test loc ations
North Korea’s six explosions were
conducted at the Punggye-ri test
site, located underneath Mount
Mantap. In each case, seismome-
ters around the world picked up
the shock waves. Researchers
compared the arrival times of the
waves at multiple stations to deter-
mine where the blast originated.
Bomb sizes
The 2017 test created the equiva-
lent of a magnitude 6.3 earth-
quake. Seismologists initially used
a standard relation, based on old
French and Russian detonations,
to estimate the bomb’s strength,
or yield, as equivalent to 100 to
200 kilotons of TNT. The most
recent estimate, based on a more
detailed analysis, puts the blast at
125 kilotons. The 1945 blast at
Hiroshima was 13 to 18 kilotons.
Blast depths
Scientists determine whether an
explosion was shallow or deep by
modeling the test site design and
simulating a range of strengths
and depths.

The signature of a mine collapse or
other cave-in looks like a blast,
except that the initial rock motion
is inward; a blast’s is outward.

Seismometers record compression
waves and shear waves in the
earth. An explosion compresses
rock more than shears it, so those
signatures are stronger.

Earthquake:
Shear waves are stronger

Compression Shear

Explosion:
Compression waves are stronger

Waves:

Collapse:
Initial rock motion is inward

Explosion:
Initial rock motion is outward
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