Mother Jones has an
excerpt from Eric Schlosser's new book on the various accidents and near misses of our nuclear program over the years, along with an
interview. I've highlighted a
few of
them, where the U.S.
accidentally dropped nuclear bombs or
crashed planes carrying the bombs, along with
tests and
bad ideas the government had about how to beneficially use nuclear bombs, but
this story is a new one to me:
Launch Complex 374-7 was involved
in two incidents. The first took
place on morning of 27 January 1978,
at approximately 0915, when the
oncoming missile combat crew
approaching the launch complex noticed
oxidizer vapors rising from the
missile complex. They drove to
Damascus and contacted the command
post, which in turn notified the
Missile Potential Hazard Team (MPHT)
members. By 0945 the MPHT directed
the missile combat crew commander at
the complex to turn off the circuit
breakers to the heaters on the
oxidizer transport trailers. The
heaters were used to keep the oxidizer
between 42 and 60 F in preparation for
flowing into the holding trailer.
Meanwhile, a helicopter from the 37th
Air Rescue and Recovery Squadron was
sent to provide aerial surveillance of
the situation. At 1030 the helicopter
crew confirmed the presence of
oxidizer vapors rising from the
trailer and crossing State Highway 65
in a cloud approximately 3,000 feet
long, 300 feet wide and 100 feet in
height. The MPHT immediately directed
the Van Buren County Sheriff's
Department to block Highway 65 and
requested evacuation of civilians in
the path of the oxidizer cloud,
including an elementary school 1.5
miles north of the complex. At 1042 a
second helicopter with propellant
transfer personnel in rocket fuel
handlers clothing outfits was
dispatched. Upon arrival at the
complex, the team reported that the
oxidizer trailer tank was at 101 F and
leaking around the manhole cover, the
safety rupture discs had not yet
burst. They sprayed water on the tank
to cool it off and tightened the
manhole cover bolts, decreasing the
amount of vapor considerably. By 1405
Highway 65 was reopened to traffic.
By 2120 the oxidizer had been
transferred to the holding trailer and
the hazard situation was terminated.
Four civilians displayed some symptoms
of contact with the vapors and were
transported to the Little Rock AFB
hospital for evaluation. Two were
released the same day and two were
held overnight for observation,
subsequently released, readmitted and
released on 4 February 1978.
The second incident, and the one
that makes this launch complex
exceptionally significant within the
context of the entire Titan II
program, took place at 1835 hours 20
September 1980, during a routine Stage
II oxidizer tank repressurization
procedure. An 8.75 pound socket
wrench socket was inadvertently
dropped from a work platform in the
launch duct on Level 2. After a drop
of approximately 66 feet, the socket
hit the missile thrust mount and
bounced in towards the missile,
puncturing the Stage I propellant
tank, filled with Aerozine 50, a 1:1
mix of unsymmetrical dimethyl
hydrazine and hydrazine. A Missile
Potential Hazard Team was formed and
the surrounding civilian population
evacuated as a precautionary measure.
A propellant transfer system team was
formed to attempt to penetrate into
the launch control center and into the
launch duct area.
At 0300 hours on 21 September 1980,
the accumulated fuel vapors were
ignited, causing an explosion that
destroyed the missile silo. The silo
closure door, which weighed 740 tons,
was thrown several hundred feet
upwards and landed 625 feet to the
northeast of the silo. The W-53
warhead was found damaged but
basically intact without a detectable
leakage of radioactive material.
Amazingly enough, only one person
was fatally injured: Senior Airman
David Livingston, one member of a two-
man propellant transfer team
investigating the status of the silo
just prior to the explosion.
A 40-member Eighth Air Force Mishap
Investigation Board and a separate
Missile Accident Investigation Board
evaluated the accident and concluded
that the near-disaster was caused by
human error and gave high marks to the
silo, which largely contained the
massive explosion, and the warhead,
which was not blown up by its
conventional explosive components. In
fact, a partial glass of Coca Cola
abandoned in the control center did
not spill in the massive explosion, a
testament to the facility’s shock-
absorbent design.
The book excerpt gives a lot of fascinating information about the Titan II, its propulsion system, the silos and procedures for working with the missiles. For example:
The missile was designed
to launch within a minute and hit a target as far as 6,000 miles away.
In order to do that, the Titan II relied upon a pair of liquid
propellants—a rocket fuel and an oxidizer—that were "hypergolic." The
moment they came into contact with each other, they'd instantly and
forcefully ignite. The missile had two stages, and inside both of them,
an oxidizer tank rested on top of a fuel tank, with pipes leading down
to an engine. Stage 1, which extended about 70 feet upward from the
bottom of the missile, contained about 85,000 pounds of fuel and 163,000
pounds of oxidizer.
Stage
2, the upper section where the warhead sat, was smaller and held about
one fourth of those amounts. If the missile were launched, fuel and
oxidizer would flow through the stage 1 pipes, mix inside the combustion
chambers of the engine, catch on fire, emit hot gases, and send almost
half a million pounds of thrust through the supersonic
convergent-divergent nozzles beneath it. Within a few minutes, the Titan
II would be 50 miles off the ground.
The two propellants were extremely efficient—and extremely dangerous.
The fuel, Aerozine-50, could spontaneously ignite when it came into
contact with everyday things like wool, rags, or rust. As a liquid,
Aerozine-50 was clear and colorless. As a vapor, it reacted with the
water and the oxygen in the air and became a whitish cloud with a fishy
smell. This fuel vapor could be explosive in proportions as low as 2
percent. Inhaling it could cause breathing difficulties, a reduced heart
rate, vomiting, convulsions, tremors, and death. The fuel was also
highly carcinogenic and easily absorbed through the skin.
The missile's oxidizer, nitrogen tetroxide, was even more hazardous.
Under federal law, it was classified as a "Poison A," the most deadly
category of man-made chemicals. In its liquid form, the oxidizer was a
translucent, yellowy brown. Although not as flammable as the fuel, it
could spontaneously ignite if it touched leather, paper, cloth, or wood.
And its boiling point was only 70 degrees Fahrenheit. At temperatures
any higher, the liquid oxidizer boiled into a reddish brown vapor that
smelled like ammonia. Contact with water turned the vapor into a
corrosive acid that could react with the moisture in a person's eyes or
skin and cause severe burns. When inhaled, the oxidizer could destroy
tissue in the upper respiratory system and the lungs. The damage might
not be felt immediately. Six to twelve hours after being inhaled, the
stuff could suddenly cause headaches, dizziness, difficulty breathing,
pneumonia, and pulmonary edema leading to death.
Sounds like fun to work around. Apparently, there were hundreds of more accidents and near misses, and it is a real tribute to the scientists and engineers, along with Lady Luck, that we didn't have a massive nuclear accident that killed thousands of people during the Cold War. And if we had this many fuckups and accidents, I can only imagine how many crazy things happened in the Soviet Union. Maybe that proves there is a God.
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