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CA Topic

Hydrogen Bomb a Game-Changer for Modern Warfare

Brief Context

Context Chinese researchers have tested a new hydrogen bomb that uses magnesium hydride to create a sustained fireball without nuclear materials. What are the Concerns? Legal Loophole: Under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), nuclear weapons are primarily defined by the use of fissile materials.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/ Science and Technology, Defence

Context

  • Chinese researchers have tested a new hydrogen bomb that uses magnesium hydride to create a sustained fireball without nuclear materials.

What is a Hydrogen Bomb?

  • A hydrogen bomb or thermonuclear bomb traditionally involves a two-stage detonation process:
    • Primary (Fission) Trigger: Utilizes fissile material such as uranium-235 or plutonium-239 to create immense heat and pressure.
    • Secondary (Fusion) Stage: The extreme conditions cause isotopes of hydrogen (deuterium and tritium) to undergo fusion, releasing energy many times greater than a simple fission bomb.

What is a Fissile-Free Hydrogen Bomb?

  • China’s hydrogen bomb innovation replaces the traditional fission-based trigger with advanced ignition systems such as;
    • Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) using high-powered lasers, or
    • Magnetic Compression through devices like Z-pinch plasma systems.
  • These systems compress and heat a pellet of hydrogen isotopes (like deuterium and tritium) to initiate fusion, without the use of uranium or plutonium.

What are the Concerns?

  • Legal Loophole: Under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), nuclear weapons are primarily defined by the use of fissile materials.
    • Fissile-free fusion devices will circumvent these treaties, challenging the current global nuclear arms control framework.
  • Ease of Development: Fusion fuels (e.g., deuterium, tritium) are not as tightly regulated as fissile materials.
    • Fusion technologies are embedded within civilian research and energy programs, making dual-use harder to track.
  • Proliferation Risk: Rogue states and terror groups could exploit this new pathway to thermonuclear weapons.
  • Asymmetric Warfare Implications: Compact, high-yield, and non-radioactive bombs could be used;
    • In covert operations
    • As tools of gray-zone warfare
    • Smuggled easily across borders
    • Disguised as industrial accidents

Way Ahead

  • Redefining International Law: Update CTBT to include non-fissile thermonuclear tests. There is a need to rethink definitions of nuclear weapons by energy yield, not just fissile content.
  • Verification Mechanisms: Create a Fusion Weapons Verification Body (FWVB) under the IAEA, modelled after the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW).
  • India, with credible minimum deterrence doctrine, now faces strategic uncertainty. Hence it should invest in technologies to detect non-radiological fusion detonations.
Nuclear fusion
– It is a process in which two light atomic nuclei combine to form a heavier nucleus, releasing a significant amount of energy in the process. 
1. This process is the same as what powers stars, including our sun.
– The most common fusion reaction involves the isotopes of hydrogen: deuterium and tritium. 
– When these isotopes fuse, they form helium and release a neutron, along with a large amount of energy.

Nuclear fusion

Source: ET

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