Operation Totem was a pair of British atmospheric nuclear tests which took place at Emu Field in South Australia in October 1953. They followed the Operation Hurricane test of the first British atomic bomb, which had taken place at the Montebello Islands a year previously. The main purpose of the trial was to determine the acceptable limit on the amount of plutonium-240 which could be present in a bomb.
In addition to the two main tests, there was a series of five subcritical tests called "Kittens". These did not produce nuclear explosions, but used conventional explosives, polonium-210, beryllium and natural uranium to investigate the performance of neutron initiators.
During the early part of the Second World War, Britain had a nuclear weapons project, code-named Tube Alloys, which the 1943 Quebec Agreement merged with the American Manhattan Project to create a combined American, British, and Canadian project. The British government expected that the United States would continue to share nuclear technology, which it regarded as a joint discovery, after the war, but the United States Atomic Energy Act of 1946 (McMahon Act) ended technical co-operation. Fearing a resurgence of United States isolationism, and Britain losing its great power status, the British government restarted its own development effort, which was given the cover name "High Explosive Research". The first British atomic bomb was tested in Operation Hurricane at the Montebello Islands in Western Australia on 3 October 1952.
The main purpose of the trial was to determine the acceptable limit of the amount of plutonium-240 that could be present in a bomb. The plutonium used in the original Hurricane device was produced in the nuclear reactor at Windscale, but the Windscale Piles did not have the capacity to provide sufficient material for the British government's planned weapons programme, and consequently eight more reactors were planned. These were intended to produce both electricity and plutonium, and the design was known as PIPPA, for pressurised pile producing power and plutonium.
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Le Royaume-Uni est l'un des neuf États qui possèdent l'arme nucléaire au début du . Il est le troisième pays à avoir développé des armes nucléaires après les États-Unis et l'Union soviétique. Son programme nucléaire de nom de code Tube Alloys est lancé en 1940 dans le contexte de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, en partie par crainte que le régime Nazi ne développe de son côté des armes nucléaires. Initialement mené en coopération avec le projet atomique des États-Unis, il est fusionné avec celui-ci en 1943 faisant ainsi perdre aux Britanniques leur avance.
This paper presents similitude laws for steady-oscillatory phenomena associated with the off-design operation of Francis turbines. An appropriate procedure is proposed for stability of operation tests to be performed along with standard model tests. The el ...
International Association For Hydraulic Research1994