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Harold Edgerton
A High-Speed Motion Photography Expert and Pioneer
Most of these are his images, but not all.
Some are shot with film at speeds approaching several million
frames per second (Atomic Weapon Detonations), but most
are just hundreds of thousands of frames per seconds or
less. |
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Below are three sequence photos shot on
special b&w film at about 10,600,000 frames per second
during the 1945 Trinity Test when Los Alamos fired the first
Atomic Bomb test. These are Edgerton images. They are three
almost-sequence frames, triggered from the primary firing
Trinity weapon firing mechanism. The camera had 3500-feet
of pre-tensioned 35-mm film on a huge spool, and the below
shots are about two or three or five frames apart (they
never could really tell) at the climax speed of the camera
when the test weapon went off. The camera exploded after
the shots because it was going so fast, but it shot 2/3rds
of a mile of film frames before it disintigrated, and Edgerton
made a special heat and blast resistant magnesium-alloy housing for the film to spin off and eject laterally when
the camera exploded, so they could recover the exposed film
after a predicted camera failure. Edward Teller was the
first one to see the frames, and he was ecstatic. Moments
later, he was depressed and realized that the US was going
to drop these weapons on Japan. He forever regretted his
role in the development of these infernal death machines.
But he ended up sticking with it into the post-WWII era
and helped make even larger Hydrogen Fusion weapons.
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(Above) - A USAF Thunderbird F-16C
pilot at the moment of ejection at an air show.
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A small 500-lb fuel-air atmospheric air-to-ground
munition device (GBU), just after primary ignition and
moments before concussive impact on a test structure at
Nellis, AFB. These were used prominently in Afghanistan
in 2001-2002 on Al-Qaida cave openings, and caused exhaust
plumes on the complete other side of the mountain when
they were placed properly. With competent USAF SpecOps
Forward Air Controllers on the ground, air crews directed
these weapons from upwards of 38,000 feet from B1B and
B2 Spirit bombers time after time inside the openings
of cave doors and cleared every living thing from here
to Timbuktku inside of them.
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Thanks to Toivo for sending me the
inspiration for this collective set of photos...
Tony's Note: Edward Teller is still
alive today (June 2004), and he has seen the Trident III
missiles on ours and the UK subs, and he shakes his head
with disgust at them. He says these are the worst weapons
to ever keep on hair-trigger alert, because if they are
ever launched on a full DefCon1 firing mission, which
they are designed to do, the Trident III missiles alone
will destroy at least 200 million people in less than
15 minutes after launch. And by the nature of the launch
of those missiles, every Russian SS-18, SS-20, and the
new TOPOL SS-22 missiles will fly automatically, which
will invoke our MILSTAR II system to authorize and auto-fire
all of our remaining ground-based missiles to impact on
Russia and China. Hmm...
As of June 2004, we have 550 "ready"
strategic ballistic nuclear missiles in our stable of
ground silos that can deliver 1,700 MIRV individual nuclear
warheads, 24 SLBM "boomer" submarines with 18
MIRV TRIDENT III missiles of 12 each in each cone for
independent delivery. That makes 5184 individual 300 kiloton
nuclear warheads from our SSBN submarines, and we have
245 nuclear cruise missiles ready to go on B1B and B2
Spirit bombers. That is 7200 ready-to-launch nuclear weapons
from our military, at any moment.
And the Russians have about 9000. And
the Chinese are pony'ing up about 100, possibly 200. Damn!
That is WAY too many thermonuclear hydrogen
weapons criss-crossing the globe for anyone to survive.
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