Operation Crossroads

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Crossroads Able, a 23-kiloton air-deployed nuclear weapon detonated on 1 July 1946.
Crossroads Able, a 23-kiloton air-deployed nuclear weapon detonated on 1 July 1946.

Operation Crossroads was a series of nuclear weapon tests conducted by the United States in the summer of 1946. The series consisted of two detonations, each with a yield of 21 kilotons: Able detonated at an altitude of 520 feet (158 m) on 1 July 1946; Baker detonated 90 feet (27 m) underwater on 25 July 1946. A third planned burst, Charlie, was canceled. The Crossroads tests were the fourth and fifth nuclear explosions done by the USA(following the Trinity test and the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki). They were the first nuclear tests held in the Marshall Islands, and the first to be publicly announced beforehand.

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[edit] General information

Prospective Operation Crossroads target ships and support ships at Pearl Harbor on 27 February 1946. Ships from front to rear: USS Crittenden (APA-77), Catron (APA-71), Bracken (APA-64), Burleson (APA-67), Gilliam (APA-57), Fallon (APA-81), unknown ship, Fillmore (APA-83), Kochab (AKS-6), Luna (AKS-7) and an unidentified tanker and liberty ship. On the right are LSM-203 and LSM-465. Further in the background are a floating drydock and a merchant ship hulk.
Prospective Operation Crossroads target ships and support ships at Pearl Harbor on 27 February 1946. Ships from front to rear: USS Crittenden (APA-77), Catron (APA-71), Bracken (APA-64), Burleson (APA-67), Gilliam (APA-57), Fallon (APA-81), unknown ship, Fillmore (APA-83), Kochab (AKS-6), Luna (AKS-7) and an unidentified tanker and liberty ship. On the right are LSM-203 and LSM-465. Further in the background are a floating drydock and a merchant ship hulk.

The series was to study the effects of nuclear weapons on ships, equipment, and material. A fleet of more than 90 vessels was assembled in Bikini Lagoon as a target. This target fleet consisted of older U.S. capital ships, three surrendered German and Japanese ships, surplus U.S. cruisers, destroyers and submarines, and a large number of auxiliary and amphibious vessels. Military equipment was arrayed on some of the ships as well as amphibious craft that were berthed on Bikini Island. Technical experiments were also conducted to study nuclear weapon explosion phenomena. Some experiments included the use of live animals.[1]

The support fleet of more than 150 ships provided quarters, experimental stations, and workshops for most of the 42,000 men (more than 37,000 of whom were Navy personnel) of Joint Task Force 1 (JTF 1), the organization that conducted the tests. Additional personnel were located on nearby atolls such as Eniwetok and Kwajalein. The islands of the Bikini Atoll were used primarily as recreation and instrumentation sites.

Before the first test, all personnel were evacuated from the target fleet and Bikini Atoll. These men were placed on units of the support fleet, which sortied from Bikini Lagoon and took safe positions at least 10 nautical miles (18.5 km) east of the atoll.

In the Able test, the weapon was dropped from the B-29 Superfortress Dave's Dream (formerly Big Stink of the 509th Composite Group) and burst over the target fleet. In Baker, the weapon was suspended beneath landing craft LSM-60 anchored in the midst of the target fleet. Baker was detonated 90 feet (27 m) underwater.

Able operations went smoothly except that the test weapon was dropped between 1,500 and 2,000 feet (450 and 600 m) off target. The miss resulted in a government investigation of the flight crew of the B-29 bomber. Eventually, it was generally agreed that the bomb had a flaw in the tail stabilizer, causing the miss, and the flight crew was cleared of any suspicion. The plutonium core of the Able shot had been previously nicknamed the Demon core by scientists at Los Alamos after it twice went critical in experiments in 1945 and 1946; in each incident, it had killed a scientist.

The radioactivity created by the burst had only a transient effect, and within a day nearly all the surviving target ships had been safely reboarded. The ship inspections, instrument recoveries, and remooring necessary for the Baker test proceeded on schedule. Five ships were sunk as a result of the test.

The crews of the target ships that had been remanned following Able were evacuated before Baker to the support fleet east of the atoll. Baker sank eight ships and damaged more ships than Able. The detonation caused most of the target fleet to be bathed in radioactive water spray and radioactive debris from the lagoon bottom. With the exception of 12 target vessels anchored in the array and the landing craft beached on Bikini Island, the target fleet remained too radiologically contaminated for several weeks for more than brief on-board activities.

Charlie was to explode deep under the surface, and indeed the test intended for Charlie was later carried out in Operation Wigwam. Charlie would have tested the effects of using nuclear weapons as depth charges. However, perhaps because of the problems with contamination from Baker, the Charlie shot was subsequently cancelled. The official reason for canceling Charlie was that it was felt unnecessary after the success of the Able and Baker tests, and it was deemed less pressing when the entire US arsenal was only a handful of such weapons.

The inability to complete inspections on much of the target fleet threatened the success of the operation after Baker. A program of target vessel decontamination was begun in earnest about 1 August. This involved washing the ships' exteriors using work crews drawn from the target ships' companies under radiological supervision of monitors equipped with radiation detection and measurement devices. Initially, decontamination was slow because the safe time aboard the target ships was measured only in minutes. As time progressed, the support fleet had become contaminated by the low-level radioactivity in marine growth on the ships' hulls and seawater piping systems.[1]

By 10 August, a decision was made to stop work in Bikini and tow the surviving target fleet to Kwajalein Atoll where the work could be done in uncontaminated water. The move was accomplished during the remainder of August and September. A major task at Kwajalein was to offload ammunition stored aboard the target ships. This work continued into the fall of 1946. Personnel continued to work on target ships at Kwajalein into 1947.

Eight of the major ships and two submarines were towed back to the United States and Hawaii for radiological inspection. Twelve target ships were so lightly contaminated that they were remanned and sailed back to the United States by their crews. The remaining target ships were destroyed by sinking off Bikini Atoll, off Kwajalein Atoll, or near the Hawaiian Islands during 1946-1948.

The support ships were decontaminated as necessary and received a radiological clearance before they could return to the fleet. This decontamination and clearance process required a great deal of experimentation and learning at Navy shipyards in the United States, primarily at San Francisco, California.

Finally, a formal resurvey of Bikini Atoll was conducted in the summer of 1947 to study long-term effects of the Crossroads tests.

All Crossroads operations were undertaken under radiological supervision intended to keep personnel from being exposed to more than 0.1 röntgen (R) per day. At the time, this was considered to be an amount of radiation that could be tolerated for long periods without any harmful effects on health.

Radiological supervision included predicting areas of possible danger, providing trained personnel equipped with radiation survey instruments to act as guides during operations involving potential exposure, and elaboration of rules and regulations governing conduct in these operations. Personnel were removed for one or more days from areas and activities of possible exposure if their badges showed more than 0.1 R / day exposure.

About 15% of the JTF 1 personnel was issued at least one of the 18,875 film-badge dosimeters during Crossroads. Approximately 6,596 personnel were on the islands or ships that had no potential for radiation exposure. Personnel anticipated to be at the greatest radiological risk were badged, and a percentage of each group working in less contaminated areas was badged. The maximum accumulated exposure recorded was 3.72 R, received by a radiation safety monitor.

Lacking complete radiation exposure data, reconstructions have been made of all personnel exposures for unbadged crewmembers of the ships involved. These calculations have considered the several sources of radiation at work in Bikini, such as the low-level contamination in the lagoon water, living aboard support ships, and boarding the contaminated target ships. The calculations relied upon radiation measurements recorded by radiation safety personnel in 1946. This data was used in a computer model that includes such factors as the radiation-shielding properties of ships' hulls and realistic patterns of daily personnel activity on weather decks and below. The actual movements of each ship were then used to reconstruct a dose for the crew. Calculated exposures range from 0 to 2.5 rem (25 mSv) (gamma) for support ships. Exposures for target ship crews that reboarded their ships after Baker were higher than those for support ship crews. A summary of film badge readings (in roentgens) for July and August, when the largest number of personnel was involved, is listed below:

[edit] Actual film badge readings (R gamma)

Readings[1] Total 0 0.001 - 0.1 0.101 - 1.0 1.001 - 10.0
July 3,767 (100%) 2,843 (75%) 689 (18%) 232 (6%) 3 (<0.1%)
August 6,664 (100%) 3,947 (59%) 2,139 (32%) 570 (9%) 8 (0.1%)

[edit] Ships sunk during test Able

A painting of USS Gilliam and Carlisle under the blast.
A painting of USS Gilliam and Carlisle under the blast.

[edit] Sunk during test Baker, 25 July 1946

The ex-German heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen survived both the Able and Baker tests but was too radioactive to have leaks repaired. In September 1946 she was towed to Kwajalein Atoll where she capsized on 22 December 1946.

[edit] Popular culture

The name "Bikini" was adopted for bikini swimwear shortly thereafter; a coincidence of explosive shock perhaps ("like the bomb, the bikini is small and devastating"), and the realization that "atom bombs reduce everybody to primitive costume."[2]

The 1988 film Radio Bikini was nominated for the Best Documentary Feature Oscar. Directed by Robert Stone, it recounts the story of Operation Crossroads, concentrating on how it affected the Bikini islanders (they were deported en masse to Rongerik Atoll) and the servicemen who took part in the operation. The film almost exclusively uses archival footage, much of it in colour. Video of the Crossroads Baker explosion is among the most often shown video of a nuclear explosion, and exists in many sources.

Footage of the blast was featured in the spongebob squarepants episode 'dying for pie', when Squidward is hit by a pie, which in the episode, was a powerful bomb.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Operation Crossroads: Fact Sheet. Department of the Navy -- Naval Historical Center (2002-08-11). Retrieved on 2008-01-24.
  2. ^ Rosebush, Judson. Michele Bernadini: The First Bikini. Bikini Science. Retrieved on 2007-09-19.

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
  • Wikimapia link showing Bikini Atoll and, particularly, the Castle Bravo crater.