Joe 4


The first (not "true") Soviet Hydrogen ("Super") Test, dubbed Joe 4 Joe 4 was an American nickname for the first Soviet test of a hydrogen bomb and was on August 12, 1953. It was not a "true" fusion bomb—it was similar to a "boosted" fission bomb, not a multi-stage, megaton-range hydrogen bomb. It utilized a scheme in which fission and fusion fuel was "layered", similar to a design developed by the USA known as the "Alarm Clock." This scheme was know as the "Sloika" model in the Soviet Union, referring to a type of layer cake. Its power was roughly equivalent to 400 kilotons of TNT. The Soviet physicist Yuli Khariton estimated that Joe 4's yield was 15 — 20% fusion, the rest fission. Being a single-stage weapon, though, it was not capable of being scaled up indefinitely like "true" hydrogen bombs. The first Soviet test of a "true" hydrogen bomb was on November 22, 1955, and was dubbed RDS-37 by the Soviets. All were at Semipalatinsk Test Site, Kazakhstan. See also:

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Category:Nuclear tests Category:Nuclear weapons Category:Soviet nuclear program Category:Cold War