High explosive violent reaction
A high explosive violent reaction includes reactions ranging from a fast deflagration of the high explosive, up to and including a detonation of the high explosive. The explosive wave may be subsonic or supersonic.
Discussion
In the mid-1990s, scientists and engineers working at the United States Department of Energy's National Security Laboratories began applying Probabilistic Risk Assessment methodologies to understand and enhance nuclear-weapon-safety over a life cycle. Probabilistic Risk Assessment generally address three basic questions:- What can go wrong, or what are the initiators or initiating events that lead to adverse consequence ?
- What and how severe are the potential detriments, or the adverse consequences from the initiating event?
- What is the likelihood of these adverse consequences, or what are the probabilities or frequencies of occurrence?
- Mechanical dispersal due to breach of the pit ;
- Combustion dispersal due to burning of the HE and SNM ; and
- HEVR dispersal defined as an explosion or "violent" reaction that outside of a laboratory or test-range environment can only be described as a continuum from violent deflagration to detonation.