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What Are the Real Yields of India's Test?

Last changed 8 November 2001

By Carey Sublette

There is a curious anomaly that has dogged all of the nuclear tests in South Asia (including Pakistan) since the first Indian test in 1974. The reported yields of these tests have consistently exceeded the yields as estimated by the data available to outside observers.

The Yield of Pokhran I (Smiling Buddha)

The first Indian test - Pokhran I or "Smiling Buddha" - was originally reported by the Indian AEC (Atomic Energy Commission) Chairman Homi Sethna on the day of the test to have had a yield of between 10 and 15 kilotons. Subsequently nearly all reports described the yield as 12 kilotons, or 12 to 15 kilotons [Perkovich 1999, p. 181] (and occasionally as high as 15 to 20 kilotons, [Perkovich 1999, p. 522]). In a paper presented to the IAEA in January 1975 Ramanna and Chidambaram placed the yield at 12 kilotons. Official reports following the 1998 Shakti test series have repeated this figure, or nudged it up to 13 kilotons.

On the other hand, other reports over the years have placed the yield much lower. U.S. analysts have estimated the yield as 4 to 6 kilotons [Wallace 1998, p. 3] (or go to his on-line reprint), and Indian journalists have published reports of yields as low as 2 kilotons.

Two former chairmen of the AEC have conceded in interviews that the test yield was lower than the official 12 kt figure [Perkovich 1999, p. 182]. Sethna stated in 1996 that "the yield was much lower than had been stated". P.K. Iyengar has repeatedly cited a yield range of 8-10 kt, though seeming to favor yields ranging from 8 to approaching 10 (but never as high as 10) at different times. In [Perkovich 1999] he is cited as offering a figure of 8-10 kt (further elaborating that the design yield was 10 kt). In [Albright 1998a] Iyengar says that based on a radiochemical analysis of samples of bomb debris taken from the shaft, the yield of the 1974 shot was closer to 10 than eight kilotons. In [Douglas et al 2001; p. ] (quoting from Gupta, V. and Pabian, F., Sci. Global Security, 1996, 6, 101-189) he is cited as saying that the yield was 8 kt ‘exactly as predicted’. Since Iyengar was second-in-command of the development and test program for Pokhran-I, as well as AEC Chairman later, and this statement contradicts official figures, his opinion on this must be accorded significant weight. The Indian government has never released the results of radiochemical tests that would give unambiguous evidence of yield.

Wallace's Analysis

Wallace estimates the yield of Pokhran-I both directly from the seismic signal generated by the test (a body wave magnitude of Mb4.9), and by comparing the crater features to U.S. descriptions of crater morphology for various underground test conditions. The basic yield-to-seismic magnitude relationship is given by Equation 1:

Eq. 1 mb = a + b log10 Y
Wallace suggests that values appropriate for the Pokhran test site are a=4.45 and b=0.75. Using these a yield of 4 kt is obtained.

In estimating the yield from test crater features Wallace points to the clear fissures seen around the crater, and in the upper part of the crater as evidence that the underground explosion was deep enough relative to yield to completely contain the blast and produce an underground void, leading to a subsidence crater when this void collapsed. Craters of this kind usually have fissures caused by tension when the soil subsides. Using the 107 m (351 ft) detonation depth provided by India, and a U.S. scaling formula used for determining the burial depth to guarantee complete containment at the Nevada Test Site:

Eq. 2 d = 122 Y1/3
where d is burial depth in meters, and Y is yield in kilotons. Wallace assesses that the yield would have been less than one kiloton, apparently operating under the assumption that yields much in excess of this cannot produce subsidence crater features. He also points to the different types of surface phenomena seen at various burst depths scaled to one kiloton. This diagram is based on a partially saturated tuff as the test soil. This is probably a reasonable match to at least some of the characteristics of the Pokhran site which is situated over moisture bearing porous rock (sandstone and shale). The scaled depth shown that matches Wallace's full containment interpretation is 350 feet which he takes to indicate a yield of approximately 1 kt for Pokhran-I. See also diagram f. in this figure from [Glasstone and Dolan 1977, p. 234]:
Underground blast diagrams

Assessment of Wallace's Analysis

The formulas for making yield estimates from seismic signals span a range greater than a factor of 4 [Barker et al 1998; p. 1968], raising the question of whether the formula chosen by Wallace was necessarily appropriate. This author cannot judge whether the formula is appropriate for the tectonic conditions of Pokhran, but from Wallace's own report it appears that it is actually on the low end of available formulas (the extreme low value for the formulas given by Wallace would make Pokhran-I a 3.2 kt yield). Even this extreme low yield is much higher than the yield estimate implied by Wallace's interpretation of the crater evidence (about one kiloton or less). Curiously Wallace chooses to describe this divergent estimate as "very consistent with the seismic estimates of yield", by arbitrarily promoting it to "&lt5 kilotons" so that it overlaps the seismic estimates. But Wallace's interpretation of the crater features is not valid, being based on several erroneous beliefs.

In a shallow underground explosion the cavity formation goes through phases as depicted in [Teller et al 1968, p. 143]:

Underground blast cavity

Images made only moments after the shot was fired (which match verbal accounts by witnesses) show that the test was too large to be fully contained -- that is, no significant surface disturbance prior to subsidence collapse. In this image we see the uplift mound thrown up briefly by Pokhran-I. Descriptions of this test by the scientists involved [Chengappa 2000, p. 198-200] also recount this phenomenon. Studying the images of this crater show that is has an unusual complex set of features, not comparable to any other underground nuclear test this author has been able to find. The crater proper, which contains fissures characteristic of settling and subsidence as Wallace observed, is surrounded by fissures and uneven broken ground stretching well away from the crater perimeter. These fissures were presumably created by stretching when the mound was heaved upward. Images of subsidence craters at the Nevada Test Site available to this writer entirely lack the pronounced fissures surrounding the outside of the crater that are so striking in images of Pokhran-I. In the NTS images of pure subsidence craters, the fissures are confined to the crater interior (see the Storax and NTS underground test pages for examples). On the other hand, clear evidence of ejecta - material thrown from the crater - is impossible to find in the pictures. Taken together these indicators show that the blast, though apparently contained, was only very marginally so. The upheaval was either not quite violent enough to actually break through and create a "throw out crater" (the typical blast-type crater), or if it did break through it was without sufficient force to throw material out of the crater. All of the material propelled upward remained within the crater. These phenomena match the craters shown here with burial depths of 175 (equivalent to diagram e. in this figure) or 200 feet (no equivalent in the Glasstone crater figure), not 350 feet. Clearly, if the yield had been significantly greater an obvious surface rupture with ejecta would certainly have occurred. The wide shallow crater produced (reportedly it had a 47 m radius and was 10 m deep; recent high resolution commercial satellite imagery indicates a crater radius of 60 m) is also characteristic of a marginal cratering explosion rather than a contained subsurface detonation. True subsidence craters have dimensions similar to the underground cavity, which for this yield range would be a radius of 30 m or less. The fact that this explosion marks a transition between surface and subsurface explosions accounts for its unusual distinctive and complex structure.

As is explained in "Scaling Laws" applying scaling laws to analyze shot effects in the regime that transitions between surface cratering and subsurface containment is difficult since the scaling laws themselves are changing (from a 1/3.4 exponent law for cratering explosions to a 1/3 law for contained cavity-producing explosions) and the exact physical properties of the media in which the shot is fired also alter the effects observed. The 1/3 law applies only to fully contained explosions, ones in which the energy of the the explosion is entirely expended in three dimensions in creating an underground cavity. The additional energy expended in lofting material against the force of gravity when the explosion breaches the surface leads (when full cratering effects are observed) to the 1/3.4 law.

Based on the surface effect diagram he uses, Wallace expects that a shallowly contained explosion would necessarily produce a permanent "retarc" (a mound of rubble - this is "crater" spelled backwards and is the actual terminology used). But the formation of a retarc is not general behavior - it is dependent on the characteristics of the medium in which it is fired, and the characteristics of any overburden that may be present (see The Effects of Underground Explosions for a detailed discussion of the issues). Retarcs only occur if the shot is fired in a medium that bulks up when shattered by the explosion, and can hold the mounded form as occurred in granite and basalt with the Whetstone Sulky shot at NTS (18 December 1964). Retarc formation is also rather sensitive to the depth of firing - in fact Sulky is the only retarc formed in the entire history of US nuclear testing. A relatively deep shot produces greater bulking because the rock is broken into large blocks with a greater amount of void between them. A shallow detonation produces higher stresses and smaller particles with low bulking even in a bulking-prone medium [Teller et al 1968, p. 88]. And if the shot is instead fired in a stratum that becomes compacted to the sides and below by the explosion (creating a cavity), but is overlaid with material that does not bulk up substantially from the explosion, then an uplift mound followed by a subsidence cavity is exactly what would be expected - but the phenomenon involved are rather different from the permanent cavity formation, followed by chimney formation progressively climbing to the surface seen in "classic" subsidence craters. This appears to be the situation with Pokhran-I.

The strata in which Pokhran-I was fired is described as being dry sandstone and shale above the water table ([Douglas et al 2001], quoting Chidambaram and Ramanna from Some studies of India’s peaceful nuclear explosion experiment, Proc. Tech. Committee on Peaceful Nuclear Explosions IV, IAEA, Vienna, 1975, pp. 421-427). From the available descriptions that are available about the shaft digging operations at Pokhran, it is clear that while the test shaft may have been above the water table, it was plagued by continual seepage and flooding, so that the porous moisture bearing rock is perhaps similar to the tuff at NTS. But the surface of the Pokhran site is clearly covered by a layer of sand - a material that does not bulk at all, and efficiently fills subsurface voids. It may also be that below the sandy surface of this area of the Thar Desert there is a layer of alluvium - a loose material that also does not bulk. Also the obviously shallow depth of the detonation would have shattered the rock overburden into small pieces reducing or eliminating bulking in any material prone to it. Thus the formation of a subsurface partial cavity, a temporary uplift mound, followed by cavity collapse and permanent subsidence crater formation in entirely consistent with an explosion that was large enough to be only marginally contained.

Using this understanding to calibrate the yield is complicated by the scaling problems noted above. But by marshalling the available data on deep cratering experiments done for Plowshare a tight boundary on the yield can be obtained.

Sulky provides the closest analogy to Pokhran-I in the US nuclear test program. This shot was a hard rock deep cratering test that was marginally contained - it failed to throw out any material, but it did rupture the surface. As [Allen et al 1997; pg. 28] states "mound formation occurs in test regimes that border on catastrophic surface rupture and throw-out (crater formation), and subsequent release of radioactivity". Sulky had a yield of 0.092 kt and a burial depth of -27.1 m, giving it an equivalent scaled depth of 54.7 - 60.0 m (179 - 197 ft) [Nordyke 1996; pg. 7]. The surface rupture produced by Sulky had a radius of 12 m, and took the form of a retarc - a pile of rubble - 4 m high. The formation of a retarc rather than a shallow subsidence crater is an artifact of the unusually strong rock in which the test was conducted, granite overlaid by basalt. The granite shattered into large blocks, producing a large permanent volume increase. If the strata had been softer causing it to shatter into finer pieces; or if the scaled depth had been slightly shallower producing a stronger shock and greater shattering effect; then Sulky would likely have produced a subsidence crater also. The retarc formation had come as a surprise, a shallow crater was the expected, and Sulky was the only retarc producing shot in the entire US nuclear test program.

A Plowshare shot that provides another constraint on conditions for containment is Palanquin which was a 4.3 kt shot fired in hard dry rock (rhyolite) at a depth of 85.7 m. Palanquin was a deep cratering shot that excavated a 73 m by 24 m crater with an ejecta boundary extending 82 m from the center [Gibson 1965; pg. 8] (for a contemporary satellite image of the Palanquin crater located at 37.280 -116.524 click here). This gives a scaled depth for Palanquin ranging from 52.7 to 55.8 m. The dimensions of Palanquin can be compared to the dimensions of Pokhran-I, 94 m by 10 m. The generally similar wide shallow form of the two craters suggest a similarity in their mechanism of formation. If scaled to the depth of Pokhran-I using the 1/3.4 law Palanquin would have a yield of 9.1 kt. If the rock in which Pokhran-I was fired matched the dry rhyolite of Palanquin in containment strength, this immediately establishes an easy upper limit to P-I's yield

Comparison of Deep Cratering Shots Scaled with the 1/3.4 Law
Test NameDateYield (kt)Depth (m)Radius (m)Scaled Depth (m)Scaled Radius (m)
Sulky12/18/640.09227.11254.724.2
Palanquin04/14/654.385.736.555.823.8
Pokhran-I
(Iyengar est.)
748.01074758.025.4
Cabriolet01/26/682.251.86141.148.4
Schooner12/08/6830111.313040.947.8

Milo Nordyke discovered that if the various hard rock cratering shots conducted for Plowshare (both conventional and nuclear) were scaled with the 1/3.4 law used for throw-out craters, and the scaled depths and radii plotted, a well defined curve resulted. Figure 1 below is adapted from one by Nordyke which appears in [Teller et al 1968, p. 197]. The graph plots cratering results for basalt and has been altered by adding data points for an additional Plowshare cratering shot (Palanquin), and also the positions for Pokhran-I scaled for 8 and 13 kt. In addition the data point for Sulky has been replotted. The original data point gives it a "zero radius". The thinking for plotting it this way was no doubt that since it wasn't defined as a crater, it couldn't have a "crater radius". However it did produce a surface rupture of considerable size, which missed being a depression simply due to the upper strata's failure to recompact. If the graph is considered a plot of surface rupture features of all types, then Sulky should be plotted at the position labelled "actual". (Note also, the original diagram placed Sulky slightly too high on the depth scale.)



Click here to see 640x530 version (20 k)
Figure 1. Scaled Depth vs Radius for Cratering Shots.

It can be seen in Figure 1 that Sulky and Palanquin occupy almost the same spot on the graph, with Sulky being located slightly farther from the crater vs radius curve.

In looking for reasons that two shots with almost identical scaled characteristics produced quite different surface effects it should be noted that they are falling on opposite sides of the point of containment, but just barely. Sulky was fired in a notably strong rock - granite - which would be expected to cause rather better containment than basalt. The rhyolite used for Palanquin is a strong hard rock (it has the same chemical composition as granite but with a finer crystal structure), probably stronger than basalt but not quite as strong as granite. Thus both shots should be expected to fall slightly below the scaled radius curve for basalt (i.e. smaller radius for the same scaled depth) due to better containment in stronger rock. Also the fact that Palanquin produced a throw-out crater while Sulky did not, even if it was slightly deeper, is explicable given the stronger rock used with Sulky. The scaled depth difference between Sulky and Palanquin (1.1 m) is so slight though, that they are virtually the same, being smaller than the scaling uncertainty introduced by the uncertainty in yield.

But the fact that these two shots - with a 47-fold yield difference - tightly bracket the threshold conditions for containment places tight constraints on the plausible yield for Pokhran-I. It can be seen that with an 8 kt yield Pokhran-I clusters closely with Sulky and Palanquin. Pokhran-I was slightly deeper than Palanquin and was barely contained, suggesting that the rock in which it was fired was roughly similar in strength to the rhyolite of Palanquin.

On the other hand the claim of 13 kt puts Pokhran-I in a strikingly anomalous position. It is much farther below the curve than any over the other shots, and at a much shallower scaled depth than the evident cutoff region for containment. In effect this requires Pokhran-I to have been fired in rock with remarkable properties - offering far better containment than basalt, rhyolite, or granite. The actual test site rock (sandstone and shale) was soft, porous and moisture bearing - quite significantly weaker than the granite strata in which Sulky was emplaced. Chidambaram asserts that rock mechanics calculations employing measurements of the physical properties of the Pokhran rocks support the 13 kt yield for Pokhran-I [Sikka et al 2000]. With due respect to Chidambaram, in light of the scaling data presented here this is an extraordinary claim, and is impossible to credit.

From this analysis, it appears that the yield of Pokhran-I has been tightly constrained to value close to 8 kt, in accordance with recent statements made by PK Iyengar.

Palanquin deposited 5% of its fission products as local fallout [Gibson 1965; pg. 45], and produced a peak post-shot radiation field exceeding 1000 R/hr, and with lethal 500 R/hr levels extending a mile downwind. It has been reported ([Chengappa 2000; p. 187]) that Chidambaram had calculated that the test depth should be 107 m to contain radiation from the shot, and by mid-1973 had passed this specification to Indian Army which was charged with the task of sinking the shaft. Since Chadambaram presumably consulted the Plowshare test results (Palanquin was conducted 14 April 1965), he would have been aware that a shot that scaled to Palanquin would be very unlikely to be contained. Thus if Chidambaram really planned complete, or nearly complete containment, a planned yield would have had to have be no more than 9 kt, and very likely less.

The 8 kt yield range suggested by comparison with US cratering data is well within the range that seismic scaling laws provide - which extends from 3.2 kt to as high as 21 kt for a mb of 4.9 (though not all yields in this range are equally plausible), and matches some values given by Iyengar. It is significantly higher than estimates favored by seismologists for Pokhran, and the reported estimates of U.S. analysts, but is well within the uncertainties characteristic of seismic yield estimation.

The Yields of Pokhran II (Operation Shakti)

The yields claimed for the initial simultaneous Shakti I-III three shot test on 11 May were 43 kt, +/- 3 kt (for a thermonuclear device test, also stated to be 43-45 kt), 12 kt (an improved fission bomb design), and 0.2 kt. As with Pokhran-I, these yield claims have been controversial from the start.

Three approaches exist for estimating yield from the seismic data: