Information About

W85




The W85 was a thermonuclear warhead developed by the United States Of America to arm the Pershing II missile. It had a variable yield which could be set between 5 and 50 Kiloton s.


OVERVIEW


The Pershing Ia missile was armed with a 400 kiloton W50 warhead. By the early 1970s it was clear that this was far too large to allow the missile to be used as a tactical weapon — by this time 400 kt was larger than most strategic warheads. The Pershing II was to have an MGM-31C high accuracy maneuvering reentry vehicle (MARV), equipped with a radar guidance system and carrying a low yield W85 warhead. Like many US nuclear weapons, it was a development of the B61 Nuclear Bomb - in this case, a modification of the Mod 3/4.

After the Pershing missiles were scrapped the W85 warheads were modified back into B61 bombs, in this case the B61-11 penetrating free-fall weapon.


EFFECTS


Assuming a detonation on the surface at the maximum 50 kt yield, W85 would result in a fireball 160 metres (525 feet) across lasting just over one second. The radiated heat would be sufficient to cause lethal burns to any unprotected person within 3.4 kilometres (2.1 miles). Blast effects would be sufficient to collapse most residental and industrial structures within a 2.7 kilometre (1.7 mile) radius; within 1 kilometre (0.6 miles) virtually all above-ground structures would be destroyed and blast effects would inflict near 100% fatalities. Within 1.8 kilometres (1.1 miles) a 500 rem dose of ionising radiation would be received by the average person, sufficient to cause a 50% to 90% casualty rate - though it is unlikely that anybody would suffer ill effects of this radiation as it is highly unlikely that anybody would survive the thermal or blast effects at this distance.

Significant amounts of Nuclear Fallout would be created and dispersed into the atmosphere.

It is worth noting that even this small tactical warhead was considerably more powerful than the combined power of the weapons used in the Atomic Bombings Of Hiroshima And Nagasaki .


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