(Redirected from Canopus operation)
'''Canopus''' (also '''Opération Canopus''' in
French) was the code name for
France's first
two-stage thermonuclear test, conducted on
August 24,
1968 at
Fangataufa atoll.
In 1966, France was able to use
fusion fuel to
boost plutonium implosion devices with the
Rigel shot.
Roger Dautry, a nuclear
physicist, was selected by the
CEA to lead the development effort to construct a two-stage weapon. France did not have the ability to produce the materials needed for a two-stage thermonuclear device at the time, so 151 tons of
heavy water was purchased from
Norway and an additional 168 tons from the
United States. This heavy water went into
nuclear reactors in 1967 to produce
tritium needed for the device.
The announcement by France in the late 1960s to test a hydrogen bomb provoked the
People's Republic of China to conduct a full scale hydrogen bomb test of its own on
June 17,
1967.
[1]
France was to test the new device as part of a 5 shot series conducted at the
nuclear testing grounds in
French Polynesia. The device weighed three tons and used a
lithium-6 deuteride secondary stage with a highly
enriched uranium jacket primary.
Fangataufa was selected as the location of the shot due to its isolation in respect to the main base on
Mururoa. The device was suspended from a large
hydrogen filled
balloon. It was detonated at 18:30:00.5
GMT with a 2.6
megaton yield at an altitude of 1800 feet. As a result of the successful detonation, France became the 5th
thermonuclear nation.
See also
★
Gerboise Bleue (French atmospheric A-bomb)
★
Agathe (atomic test) (French underground A-bomb)
★
Force de frappe
★
Nuclear weapons and France
★
List of states with nuclear weapons
External links
★
France's Nuclear Weapons Program at the
Atomic Forum
Notes
1. Atomic Forum; French Atmospheric Nuclear Testing Series - 1968, "[1]"