The 'Smiling Buddha' was the first
nuclear test explosion by
India on
May 18,
1974 at
Pokhran. It was also the first confirmed nuclear test by a nation outside the permanent five members of the
United Nations Security Council.
Preparation and design
On
September 7,
1972, Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi gave authorization to the scientists at the
Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) to manufacture the nuclear device they had designed and prepare it for a test. Throughout its development, the device was formally called the
"Peaceful Nuclear Explosive", but it was usually referred to as the Smiling Buddha.
The head of the development team was
Raja Ramanna. Other key members were
P.K. Iyengar,
Rajagopala Chidambaram, and
Nagapattinam Sambasiva Venkatesan. The project employed no more than 75 scientists and engineers from 1967-1974. Keeping it small served to aid in the preservation of secrecy, according to the researcher Jeffrey Richelson.
[1]
The device used a high explosive implosion system developed at the
DRDO Terminal Ballistics Research Laboratory (TBRL) in
Chandigarh based on the American design from
World War II. But the Indian design was simpler and less sophisticated than the American system. The 6 kg of
plutonium came from the
CIRUS reactor at BARC. The neutron initiator was a
Polonium-
Beryllium type (again like those used in early U.S. bombs of the
Fat Man type) code-named "Flower." The complete core was assembled in
Trombay before transportation to the test site.
The fully assembled device had a hexagonal cross section, 1.25 m in diameter and weighed 1400 kg. The device was detonated at 8.05 a.m. in a shaft 107 m under the army
Pokhran test range in the
Thar Desert (or Great Indian Desert),
Rajasthan. Officially the
yield was reported at 12
kt, though outside estimates of the yield vary from 2 kt to 20 kt.
Code name
Smiling Buddha was the code-name of the project because May 18, 1974 (the official test date) was
Buddha Jayanti, a festival day in India marking the birth of
Gautama Buddha.
The then-
PM Indira Gandhi was not present at
Pokhran so as to keep this operation confidential until the last minute. In her full cabinet, only her NSA and private secretary knew about it.
On May 18, 1974, when the blast occurred successfully, Dr Ramanna wanted to tell this news to the Prime Minister, who was miles away in Delhi. The hotline was not working, so he went to a nearby village and called her from an ordinary landline and said "Madam, Buddha has finally smiled."
Effects
In
1975, Homi Sethna (chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission), Raja Ramanna and Nag Chaudhuri (head of the DRDO) received the ''
Padma Vibhushan'' - India's second highest civilian award. Five other project members received the ''
Padma Shri'' - India's fourth highest civilian award.
The
CIRUS reactor used to produce the plutonium was a research reactor based on the
NRX design and donated by
Canada in 1960, with heavy water supplied by the US; ("
CIRUS" = Canada-India Reactor U.S.). The Smiling Buddha test caused a public outcry in Canada, and the Canadian government cut off exchange of nuclear materials and technology with India in the wake of the test.
India did not carry out any further nuclear tests until the successful
Operation Shakti in 1998.
A further effect of India's nuclear test was the formation of the
Nuclear Suppliers Group also known as the London Club.
The Smiling Buddha Deity
Smiling Buddha refers to
Maitreya or
Hotei. A Buddhist Deity popular like a Good Luck Giver.
Notes
1. Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea, , Jefferey T., Richelson, WW Norton, 1999,
External links
★
India's Nuclear Weapons Program Smiling Buddha: 1974