1 / 41

ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE

ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE Agenda. Definition Damage Likelihood Detection Preparation Afterward Summary. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE Definition. Nuclear bomb High altitude Three waves Solar flare Non-nuclear. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE Definition. Nuclear bomb

chase-lee
Download Presentation

ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSE

  2. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  3. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDefinition • Nuclear bomb • High altitude • Three waves • Solar flare • Non-nuclear

  4. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDefinition • Nuclear bomb • Radiation burst: neutrons and gamma waves • Blast: shock wave and thermal wave • Electromagnetic pulse that can damage electronic and electrical devices • Caused by gamma radiation interacting with upper atmosphere

  5. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDefinition • High altitude • Interaction in upper atmosphere from 12-25 miles altitude • Higher altitude burst creates larger circle of interaction in upper atmosphere • Altitude of 250+ miles creates EMP that covers the entire continental US

  6. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDefinition • Three waves • E1: lasts 1 microsecond, extends across all frequencies • E2: lasts 1 second, similar to lighting strike surges • E3: lasts many seconds, low frequency, long wavelength

  7. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDefinition • Solar flare • E-3 component only

  8. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDefinition • Non-nuclear • Devices that can create local EMP-like effects • Limited in range and power compared to nuclear and solar events • May become useful in warfare because of limited scope

  9. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  10. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • Delicate electronics • All electronics and electrical devices • Long antennas • Infrastructure • Ripple effects

  11. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • E-1: Delicate electronics • Fragile chips and circuits can be burned out • Includes: computers, smart phones, process controllers, solid state radios, LEDs, solar panels, chargers, modern car ignition systems, surge suppressors • May not include: older vacuum tube radios, older car ignition systems, batteries

  12. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • E-2: All electronics and electrical devices • Since the E-1 wave can destroy surge suppressors before they activate, they will likely be unavailable to protect during the E-2 wave

  13. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • E-3: Long antennas • Long power lines, electrical cables, communication cables, even railroad rails, any conductor long enough to absorb the long waveform • Will induce currents that can melt lines and cause fires • Likely to destroy many large transformers in power grid

  14. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • Infrastructure • Electric power grid • Likely to be 100% incapacitated, big questions about repair time frames • Water supply • Pumping stations – depend upon electric supply, can use temporary/portable generators if they are available • Water treatment plants – depend upon electric supply, too big to use portable generators, will be down until the grid is restored

  15. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • Infrastructure • Communications – most unprotected systems will be down, those with shielding may survive – shielded spares may enable repairs • Transportation – older cars, trucks, locomotives and boats may survive - newer cars, trucks, locomotives and boats may be disabled temporarily or permanently - accidents will congest roads, control systems will be disabled and may take a long time to repair

  16. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • Ripple effects • Repair and replace • Extreme parts shortage of what is most needed, limited distribution capability, no short term manufacturing capability • Distribution • Limited by nearly non-existent transportation, fuel supply and communications • Manufacturing • Limited by lack of power, workers, communications, transportation, control systems

  17. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • Ripple effects • Agriculture • Crippled by lack of water, equipment, workers, transportation, communication, power – refrigeration, storage and distribution will be non-existent • Financial transactions • Crippled by lack of power, computer systems, communications, workers

  18. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDamage • Ripple effects • Aid: there will be no help coming from anybody since the entire nation will be affected • Repair and recovery will be extremely slow, possibly taking many years to restore normality • Anticipated population death rates: • 25% in two weeks • 50% in one month • 75% in ninety days

  19. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  20. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSELikelihood • HEMP (High altitude EMP) • Solar Flare

  21. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSELikelihood • HEMP (High altitude EMP) • Motive • Cripple most US infrastructure without warfare • Can be done “anonymously” without retaliation • Means • Moderate sized nuclear warhead • 500 kiloton bomb (fission weapon) • Missile capable of reaching 300 miles altitude • Scud-D, Shahab-3, Nodong, Taepodong-1+2 • Launch from ship, balloon, satellite, inside the US

  22. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSELikelihood • HEMP (High altitude EMP) • Opportunity • Get a delivery system into position without detection (either inside the US or near a border) • 5 minutes flight time from ground to 250 miles altitude • OUTBOUND trajectory implications • Defensive missiles can't react in enough time • Hesitation in decision making

  23. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSELikelihood • Solar flare • 100% probability – flares occur frequently, but most do not impact us • Unknown timing – cannot reliably predict flare timing • Unknown power level – depends on size of the flare and how directly it impacts Earth • We do get some warning: often days, at least hours

  24. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  25. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDetection • Simple observation • Scientific evidence

  26. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDetection • Simple observation • Power outage • Most communications fail • Things not connected to power fail - battery operated devices like laptops, LED flashlights, radios, phones • Car and truck ignition systems may fail

  27. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEDetection • Scientific evidence • Sensors will record event until they are disabled but the data is not likely to be available • Only military hardened systems will stay up • Emergency radio broadcast may or may not be practical to spread the word

  28. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  29. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEPreparation • Knowledge • Faraday shielding • Spare parts • Emergency preparation

  30. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEPreparation • Knowledge • Basic knowledge about EMP • Preparedness knowledge

  31. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEPreparation • Faraday shielding • Metallic surrounding with no gaps • Insulation from metal • Grounding is controversial • Simplest method: • Wrap objects in insulating layer (plastic) • Wrap objects in foil • Place wrapped objects inside metal container that can be tightly sealed with metal to metal contact

  32. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEPreparation • Spare parts • Radios • Power generation • Generator spare parts • Solar panel, charge controller, inverter • Battery chargers • Ignition systems • LED lights • Data access – DVD reader

  33. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEPreparation • Emergency preparation • Water storage, collection and purification • Food storage, foraging, hunting, gardening, raising livestock • Defense planning and equipment • Medical supplies and knowledge • Community networking

  34. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  35. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAfterward • Rapid knowledge sharing • Key knowledge points to distribute • Collective effort

  36. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAfterward • Rapid knowledge sharing • Most neighbors will have 2-3 days water and 5-10 days food • Tell everybody to fill bathtubs and other containers before the water pressure fails (avg bathtub = 50 gallons) • Inventory resources (water, food, tools, seeds...) • Begin food production efforts immediately

  37. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAfterward • Key knowledge points to distribute • Fill tubs and collect rainwater • Maintain water discipline (flushing, bathing) • Water purification methods • Food production methods • Need for cooperation and planning

  38. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAfterward • Collective effort • Water collection, storage and purification • Food production: fish, rabbits, chickens, gardens, foraging, hunting, storing • Defense plan for neighborhood, shared resources • Communications – alert system, sharing information, planning • Medical supplies and knowledge will become premium

  39. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSEAgenda • Definition • Damage • Likelihood • Detection • Preparation • Afterward • Summary

  40. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSESummary • EMP is dangerous • EMP is likely • EMP damage tests a full range of preparedness and may be widespread • Knowledge is critical • Fast reactions can save lives • Store water

  41. ELECTRO-MAGNETIC PULSESummary • References • http://www.fas.org/nuke/intro/nuke/emp.htm • http://www.futurescience.com/emp.html • http://www.empcommission.org/

More Related