Hydrodynamic experiments represent the most comprehensive test of our integrated capabilities and provide confidence in the safety and performance of the warheads.
Hydrodynamic experiments represent the most comprehensive test of our integrated capabilities and provide confidence in the safety and performance of the warheads. We have several world-class facilities dedicated to hydrodynamics research. We undertake two approaches to obtain hydrodynamic data:
- Firstly, complex integrated experiments are carried out on devices as closely resembling an actual warhead as practically possible;
- Secondly, simplified focussed experiments are carried out to gain a more fundamental understanding of individual aspects of hydrodynamics.
Any modifications to the UK’s nuclear deterrent (e.g. due to changes in the materials) or the development of potential new designs will typically have one or more hydrodynamic experiments, or ‘Hydrotrials’, to aid in their certification.
A significant number of the simplified experiments do not actually involve using explosives but instead make use of technologies such as shock tubes, gas guns and pulsed power to generate the shock regimes of interest.
Studying plasma physics
Our experts explore the physics behind materials that are shocked and heated by picosecond and nanosecond high-powered lasers