ryguy - I'll respond separately to your latest thought on recent announcements concerning any deductions we could make from SLX's announcement regarding the BCS.
Concerning your response on proliferation I guess I have to declare a financial interest so my deductions may be influenced by that - but I do attempt to think about these issues from an independent standpoint - possibly not successfully. I really don't think many of us want proliferation but I guess my interests are to preserve the status quo. My views are:
1. You really can't "uninvent" something that has been invented - IMO nuclear weapons are with us for better or for worse and we can do nothing about it. In my view our current state is possibly as good as is practically obtainable whereby the nuclear powers have the ability to make it very "uncomfortable" for non nuclear powers to acquire weapons. If nuclear weapons were notionally dispensed with by nuclear nations; other nuclear nations would not trust that their competitors had done so and keep clandestine inventories. IMO that is worse than declaring their inventory and getting on with discouraging non nuclear nations from joining the club (as we have now). I guess I come at the issue that "deterrence" works in that war deaths are much lower since WW2. I also guess I am influenced by my father being poised to attack Japan in WW2 but the nuclear weapons dropped on Hiroshima & Nagasaki saved him for such attack and possibly meant that I had a farther in my childhood.
2. From what I have read and deduced the silex system is still a less preferred option for a proliferator - centrifuge is still the simplest way to go - the technology details are on the internet and if not still available from A Q Khan (Pakistan) can be purchased from North Korea.
3. Silex is technically challenging - you and me (and Snyder) can only speculate on how it works but since the 1972 classified paper by Horst Struve it has taken until now (and about U$600m investment) to get to where we are - it's NOT trivial and IMO beyond the capabilities of a terrorist. LIS is really only of interest to a commercial party who wishes o gain a commercial "edge" over old technology which is less cost/effective for bulk production but is technically challenging
4. A critical mass of 235U for a simple gun weapon is about 50kg of HEU - that's a lot. A much lager danger is that a terrorist irradiates thorium to produce (and chemically separate) Protactinium) - discards the shorter half life 232Pa which the daughter product 232U provides "protection" due to a highly energetic gamma ray daughter product 208Tl) leaving 233U from further decay of the 232Pa - it only takes about 4kg of 233U to produce a critical mass and can be just a simple gun type weapon. This is by far the simplest path for a proliferator to produce a weapon - robot surgical apparatus now make is relatively easy to construct a simple hot cell to perform chemical separations of Pa to produce relatively pure 233U
5. IMO the way forward in proliferator detection is not to seek out large users of power but to take air (or local) samples to look for elevated levels of enriched fissile isotopes. As you have said previously Pu is fissile but 239Pu and 241Pu require a more technically challenging implosion type weapon and the presence of even isotopes of Pu make the task of producing a weapon far more difficult. Getting hold of separated Pu and other fissile elements is very difficult and requires radiation protection.
rrguy - in conclusion I feel that the dangers of a proliferator (or rogue country) using Silex to enrich weapons material is negligible compared to its benefit for producing cheaper nuclear fuel which would address the very real problems of reducing emissions to address climate change and help energy security whilst scoring one over the Russians and Chinese. I must also admit that it would help me financially but that's also a good investment which helps everyone. In short I think opposition to the technology through fear of proliferation is misplaced and on a balance of merits needs to be supported - utopian energy is non existent.
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