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US successfully tests new nuclear gravity bomb

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US successfully tests new nuclear gravity bomb
Published time: 14 Apr, 2017 18:08Edited time: 14 Apr, 2017 18:11
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USAF F-16 testing a B61-12 gravity bomb © National Nuclear Security Administration @FrankKlotzNNSA / Twitter
As the world’s attention was on the first combat use of the conventional “Mother Of All Bombs,” the US National Nuclear Security Administration announced the successful field test of the modernized gravity nuclear bomb in Nevada.
The NNSA and the US Air Force completed the first qualification flight test of the B61-12 gravity nuclear bomb on March 14 at the Tonopah Test Range in Nevada, the agency announced on Thursday.

The test was intended to evaluate the weapon’s “non-nuclear functions” and the capability of the F-16 fighter to successfully deploy the bomb. An F-16 fighter from Nellis Air Force Base dropped the “non-nuclear test assembly,” the NNSA said in a statement.

“The successful test provides critical qualification data to validate that the baseline design meets military requirements,” said Brigadier General Michael Lutton, NNSA’s principal assistant deputy administrator for military application. The NNSA is part of the Department of Energy, which is charged with managing US nuclear weapons.


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Frank Klotz @FrankKlotzNNSA

#NNSA & @usairforce complete first B61-12 #LEP qualification flight test. @NellisAFB @NNSANevadahttps://nnsa.energy.gov/mediaroom/pressreleases/nnsa-air-force-complete-first-b61-12-life-extension-program-qualification …

3:38 PM - 14 Apr 2017


The B61-12 is a modernized version of the B61 gravity bomb, the mainstay of the Air Force’s nuclear arsenal and one of the legs of the so-called nuclear triad, along with the intercontinental ballistic missiles deployed from either ground-based silos or oceangoing submarines.

President Donald Trump has endorsed an ambitious – and expensive – plan to modernize the US nuclear triad, begun under his predecessor. The B61-12 is intended to consolidate and replace all the B61 variants currently in service.

Three successful development flight tests of the B61-12 were conducted in 2015. The March test was the first in a series scheduled to span the next three years, with the final design review due in September 2018 and the first production unit scheduled for completion by March 2020.

On Thursday, the US attracted the world's attention by dropping a GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast Bomb (MOAB), also known as "Mother Of All Bombs," on Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) positions in eastern Afghanistan's Nangarhar province. It was the first combat use of the weapon, the largest conventional bomb in the US arsenal.
 
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U.S. Air Force test-drops inert nuclear bomb
The bomb was dropped to demonstrate the capability of an F-16 to use the weapon and to test its non-nuclear components, Air Force officials said.


A U.S. Air Force F-16C has shown its capability to drop an upgraded verson on the B-61 nuclear bomb. Photo by Staff Sgt. Brandi Hansen/U.S. Air Force


April 14 (UPI) -- An inert B61-12 nuclear bomb was dropped by the U.S. Air Force over the Nellis Test and Training Range Complex in Nevada recently, officials announced this week.

The dropping of the bomb, the first of the upgraded B-61 variant, was to demonstrate the capability of an F-16 to employ the weapon and the functioning of the bomb's non-nuclear components, such as the arming and fire control system, radar altimeter, rocket motors and weapons control computer, the Air Force said.

"The B61-12 gravity bomb ensures the current capability for the air-delivered leg of the U.S. strategic nuclear triad well into the future for both bombers and dual-capable aircraft supporting NATO," Paul Waugh, AFNWC's Air-Delivered Capabilities director, said in a press release.

The test was conducted under a B-61 life-extension program the Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center, together with the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. The B61-12 is to replace four versions of the B61 bomb in the U.S. nuclear stockpile.

B-2A, B-21, F-15E, F-16C/D, F-16 MLU, F-35 and PA-200 aircraft will be able to carry the weapon, the Air Force said.

http://www.upi.com/Defense-News/2017/04/14/US-Air-Force-test-drops-inert-nuclear-bomb/8381492188828/
 
Most bombs do fall free fall under the gravity influence as far as I know of 9.8 m/s2

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I thought They bombed another nation :D:DGot Me by headlines :lol:
 
So they can test nuclear weapons and others cant? Isnt this why the US sent its air craft carrier to deter North Korea from testing its 6th nuclear weapon? while they did just that. Hypocrisy!
 
I think US is getting closer of using newclear weapons in Afghanistan.
 
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