When Rainer Karlsch published his book Hitler's Bombe, I found his reference to nuclear test blasts at Rugen in October 1944 and again at Ohrdruf twice in March 1945 fascinating but I was also dismissive of a diagram widely published online for a Plutonium weapon. It ran contrary to everything I knew or understood to accept that Germany acquired Plutonium so I dismissed Karlsch's conclusions whilst accepting his claims about Rugen and Ohrdruf.
Part of the difficulty is that his book was written in German and a great deal of the commentary in English about his book was selective in what was disclosed.
Recently I managed to struggle through the book in German sufficiently to grasp that the commentaries in English left out important qualifications.
What became apparent to me is that German scientists Schumann and Trinks, building upon research by Otto Haxel about superheated Lithium, came up with several patent applications during WW2 for what we'd call today, tactical nukes.
These were based on two opposing conical shaped charges. The cones were fabricated from Lithium6. They blasted two molten slugs of Lithium together into a cavity containing a near vacumn. Placed at the centre of the cavity was a small quantity of fisslie material (233U or Pu239) in combination with other compounds of Lithium deuterides with Beryllium etc.
These weapons when detonated created a Deuteron beam which prompted a neutron flux in the fissile core at a level of radioactivity similar to that in the core of a critical mass warhead.
It is a contentious issue and if Germany did develop the bomb an even bigger question than how did they do it is why didn't they use it, or did they?
Sources: Karlsh, Rainer. Hitler's Bombe, pub 2005
Part of the difficulty is that his book was written in German and a great deal of the commentary in English about his book was selective in what was disclosed.
Recently I managed to struggle through the book in German sufficiently to grasp that the commentaries in English left out important qualifications.
What became apparent to me is that German scientists Schumann and Trinks, building upon research by Otto Haxel about superheated Lithium, came up with several patent applications during WW2 for what we'd call today, tactical nukes.
These were based on two opposing conical shaped charges. The cones were fabricated from Lithium6. They blasted two molten slugs of Lithium together into a cavity containing a near vacumn. Placed at the centre of the cavity was a small quantity of fisslie material (233U or Pu239) in combination with other compounds of Lithium deuterides with Beryllium etc.
These weapons when detonated created a Deuteron beam which prompted a neutron flux in the fissile core at a level of radioactivity similar to that in the core of a critical mass warhead.
It is a contentious issue and if Germany did develop the bomb an even bigger question than how did they do it is why didn't they use it, or did they?
Sources: Karlsh, Rainer. Hitler's Bombe, pub 2005