Agate (nuclear test)

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Agate
Agathe heure h.png
Béryl's explosion in the Hoggar Mountains (1962). It is believed that footage of Agathe was used in the news instead in order to hide the atomic incident that occurred.
Algeria location map.svg
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Location of the test site
Information
Country France
Test series In Ekker series
Test site In Ekker, French Algeria
Coordinates 24°03′55″N5°03′23″E / 24.06528°N 5.05639°E / 24.06528; 5.05639
Date7 November 1961;62 years ago (1961-11-07)
Test type Atmospheric
Test altitude1,000 m
Device type Fission bomb
Yield10 kt (41.84 TJ)
Test chronology

Agate [lower-alpha 1] was the codename of the first French nuclear underground test. It was conducted by the Joint Special Weapons Command on 7 November 1961, at the Oasis Military Experiments Centre near In Ekker, French Algeria at the Tan Afella in the Hoggar Mountains, during the Algerian War. [1]

Contents

It is named after the Agate, a rock formation used in jewelry.

History

Agate was the first test of the jewel designation series running from 1961 until 1966. Minor and major incidents occurred during these experiments, the most important being the Béryl incident on May 1, 1962, where the nine militarymen of the 621ème Groupe d'Armes Spéciales unit were heavily contaminated (600 mSv) as portrayed in the 2006 docudrama Vive La Bombe! . The French Defence Minister Pierre Messmer and other officials and civilians were present in the command post and were contaminated too (around >200 mSv).

Programme

Known incidents

The millisievert (mSv) is commonly used to measure the effective dose in diagnostic medical procedures. See radiation poisoning for a more complete analysis of effects of various dosage levels.

100 pers. (>50 mSv)
15 pers. (>200 mSv)
9 pers. (600 mSv)
possibly 240 pers. (<2.5 mSv)
13 pers. (=10 mSv)
280 pers. (<1 mSv)
500 pers. (<0.2 mSv)
undisclosed (= 0.01 mSv)
undisclosed (<1 mSv)

Data provided by the French Defense Ministry in January 2007. [2]

See also

Notes

  1. Some sources report the name Agathe; however, it is a misspelling of the rock formation after which the bomb was named.

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References

  1. Senate of the French Republic (15 December 1997). "French Senate report #179: The first French tests in the Sahara". senat.fr (in French). Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  2. Defense.gouv.fr Archived 2007-09-25 at the Wayback Machine