Project Pluto Studied Nuclear Ramjet Propulsion
On January 1, 1957, the U.S. Air Force and the Atomic Energy
Commission selected the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's (LLNL)
predecessor, the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory to study the feasibility
of applying heat from nuclear reactors to ramjet engines.
This research became known as "Project Pluto" and was moved from
Livermore, California to new facilities constructed for $1.2 million on
eight square miles of Jackass Flats at the Nevada Test Site (NTS).
The complex consisted of six miles of roads, critical assembly
building, control building, assembly and shop buildings, and utilities.
Also required for the construction was 25 miles of oil well casing which
was necessary to store the million pounds of pressurized air used to
simulate ramjet flight conditions for Pluto.
The work was directed by Dr. T.C. Merkle, leader of the laboratory's
R-Division.
The principle behind the ramjet was relatively simple: air was drawn
in at the front of the vehicle under ram (under great force) pressure,
heated to make it expand, and then exhausted out the back, providing
thrust.
The notion of using a nuclear reactor to heat the air was
fundamentally new. Unlike commercial reactors, which are surrounded by
concrete, the Pluto reactor had to be small and compact enough to fly,
but durable enough to survive a 7,000 mile trip to a potential target.
The success of this project would depend upon a series of
technological advances in metallurgy and materials science. Pneumatic
motors necessary to control the reactor in flight had to operate while
red-hot and in the presence of intense radioactivity. The need to
maintain supersonic speed at low altitude and in all kinds of weather
meant the reactor, code named "Tory", had to survive temperatures of
2,500 degrees Fahrenheit, and conditions that would melt the metals used
in most jet and rocket engines.
On May 14, 1961, the world's first nuclear ramjet engine, "Tory-IIA,"
mounted on a railroad car, roared to life for just a few seconds.
Despite other successful tests the Pentagon, sponsor of the "Pluto
project," had second thoughts. On July 1, 1964, seven years and six
months after it was born, "Project Pluto" was canceled.
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