Los Alamos Is Capturing Real-Time Images of Explosions at 7Mths of a Second

28 LAsteNERD 9 8/5/2025, 2:47:07 PM lanl.gov ↗

Comments (9)

LAsteNERD · 1h ago
Fascinating look into the dynamic imaging capabilities at Los Alamos National Lab—essentially, how the U.S. is able to analyze nuclear-level explosive events without actually conducting nuclear tests. The Lab uses multiple systems to image these high-speed events: • pRad uses proton radiography to get 20–40 frames of a detonation, with material-level resolution based on density. • DARHT uses dual-axis x-ray imaging to create 3D snapshots from two angles, ideal for testing whether the computational models built from pRad hold up. • Scorpius (in development) will take this a step further by using subcritical plutonium in a new accelerator at NNSS, capturing multiple high-resolution frames just nanoseconds apart. The fact that they can tailor experiments based on frame-by-frame behavior of individual materials under explosive stress feels like the real-world version of “bullet time” physics modeling. The margins of error come down to billionths of a second.
dez11de · 27m ago
Pics or it didn’t happen.
dylan604 · 13m ago
You could watch it, but you'd die of natural causes before it finished
LAsteNERD · 5m ago
depending on the experiment, could be unnatural causes.
sci-designer · 1h ago
Wow, this is wild. billionths of a second?!
BearOso · 1h ago
Not quite. The article says hundreds of nanoseconds, which would be in the 10 millionths range. Or if you take the title literally, 143ns per image. That's in line with the fastest CCDs, so not unimaginable.
scrlk · 1h ago
I'm reminded of Grace Hopper's famous nanoseconds lecture: https://youtu.be/gYqF6-h9Cvg?t=78
LosAlamosNerd · 43m ago
Oh, I haven't watched that before.