Skeptoid #592: Alert 747: The Vela Incident
In 1979, a mysterious flash occurred over the southern ocean that could have been a nuclear bomb. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
In 1979, a mysterious flash occurred over the southern ocean that could have been a nuclear bomb. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
The Vela Incident Mystery
00:07:38
|
|
| Who doesn't love a good Cold War mystery? | |
| In 1979, a satellite designed to monitor the Soviet Union for compliance with nuclear test bans picked up what appeared to be a nuclear test. | |
| The only problem was that it didn't happen anywhere remotely near the Soviet Union. | |
| In fact, it didn't happen near to anywhere. | |
| It was over a remote patch of ocean where no self-respecting nuclear explosion had any business being. | |
| Alert 747 is today on Skeptoid. | |
| A quick reminder for everyone, you're listening to Skeptoid, revealing the true science and true history behind urban legends every week since 2006. | |
| With over a thousand episodes, we're celebrating 20 years of keeping it focused and keeping it brief. | |
| And we couldn't have done it without your curiosity leading the way. | |
| And now we're even offering a little bit more. | |
| If you become a premium member, supporting the show with a monthly micropayment of as little as $5, you get more Skeptoid. | |
| The premium version of the show is not only ad-free, it has extended content. | |
| These episodes are a few minutes longer. | |
| We get rid of the ads and replace them with more Skeptoid. | |
| The Extended Premium Show available now. | |
| Come to Skeptoid.com and click Go Premium. | |
| You're listening to Skeptoid. | |
| I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. | |
| Alert 747, The Vela Incident Something happened on the ocean on September 22nd, 1979, between South Africa and Antarctica. | |
| Some say it was a nuclear explosion. | |
| Some say it was a natural event of some kind. | |
| Nobody's known to have seen it. | |
| All we have are some remote detections, but they don't add up very well. | |
| We also have some international politics, some government panels and cover-ups, some declassified documents covered in redactions, and a whole lot of data. | |
| We also have satellites and spies. | |
| This was the famous Vela incident of 1979, also called the South Atlantic Flash. | |
| Today we're going to dive into the records as history slowly unfolded over about 40 years and see if we can figure out what happened. | |
| Today's podcast is noteworthy in that I believe it holds the record for an idea sitting in my folder longer than any other without being produced, over nine years. | |
| It was back in 2008 that this topic was first emailed to me as an episode suggestion. | |
| I did a bit of preliminary research at the time and concluded that the question of the Vela incident simply didn't have any answer, which on the one hand is an answer in itself of a sort, but on the other hand, it doesn't make for a most exciting skeptoid episode. | |
| However, new information emerged. | |
| And now we have a bit clearer picture. | |
| At that time, in 2008, the latest and greatest information on the Vela incident was in a 2006 article from the National Security Archive at George Washington University. | |
| So let's begin with what was known for the first 30 years following the incident. | |
| It all started with the Vela satellites, a fleet of 12 satellites launched from 1963 to 1970, intended to monitor compliance with the Partial Test Ban Treaty between the United States, United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union. | |
| This treaty allowed only underground nuclear testing, so the Vela satellites were built to detect any explosions either in space or in the atmosphere. | |
| Then on September 22nd, 1979, at about 3 a.m. local time, ba-boom! Vela 6911 caught the distinctive double flash of a nuclear detonation. | |
| The event was logged as Vela Alert 747. | |
| Let's take a moment to talk about what happens during the first few milliseconds when a nuclear explosion happens. | |
| When the explosion begins, the device itself quickly goes to a temperature of about 10 million Kelvins. | |
| The X-rays and ultraviolet waves emitted heat the air within a few meters of the device to a temperature of about 1 million kelvins, which makes it extremely incandescent and causes an incredibly bright flash. | |
| Meanwhile, inside that cloud of bright gas, a shockwave expands, pushed by the explosion itself. | |
| Inside that shockwave, everything is a plasma, where the atomic particles are actually dissociated. | |
| Plasmas are opaque because they absorb electromagnetic radiation at all frequencies. | |
| As that shockwave expands, it overtakes those first few meters of incandescent air, and once it does, its opacity actually shades it like a curtain. | |
| From there, the shockwave expands outward spherically, and as the plasma thins and diminishes, it becomes increasingly transparent, allowing the expanding fireball to shine forth with its full brilliance. | |
| Thus, when a nuclear explosion happens, we actually get a double flash. | |
| The larger the yield, the longer the space between the flashes, ranging from 30 milliseconds for the smallest devices to half a second for the larger ones. | |
| What Alert 747 detected was this characteristic double flash, with a gap between the flashes indicating a small yield of between two and three kilotons. | |
| It was picked up on the satellite's bang meter. | |
| All 12 Velas were equipped with X-ray detectors, but the later six, known as the Advanced Vela satellites, also added bang meters. | |
| You are asking what a bang meter is, so I will tell you, it's named after BANG, an edible form of cannabis popular in Hindu festivals, and evidently well known to the scientists who were working on this new type of radiometric sensor for detecting nuclear tests. | |
| One day at Los Alamos, one scientist observed that you'd have to be, quote, on something to think that this type of detector could determine a device's yield. | |
| But determine yield, it could. | |
| So they duly dubbed it the bang meter. | |
| That story is, by all accounts, absolutely true. | |
| President Jimmy Carter was in office, and word spread quickly that this detection of a nuclear blast had been made. | |
| Carter wrote in his diary for that very same day, published in 2010, There was indication of a nuclear explosion in the region of South Africa, either South Africa or Israel, using a ship at sea or nothing. | |
| So there's a lot to unpack there just in those first hours. | |
| Obviously, the probability that a nuclear weapon had been detonated in the atmosphere was a treaty violation, and that's big. | |
| Second, note that right away, as early as that very same day, the administration already suspected Israel and or South Africa were responsible. | |
| So the importance of definitively answering this question was clear. | |
| Carter ordered his science advisor, Dr. Frank Press, to assemble a panel of outside experts to look at all the evidence. | |
|
Unpacking the Evidence Files
00:03:24
|
|
| The panel was chaired by Dr. Jack Rowina, a former head of DARPA. | |
| The Rowena panel issued its report in May of 1980. | |
| In short, it found the deviances between the light flash recorded by Vela and light flashes from known nuclear detonations too significant, and it found the lack of corroborating data, which must exist, to be problematic. | |
| The Rowena panel's conclusion was that the most likely explanation for the Vela incident was a meteoroid strike on the satellite itself, where the meteor's initial entry into the field of view was responsible for the initial flash, and the spread of debris from the impact responsible for the second flash. | |
| In a world that can feel overwhelming, spreading thoughtful, evidence-based content is one of the best ways to make a positive impact. | |
| Ask your local public radio station to air the Skeptoid Files, a 30-minute radio-friendly version of Skeptoid that pairs two related episodes promoting real science, true history, and critical thinking. | |
| And in these challenging times for public media, we're offering these broadcasts for free to radio stations, available on the PRX Exchange or directly from Skeptoid Media. | |
| It's an easy ask. | |
| Just send a quick message to your station's programming director. | |
| By helping to bring the Skeptoid files to the airwaves, you'll help promote the essential skills we all need to tell fact from fiction. | |
| Just go to your local station's website, find the programming director's email address, or just their general email address. | |
| You can even use the telephone. | |
| I know that might sound crazy. | |
| It's an old legacy device that allows real-time voice communication. | |
| I know that's weird, but hey, it's an option. | |
| The world can feel chaotic, but you're not powerless. | |
| When you promote critical thinking, you can help your community tell fact from fiction. | |
| And that's how we shape a better future. | |
| In uncertain times, spreading good ideas can make you feel helpful, not helpless. | |
| Let's stand up for reason, truth, and understanding together. | |
| Get them to air the Skeptoid files from Skeptoid Media, available on the PRX Exchange, and they'll know what that is. | |
| A lot of briefs were written by a lot of experts from the Air Force, from our national laboratories, NGOs, and government over the next two or three years and were quickly classified. | |
| They've since been declassified, and we can now read them. | |
| Nearly all were equivocal. | |
| About the only thing they agreed on was that there was no proof that a nuclear detonation had taken place. | |
| Most concluded that it was still the most likely explanation. | |
| Some also considered a variety of natural events, like a lightning superbolt making a double flash. | |
| One from the Defense Intelligence Agency found that the chances of the Rowena panel's meteoroid causing a signal would be a once-in-a-hundred billion years incident. | |
| Right after the alert, the Air Force dispatched WC-135B Constant Phoenix aircraft to sample the atmosphere in the region of the flash. | |
| 25 sorties were flown from a classified airbase totaling 230.4 hours. | |
|
Espionage and Uranium Secrets
00:04:47
|
|
| What was found? | |
| Bupkis. | |
| No fresh fission products. | |
| It looked like the flash was going to always remain a mystery. | |
| However, in 2016, additional information was declassified. | |
| It came from the files of Gerard Smith, Jimmy Carter's ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency. | |
| There was a lot in there that, put together, painted a pretty clear picture. | |
| After Alert 747, the State Department put out a series of memos on diplomatic strategy with South Africa if the news leaked, which it did, virtually confirming that the flash was indeed a diplomatic matter. | |
| In addition, hydroacoustic data from that exact spot in the ocean from that exact time had been analyzed by the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and found to be, quote, unique to nuclear shots in a maritime environment. | |
| At least two spies, retired CIA officer Tyler Drumheller and retired KGB officer Dieter Gerhardt, said they knew it to have been a nuclear test called Operation Phoenix. | |
| Finally, there was a variety of information from a number of sources that indicated the Rowena report had been a, quote, whitewash, using flimsy evidence to arrive at a preferred conclusion of a natural event for political reasons, while the panel's actual research pointed toward a nuclear event, including the fact that experts would not have expected the aerial sampling to find anything. | |
| The National Security Archives provides links to dozens of these documents. | |
| Why Israel and South Africa? | |
| And how did Carter know this within hours? | |
| The two nations' relationship was an interesting one. | |
| Israel wanted nuclear weapons, but the international community didn't want them to. | |
| South Africa, with its official policy of apartheid, was an international pariah. | |
| But they did have one thing that everyone wanted, uranium. | |
| What better partnership could there be? | |
| Two nations, both outcast internationally, but with a common goal and the expertise and the resources. | |
| We know that South Africa did provide Israel with uranium in the 1960s and again in the 1970s. | |
| South Africa had been caught preparing a site for underground nuclear tests in 1977 by both the Soviet Union and the United States, but was compelled to shut it down to protect its contract for French nuclear reactors. | |
| Israel's nuclear weapons capability has always been an open secret, but they've never been proven to have conducted a successful test. | |
| Let's throw one more piece of circumstantial evidence into the pile. | |
| In 1982, the Air Force produced a history of the operations of the Air Force Technical Applications Center, AFTAC, from 1979 to 1980, which detailed the aerial sampling done by the WC-135B aircraft. | |
| In this report, it was added, Alert 747, the unexplained event that occurred on 22 September 1979 in the southern hemisphere, brought to light AFTAC's meager resources in that area of the world. | |
| This generated high-level interest in the Atomic Energy Detection System program and a re-evaluation of the system to improve coverage in the southern hemisphere. | |
| This was then done by adding additional resources which were collectively called the Auxiliary Seismic Network. | |
| The Air Force knew that the resources it had in place in 1979 simply weren't adequate to definitively detect a nuclear test. | |
| And if the Air Force knew it, then it's probably a safe bet that Israeli intelligence knew it too. | |
| The uncertainty surrounding the detection and potentially corroborating evidence was not necessarily due to that evidence being non-existent, but rather to our inadequate ability to collect it. | |
| Case proven and closed? | |
| No, but settled, I think, to a sufficient degree of satisfaction. | |
| The Vela incident or the South Atlantic flash or Alert 747 or Operation Phoenix was a joint Israeli-South African nuclear test of less than three kilotons on the ocean's surface. | |
| So there we have it. | |
| A tale of intrigue, espionage, and satellites from the Cold War probably, if not definitively, solved. | |
|
Skepticism as Best Medicine
00:01:43
|
|
| Every week, over 25,000 people receive the Skeptoid podcast companion email. | |
| If you're not getting it, you're only getting half the show. | |
| Sign up at skeptoid.com slash newsletter. | |
| And you can be safely assured that every electron that goes to make up the email is as genetically modified and gluten-filled as I could get it. | |
| You're listening to Skeptoid, a listener-supported program. | |
| I'm Brian Dunning from skeptoid.com. | |
| Hello, everyone. | |
| This is Adrienne Hill from Skookum Studios in Calgary, Canada, the land of maple syrup and mousse. | |
| And I'm here to ask you to consider becoming a premium member of Skeptoid for as little as $5 per month. | |
| And that's only the cost of a couple of Tim Horton's double-doubles. | |
| And that's Canadian for coffee with double cream and sugar. | |
| Why support Skeptoid? | |
| If you are like me and don't like ads, but like extended versions of each episode, Premium is for you. | |
| If you want to support a worthwhile nonprofit that combats pseudoscience, promotes critical thinking, and provides free access to teachers to use the podcast in the classroom via the teacher's toolkit, then sign up today. | |
| Remember that skepticism is the best medicine. | |
| Next to giggling, of course. | |
| Until next time, this is Adrienne Hill. | |
| From PRX | |