|
|
Source: University of Missouri - Rolla 12/19/2002 10:19
 By UMR PUBLIC
RELATIONS
 |

 One of the fifth-generation
Russian missiles, the SS-24 Scalpel is slated for destruction under SALT II as a
multiple warhead ICBM.
| The UMR researchers
are known for their expertise in using waterjets to find and neutralize
landmines, cut through rubble and carve works of art out of Missouri granite.
They have been working with this technology at the UMR High Pressure Waterjet
Laboratory since 1984.
“We were subcontracted to train and supervise the
Ukrainians on how to evaluate the safety of waterjet technology for the removal
of the explosives and propellants from the missiles,” says Dr. Paul Worsey,
professor of mining engineering and one of the key researchers in the group.
Even though UMR’s portion of the project is complete, it will be at least
another year before the missiles and silos are completely eliminated.
UMR has been conducting the work as part of a project funded by the U.S.
Defense Department’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA). The UMR team was
contracted for more than $70,000 by Washington Group International and Alliant
Techsystems (ATA) Thiokol Propulsion, an aerospace and defense company. DOD and
DTRA are working under the terms of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty in
disarming the missiles and eliminating the 46 silos that existed in the Ukraine.
DTRA works to ensure the United States is able to address threats from such
weapons of mass destruction.
With the use of a specially designed
waterjet, the operator is able to disassemble the missile from a safe distance,
Worsey says. After the missile is disarmed, the casing is washed out and
crushed. The propellant is then recycled by blending it with emulsion explosives
and used in mining in the Ukraine. This method is more environmentally friendly
than the traditional method of burning them, Worsey says.
Production of
the missiles, also called SS 24 Rockets, ceased in 1991, having been
manufactured during the Cold War for the sole purpose of delivering nuclear
warheads on U.S. and allied targets. With hostility increasing in the Middle
East, these dormant missiles have potential for great destruction if they “fall
into the wrong hands,” says Worsey.
With the ability to carry more than
10 nuclear warheads, an SS-24's range is more than 6,200 miles. More than 50
missiles have been disarmed during the course of this project. “The sum of
rockets that are being dismantled and destroyed on this single project had the
capability of destroying every United States major city, over two million people
per city, and wiping out more than half of the United States population,” Worsey
says.
The missile plants are located in Pavlograd, Ukraine, a town that
was built around the plants sometime during the Cold War. “The whole reason that
Pavlograd exists is because of these missile plants, so one of the project’s
goals is to find a way to keep the plant workers employed,” Worsey says. “This
would make it less likely that they would share their expertise about missile
manufacturing with hostile countries.”
Members of the UMR research team
include Dr. Paul Worsey; Dr. David Summers, Curators’ Professor of mining
engineering and director of UMR’s Rock Mechanics and Explosives Research Center
(RMERC); John Tyler, research engineer for RMERC; Bob Fossey, research
specialist for RMERC, and Scott Parker, senior laboratory mechanic for
RMERC.

| |