This article is about the Soviet submarine K-19. For the 2002 film dramatizating the submarine's nuclear accident, see K-19: The Widowmaker. For other uses, see K-19 (disambiguation).
On its initial voyage on 4 July 1961, K-19 suffered a complete loss of coolant to one of its two reactors. A backup system included in the design was not installed, so the captain ordered members of the engineering crew to find a solution to avoid a nuclear meltdown. Sacrificing their own lives, the engineering crew jury-rigged a secondary coolant system and kept the reactor from a meltdown. Twenty-two crew members died during the following two years. The submarine experienced several other accidents, including two fires and a collision. The series of accidents inspired crew members to nickname the submarine "Hiroshima".
History
Background
In the late 1950s, the leaders of the Soviet Union were determined to catch up with the United States and began to build a nuclear submarine fleet. In practice, this meant that speed was prioritized over safety in the construction of vessels, which were then rushed through sea trials so they could be put into service. K-19 suffered from poor workmanship and was accident-prone from the beginning.[1] Many Soviet naval officers felt that the ships were not fit for combat, but no action was taken to prevent them from sailing.[2] The crews aboard the first nuclear submarines of the Soviet fleet were provided with a very high quality standard of food including smoked fish, sausages, fine chocolates, and cheeses, unlike the standard fare given to the crews of other naval vessels.[3]
Construction deaths
K-19 was ordered by the Soviet Navy on 16 October 1957.[4] Her keel was laid on 17 October 1958 at the naval yard in Severodvinsk. Several workers died building the submarine: two workers were killed when a fire broke out, and later six women gluing rubber lining to a water cistern were fatally poisoned by inhaling fumes.[3] While missiles were being loaded, an electrician was crushed to death by a missile-tube cover, and an engineer fell between two compartments and died.[2]
Gains unlucky reputation
The boat was launched and named on 8 April 1959.[2] Breaking with tradition, a man (Captain 3rd Rank V. V. Panov of the 5th Urgent Unit) instead of a woman was chosen to smash the ceremonial champagne bottle across the ship's stern. The bottle failed to break, instead sliding along the propellers and bouncing off the rubber-coated hull. This is traditionally viewed among sea crews as a sign that the ship is unlucky.[5] Captain 1st Rank Nikolai Vladimirovich Zateyev was the first commander of the submarine.[2]Vasily Arkhipov was appointed as executive officer.
Early problems
In January 1960, confusion among the crew during a watch change led to improper operation of the reactor and a reactor-control rod was bent. The damage required the reactor to be dismantled for repairs. The officers on duty were removed and Captain Panov was demoted.
The submarine's ensign was hoisted for the first time on 12 July 1960. The vessel underwent sea trials from 13 through 17 July 1960 and again from 12 August through 8 November 1960, travelling 17,347 kilometres (10,779 mi). The ship was considered completed on 12 November 1960.[2] After surfacing from a full-power run, the crew discovered that most of the hull's rubber coating had detached, and the entire surface of the boat had to be re-coated.
During a test dive to the maximum depth of 300 m (980 ft), flooding was reported in the reactor compartment, and Captain Zateyev ordered the submarine to immediately surface, where the boat heeled over on her port side due to the water she had taken on. It was later determined that during construction the workers had failed to replace a gasket.[2] In October 1960, the galley crew disposed of wood from equipment crates through the galley's waste system, clogging it. This led to flooding of the ninth compartment, which filled one third full of water. In December 1960, a loss of coolant was caused by failure of the main circuit pump. Specialists called from Severodvinsk managed to complete repairs at sea within a week.[citation needed]
The boat was commissioned on 30 April 1961. The submarine had a total of 139 men aboard, including missile men, reactor officers, torpedo men, doctors, cooks, stewards, and several observing officers who were not part of the standard crew.
Nuclear accident
On 4 July 1961, under the command of Captain First Rank Nikolai Vladimirovich Zateyev, K-19 was conducting exercises in the North Atlantic off the south-east coast of Greenland. At 04:15 local time the pressure in the starboard nuclear reactor's cooling system dropped to zero. The reactor department crew found a major leak in the reactor coolant system, causing the coolant pumps to fail. The boat could not contact Moscow and request assistance because a separate accident had damaged the long-rangeradio system. The control rods were automatically inserted by the emergency SCRAM system, but the reactor temperature rose uncontrollably. Decay heat from fission products produced during normal operation eventually heated the reactor to 800 °C (1,470 °F).
Making a drastic decision, Zateyev ordered the engineering section to fabricate a new coolant system by cutting off an air vent valve and welding a water-supply pipe to it. This required men to work in high radiation for extended periods. The jury-rigged cooling water system successfully reduced the temperature in the reactor.[1]
The accident released radioactive steam containing fission products that were drawn into the ship's ventilation system and spread to other compartments of the ship. The entire crew was irradiated as was most of the ship and some of the ballistic missiles on board. All seven members of the engineering crew and their divisional officer died of radiation exposure within the next month. Fifteen more sailors died within the next two years.[6]
Instead of continuing on the mission's planned route, the captain decided to head south to meet diesel-powered submarines expected to be there. Worries about a potential crew mutiny prompted Zateyev to have all small arms thrown overboard except for five pistols distributed to his most trusted officers. A diesel submarine, S-270, picked up K-19's low-power distress transmissions and joined up with it.
American warships nearby had also heard the transmission and offered to help, but Zateyev, afraid of giving away Soviet military secrets to the West, refused and sailed to meet S-270. He evacuated the crew and had the boat towed to its home base.
Over the next two years, repair crews removed and replaced the damaged reactors. The repair process contaminated the nearby environment, in a zone within 700 m (2,300 ft), and the repair crew. The Soviet Navy dumped the original radioactive compartment into the Kara Sea.[7]K-19 returned to the fleet with the nickname "Hiroshima".[8]
According to the government's official explanation of the disaster, the repair crews found that the catastrophe had been caused by a faulty welding incident during initial construction. They discovered that during installation of the primary cooling system piping, a welder had failed to cover exposed pipe surfaces with asbestos drop cloths (required to protect piping systems from accidental exposure to welding sparks), due to the cramped working space. A drop from a welding electrode fell on an unprotected surface, producing an invisible crack. This crack was subject to prolonged and intensive pressure (over 200 standard atmospheres (20,000 kilopascals)), compromising the pipe's integrity and finally causing it to fail.[8]
Others disputed this conclusion. Retired Rear-Admiral Nikolai Mormul asserted that when the reactor was first started ashore, the construction crew had not attached a pressure gauge to the primary cooling circuit. Before anyone realized there was a problem, the cooling pipes were subjected to a pressure of 400 atmospheres, double the acceptable limit.
Several crew members received fatal doses of radiation during repairs on the reserve coolant system of Reactor #8. Eight died between one and three weeks after the accident from severe radiation sickness. A person who receives a dose of 4 to 5 Sv (about 400–500 rem) over a short period has a 50% chance of dying within 30 days.[10]
Fourteen other crew members died within two years. Many other crew members also received radiation doses exceeding permissible levels.[1] They underwent medical treatment during the following year. Many others experienced chest pains, numbness, cancer, and kidney failure. Their treatment was devised by Professor Z. Volynskiy and included bone marrow transplantation and blood transfusion. It saved, among others, Chief Lieutenant Mikhail Krasichkov and Captain 3rd class Vladimir Yenin, who had received doses of radiation that were otherwise considered deadly. For reasons of secrecy, the official diagnosis was not "radiation sickness" but "astheno-vegetative syndrome", a mental disorder.[12]
Crew members decorated
On 6 August 1961, 26 members of the crew were decorated for courage and valor shown during the accident.[citation needed]
On 14 December 1961, the boat was fully upgraded to the Hotel II (658м) variant, which included upgrading to R-21 missiles, which had twice the effective range of the earlier missiles.
Collision
At 07:13 on 15 November 1969, K-19 collided with the attack submarine USS Gato in the Barents Sea at a depth of 60 m (200 ft). She was able to surface using an emergency main ballast tank blow. The impact completely destroyed the bow sonar systems and mangled the covers of the forward torpedo tubes. K-19 was able to return to port where the boat was repaired and returned to the fleet. Gato was relatively undamaged and continued her patrol.[13]
Fires
On 24 February 1972, a fire broke out while the submarine was at a depth of 120 m (390 ft), some 1,300 km (700 nmi; 810 mi) from Newfoundland, Canada. The boat surfaced and the crew was evacuated to surface warships except for 12 men trapped in the aft torpedo room. Towing was delayed by a gale, and rescuers could not reach the aft torpedo room because of conditions in the engine room. The fire killed 28 sailors aboard K-19 and two others who died after they were transferred to rescue ships. Investigators determined that the fire was caused by a hydraulic fluid leak onto a hot filter.
The rescue operation lasted more than 40 days and involved over 30 ships. From 15 June through 5 November 1972, K-19 was repaired and put back into service.
On 15 November 1972, another fire broke out in compartment 6, but it was put out by the chemical fire-extinguisher system and there were no casualties.
Reclassification
On 25 July 1977, K-19 was reclassified in the large submarine class, and on 26 July 1979, she was reclassified as a communications submarine and given the symbol KS-19 (КС-19).
On 15 August 1982, an electrical short circuit resulted in severe burns to two sailors; one, V. A. Kravchuk, died five days later.
On 28 November 1985, the ship was upgraded to the 658s (658с) variant.
In 2006, a section of K-19 was purchased by Vladimir Romanov, who once served on the submarine as a conscript, with the intention of "Turning it into a Moscow-based meeting place to build links between submarine veterans from Russia and other countries." Many of K-19's survivors objected to the plans.[14] In 2023, The Athletic reported that Romanov had refurbished the submarine to serve as his place of residence in Nikul'skaya, described as a village in northwestern Russia.[15]
The movie K-19: The Widowmaker (2002), starring Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson, is based on the story of the K-19's first disaster.[17] The original crew of the submarine were allowed to read the script and had complaints, which led to several changes in the script.[18] The production company attempted in March 2002 to secure access to the boat as a set for its production, but the Russian Navy declined. The nickname "The Widowmaker" in the film's title is fictional; the submarine did not gain a nickname until the nuclear accident on 4 July 1961, when she was called "Hiroshima".[3]
^"The poet Vasily Aksyonov" thesis of Herbert Gantschacher for obtaining the academic title "Master of Arts" at the Academy, today University of Music and Performing Arts, Graz, Re / 1653/1988, July 1988
Untuk kegunaan lain, lihat Fragmentasi (disambiguasi). Fragmentasi atau fragmentasi klonal pada organisme multi seluler atau kolonial adalah bentuk reproduksi aseksual atau kloning di mana organisme memecah diri menjadi fragmen-fragmen. Masing-masing fragmen ini berkembang menjadi dewasa, tumbuh menjadi individu dewasa yang merupakan klon dari organisme asli. Pemisahan dapat terjadi baik disengaja maupun tidak disengaja–dapat terjadi akibat ulah manusia maupun kerusakan alami oleh lingkunga...
Carré de l'EstNegara asalPrancisSumber susuSapiDipasteurisasiYaTeksturLembutWaktu pematangan3-4 bulanSertifikasiTidak[1] Carré de l'Est adalah keju dari negara Prancis yang dibuat dengan menggunakan susu sapi yang dipasteurisasi.[1] Keju tersebut dimatangkan di gudang bawah tanah dan selama proses pematangan pada keju itu tumbuh lapisan kulit berwarna putih yang lembut.[1] Untuk menjadikan bagian kulit dari keju ini tajam dan berwarna oranye maka keju ini dicuci deng...
Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Januari 2023. Beben BenyaminCaption for example.pngHeader defined aloneData defined aloneAll three defined (header)Nama LengkapBeben BenyaminlbsBeben Benyamin merupakan seorang senior lecturer untuk Biostatistics dan NHMRC Career Development Fellow pada School of He...
This article is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic. Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style. (November 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) War and Peace in the Global Village AuthorsMarshall McLuhan, Quentin FioreCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishPublication date1968Media typePrint War and Peace in the Gl...
Austronesian language spoken in Papua New Guinea BoselewaNative toPapua New GuineaRegionFergusson Island, Milne Bay ProvinceEthnicity880 ethnic population (2011 census)[1]Native speakers880 (2011 census)[1]Language familyAustronesian Malayo-PolynesianOceanicWestern OceanicPapuan TipNuclear Papuan TipNorth Papuan Mainland – D'EntrecasteauxDobu–DuauBoselewaLanguage codesISO 639-3bwfGlottologbose1237ELPBoselewaBoselewa is classified as Vulnerable by the UNESCO Atlas...
Period of technological development 19000 year old microblades found at Fukui cave in Japan. Microblade technology is a period of technological microlith development marked by the creation and use of small stone blades, which are produced by chipping silica-rich stones like chert, quartz, or obsidian. Blades are a specialized type of lithic flake that are at least twice as long as they are wide.[1] An alternate method of defining blades focuses on production features, including parall...
Adelaide dari Torino (juga Adelheid, Adelais, atau Adeline; skt. 1014/1020 1014/1020 – 19 Desember 1091)[1] merupakan seorang Comtesse bagian dari Marca d'Ivrea dan Marchioness Torino di Barat laut Italia dari tahun 1034 hingga kematiannya. Dia adalah yang terakhir dari Wangsa Arduinici dan sering salah dikaitkan dengan Susa.[2] Dia kadang-kadang dibandingkan dengan sepupu kedua, dan dekat kontemporer, Matilda dari Toskana.[3] Adelaide dari Susa - Google Art Projec...
16th-century Italian painter of the late renaissance period Giuseppe ArcimboldoSelf-portrait, now in National Gallery PragueBorn5 April 1526Milan, Duchy of Milan, Holy Roman EmpireDied11 July 1593(1593-07-11) (aged 67)Milan, Duchy of Milan, Habsburg SpainKnown forPaintingNotable workThe Librarian, 1566 Vertumnus, 1590–1591 Flora, c. 1591 Giuseppe Arcimboldo, also spelled Arcimboldi (Italian: [dʒuˈzɛppe artʃimˈbɔldo];[1] 5 April 1526 – 11 July 1593), w...
American politician Charles Franklin SpragueMember of the U.S. House of Representativesfrom Massachusetts's 11th districtIn officeMarch 4, 1897 – March 3, 1901Preceded byWilliam F. DraperSucceeded bySamuel L. PowersMember of theMassachusetts State SenateIn officeJanuary 1895 - January 1897Preceded byFrancis William Kittredge[1]Succeeded byJoshua Bennett Holden[2]ConstituencyNinth Suffolk DistrictMember of the Massachusetts House of RepresentativesIn office1891-18...
Les contributeurs sont tenus de ne pas participer à une guerre d’édition sous peine de blocage. Cette page a récemment subi une guerre d’édition durant laquelle plusieurs contributeurs ont mutuellement annulé leurs modifications respectives. Ce comportement non collaboratif est interdit par la « règle des trois révocations ». En cas de désaccord éditorial, ils doivent en discuter et trouver un consensus avant toute nouvelle modification sur le même sujet. Pour les a...
بايزيد بن سليمان بن سليم (بالتركية: Şehzade Bayezid) منمنمة عثمانية تصور السلطان سليمان القانوني مع ابنه شاهزاده بايزيد. معلومات شخصية الميلاد 14 سبتمبر 1525الآستانة الدولة العثمانية الوفاة 23 أيلول 1561 (37 عام)قزوين الدولة الصفوية مكان الدفن سيواس مواطنة الدولة العثما�...
Women's floorat the Games of the XXIX OlympiadMedalists Sandra Izbașa Romania Shawn Johnson United States Nastia Liukin United States← 20042012 → Gymnastics at the2008 Summer OlympicsList of gymnastsQualificationArtisticQualificationmenwomenTeam all-aroundmenwomenIndividual all-aroundmenwomenVaultmenwomenFloormenwomenPommel horsemenRingsmenParallel barsmenHorizontal barmenUneven barswomenBalance beamwomenRhythmicGroup all-aroundwomenIndividual all-arou...
Venus of Moravany - تم اكتشافها في سلوفاكيا أوائل القرن 20 العصر الحجري القديم الأوروبي، أو العصر الحجري القديم السفلي، يشمل الحقبة الممتدة من وصول أول إنسان بدائي منذ نحو 1.4 مليون سنة حتى بداية العصر الحجري المتوسط (العصر الحجري القديم الانتقالي) منذ نحو 10,000، بالتالي تغطي هذه الفتر...
لمعانٍ أخرى، طالع مرونة (توضيح). المرونة (بالإنجليزية: elasticity) في علم الاقتصاد تمثل مدى استجابة متغير واحد أو أكثر للتغيرات التي تحدث في متغير آخر أو أكثر، أي قياس كيف أن تغيير متغير اقتصادي واحد سيؤثر على باقي المتغيرات الاقتصادية.[1][2][3] مثلا : إذاقمت ب...
هذه المقالة بحاجة لصندوق معلومات. فضلًا ساعد في تحسين هذه المقالة بإضافة صندوق معلومات مخصص إليها. تمثيل رأس حصان ما قبل التاريخ - متحف سان جيرمان اونلي يقدم فن العصر الحجري القديم العلوي أقدم شكل من الأشكال الفنية ما قبل التاريخ. وُجد الفن التشخيصي في أوروبا وجنوب شرق آسيا ...
Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento armi non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Un M1 Abrams adopera il pezzo principale in torretta, un cannone 120 mm Rheinmetall prodotto su licenza Un carro armato russo T-72 apre il fuoco con il cannone 2A46 da 125 mm. Il cannone da carro armato è l'armament...
TiramisuAsalNegara asalItalia PembuatAdo Campeol (en) RincianJenisdessert with spoon (en) Bahan utamatelur ayam, Kakao padat, ladyfinger (en) , Mascarpone dan kopi Tiramisù (Tiramesù) adalah kue keju khas Italia dengan taburan bubuk kakao di atasnya. Kue ini merupakan hidangan penutup yang dimakan dengan sendok, sehingga digolongkan ke dalam hidangan al cucchiaio (dengan sendok). Kue ini tidak dibuat dari adonan dan tidak dipanggang. Bahan dasarnya adalah biskuit yang sudah direndam ke dala...
Иван Дмитриевич Посыльный Дата рождения 15 июня 1922(1922-06-15) Место рождения хутор Тацин, Красносулинский район, Ростовская область Дата смерти 4 февраля 2005(2005-02-04) (82 года) Место смерти город Шахты Гражданство СССР Россия Награды и премии Медали Ива́н Дми́триевич П...
Triathlon South AfricaSportTriathlonJurisdictionNationalAbbreviationTSAFounded1984AffiliationInternational Triathlon Union (ITU)Regional affiliationAfrican Triathlon UnionHeadquarters1st Floor, Loftus Versfeld, Kirkness Street, Pretoria, Tshwane, 0002PresidentJan Sterk[1][failed verification]SecretarySharon OakleyOfficial websitewww.triathlonsa.co.za Triathlon South Africa is the Sport governing body for the sport of triathlon in South Africa. It is responsible for the manage...