CRS INSIGHT
North Korea's January 6, 2016, Nuclear Test
January 7, 2016 (IN10428)
|
Related Author
Mary Beth D. Nikitin
|
Mary Beth D. Nikitin, Specialist in Nonproliferation (mnikitin@crs.loc.gov, 7-7745)
North Korea announced that it successfully tested a "hydrogen bomb" (its fourth nuclear test) on January 6, 2016. The
official statement also called the device an experimental or "pilot H-bomb." It emphasized that North Korea would
continue its policy of both building up its nuclear weapons program and developing its economy in parallel, and said
that North Korea would not proliferate nuclear weapons to others. The statement reiterated that North Korea would not
suspend or dismantle its nuclear weapons program unless the United States changed its "hostile policy" toward the
country. Observers have been anticipating a new nuclear test by North Korea since a December 2015 statement by
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un claimed that the country had a hydrogen bomb. Earlier statements by North Korean
scientists cited fusion technology development, the basis for a hydrogen bomb, in the country.
The U.S. Geological Survey detected a non-earthquake seismic event with a magnitude of 5.1 near the Punggye-ri
nuclear test site in North Korea. The Comprehensive Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) said in a January 6
statement and press briefing that its monitors had detected a seismic event at the same North Korean location as the
February 2013 nuclear test, and that the "seismic signals are largely consistent with those picked up during the last
announced nuclear test on 12 February 2013." The U.S. government has said that it was a nuclear test, but a White
House spokesman said that initial data was "not consistent" with North Korean claims of detonating a hydrogen bomb.
The Air Force deployed a WC-135 Constant Phoenix "sniffer" aircraft to test for any atmospheric radiation. Many
countries around the world, including China and Russia, have condemned the test as a violation of several U.N.
Security Council resolutions.
North Korea has tested a nuclear explosive device three other times since 2006. Each test produced progressively
somewhat-higher yields (ranging up to several kilotons). These devices were fission bombs. The U.S. intelligence
community has said that the prime objective of North Korea's nuclear weapons program is to develop a nuclear
warhead that is "miniaturized" or sufficiently small to be mounted on intermediate-range and long-range ballistic
missiles. Observers debate the extent to which North Korea's nuclear tests have improved Pyongyang's ability to
produce nuclear weapons, but since even unsuccessful nuclear tests give scientists useful information, the January 6 test
could assist in that goal.
A "hydrogen bomb" refers to a thermonuclear device, or a two-phase explosion that includes a nuclear fission trigger to
initiate a fusion reaction. A plutonium pit at the core of the device causes the larger, fusion reaction using hydrogen
isotopes. This is considered to be technically challenging and only the United States, Russia, France, and China have
tested thermonuclear devices. Many experts doubt that North Korea has achieved this technical step. Others argue that
the January 6 test was probably not a hydrogen bomb test because of the low yield relative to other hydrogen or
thermonuclear tests.

Another possibility discussed by technical experts is that the January 6 test was a "boosted" fission weapon. Generally,
countries would test a boosted fission weapon as the next step after testing fission weapons, on the path to developing a
hydrogen bomb (or as its own end). This type of nuclear weapon includes a fission device plus a small amount of
hydrogen isotopes (trtium and deuterium gas) which undergo fusion and whose resulting energy release sustains the
fission reaction for longer, causing a larger blast. This type of device would also be lighter in weight and smaller in size
and may explain the North Korean claim that they have tested a "mini H-bomb." In order to be delivered on longer-
range ballistic missiles, nuclear warheads need to be of a lower-weight and size than the most simple nuclear fission
bomb design would allow.
It is also possible that the device was a fission bomb, but that the North Korean government claimed it was a hydrogen
bomb for other purposes such as domestic political support, deterrence impact on its neighbors, or possibly an
exaggerated claim by scientists to the leadership. Intelligence agencies and the international scientific community are
still collecting data from the test, which could reveal more information about the nature of the nuclear material used,
and whether the explosion involved fusion. These details may take days or weeks to be detected and may or may not be
released to the public. Following past tests, the Director of National Intelligence has released statements with the
intelligence community's conclusions. However, DNI has not always confirmed the material used in the test or the
exact yield. Although seismic monitoring data should reveal the estimated yield of the device, the material used can be
detected by radionuclides released into the atmosphere. If North Korea has successfully designed the test site so that
little to no release or venting occurs, it may prove more difficult for intelligence agencies to detect and draw strong
conclusions.