The consortium’s strategy is to create an AI-driven Structure-enabled Antiviral Platform (ASAP), using cutting-edge technology such as advanced structural biology, fragment screening, AI and machine learning, as well as computational chemistry on Folding@home, the world’s largest distributed computing platform to build a robust and open access antiviral discovery pipeline. Click to read more.
National Archives of Australia
Besides the full-scale nuclear detonations, there were hundreds of “subcritical” trials designed to test the performance and safety of nuclear weapons and their components. These trials usually involved blowing up nuclear devices with conventional explosives, or setting them on fire.
The subcritical tests released radioactive materials. The Vixen B trials alone (at the Taranaki test site at Maralinga) spread 22.2 kilograms of plutonium and more than 40 kilograms of uranium across the arid landscape. For comparison, the nuclear bomb dropped on Nagasaki contained 6.4 kilograms of plutonium, while the one dropped on Hiroshima held 64 kilograms of uranium.
These tests resulted in long-lasting radioactive contamination of the environment. The full extent of the contamination was only realised in 1984, before the land was returned to its traditional owners, the Maralinga Tjarutja people.