Authenticating Nuclear Warheads With High Con dence

Year
2014
Author(s)
Alexander Glaser - Princeton University
Boaz Barak - Microsoft Research New England
Robert J. Goldston - Princeton University
Sebastien Philippe - Princeton University
Moritz Kutt - Princeton University, Technische Universitat Darmstadt, Germany
Abstract
Negotiated deeper cuts in the nuclear arsenals may place limits on the total number of nuclear weapons in states' stockpiles, which could require inspections on hundreds or thousands of warheads or warhead components currently in storage or in dismantlement queues. The process of authenticating treaty limited items, e.g. with passive or active radia- tion measurements, is likely to be a critical element of veried disarmament. We have been developing a template-matching approach under which, for maximum security, classied in- formation is never measured or stored electronically during the inspection. While one-on-one measurements (template versus inspected item) are feasible, such a system would strongly benet from optimized sampling strategies authenticating as many items as possible with minimum probabilities for cheating. This paper proposes and examines the eectiveness of a strategy for authenticating nuclear warheads with a particular emphasis on controlling false positive and false negative rates of the inspections.