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The Sum of All Fears.pdf - Delta Force

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CHAPTER 36<br />

Weapons Effects<br />

Sergeant Ed Yankevich should have been the first to notice what was happening.<br />

His eyes were on the van, and he was walking in that direction, scarcely forty<br />

feet away, but the human nervous system works in milliseconds and no faster.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fizzle had just ended when the first radiation reached the police <strong>of</strong>ficer.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se were gamma rays, which are actually photons, the same stuff that light<br />

waves are made <strong>of</strong>, but far more energetic. <strong>The</strong>y were already attacking the body<br />

<strong>of</strong> the truck as well, causing the sheet steel to fluoresce like neon.<br />

Immediately behind the gammas were X-rays, also composed <strong>of</strong> photons but less<br />

energetic. <strong>The</strong> difference was lost on Yankevich, who would be the first to die.<br />

<strong>The</strong> intense radiation was most readily absorbed by his bones, which rapidly<br />

heated to incandescence, while at the same time the neurons <strong>of</strong> his brain were<br />

simultaneously excited as though each had become a flashbulb. In fact, Sergeant<br />

Yankevich was unable to notice a thing. He literally disintegrated, exploded<br />

from within by the tiny fraction <strong>of</strong> energy his body was able to absorb as the<br />

rest raced through him. But the gammas and X-rays were heading in all possible<br />

directions at the speed <strong>of</strong> light, and their next effect was one no one had<br />

anticipated.<br />

Adjacent to the van, whose body was now being reduced to molecular bits <strong>of</strong><br />

metal, was ABC's 'A' satellite unit. Inside were several people who would have<br />

no more time to sense their fate than Sergeant Yankevich. <strong>The</strong> same was true <strong>of</strong><br />

the elaborate and expensive electrical equipment in the van. But at the rear <strong>of</strong><br />

this vehicle, pointing south and upward was a large parabolic-dish antenna, not<br />

unlike the kind used for radar. In the center <strong>of</strong> this, like the stamen <strong>of</strong> a<br />

flower, was the wave guide, essentially a metal tube with a square<br />

cross-section, whose inside dimensions roughly approximated the wave-length <strong>of</strong><br />

the signal it was now broadcasting to a satellite 22,600 miles over the equator.<br />

<strong>The</strong> wave guide <strong>of</strong> the 'A' unit, and soon thereafter each <strong>of</strong> the eleven trucks<br />

lined up west <strong>of</strong> it, was struck by the gammas and X-rays. In the process,<br />

electrons were blasted <strong>of</strong>f the atoms <strong>of</strong> the metal – in some cases the guides<br />

were lined with gold plate, which accentuated the process – which gave up their<br />

energy at once in the form <strong>of</strong> photons. <strong>The</strong>se photons formed waves whose<br />

frequency was roughly that <strong>of</strong> the satellite up-link transmitters. <strong>The</strong>re was one<br />

difference: the up-link trucks were in no case transmitting as much as one<br />

thousand watts <strong>of</strong> radio-frequency – RF – energy, and in most cases far less than<br />

that. <strong>The</strong> energy transfer from the 'A' unit's wave guide, however, released<br />

nearly a million watts <strong>of</strong> energy in one brief, orgasmic pulse that ended in less<br />

than a microsecond as the antenna and the associated truck were also vaporized<br />

by the searing energy front. Next to go was the ABC 'B' unit, then TWI. NHK,<br />

which was sending the Superbowl to Japan, was the fourth van in the line. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

were eight more. <strong>All</strong> were destroyed. This process took approximately fifteen<br />

'shakes.' <strong>The</strong> satellites to which they transmitted were a long distance away. It<br />

would take the energy roughly an eighth <strong>of</strong> a second to span the distance, a<br />

relative eternity.<br />

Next to emerge from the explosion – the truck was now part <strong>of</strong> it – was light and<br />

heat energy. <strong>The</strong> first blast <strong>of</strong> light escaped just before the expanding fireball

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