{"id":1323397,"date":"2026-05-28T17:05:25","date_gmt":"2026-05-28T15:05:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/pascal-b-nuclear-manhole-cover-fastest-object-1957\/"},"modified":"2026-06-11T21:48:26","modified_gmt":"2026-06-11T19:48:26","slug":"pascal-b-nuclear-manhole-cover-fastest-object-1957","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/pascal-b-nuclear-manhole-cover-fastest-object-1957\/","title":{"rendered":"Did a 1957 Nuke Just Launch a Manhole Cover to Space?"},"content":{"rendered":"<style>.et_pb_title_container h1.entry-title { padding-top: 40px !important; }<\/style>\n<p>At Yucca Flat in the Nevada desert, on the morning of 27 August 1957, the United States Atomic Energy Commission detonated a small nuclear device at the bottom of a 152-metre vertical shaft. They sealed the shaft with a four-inch-thick welded steel cap, weighing about 900 kg, partly to contain fallout, partly to find out what would happen if you welded a four-inch plate over a nuclear explosion.<\/p>\n<p>What happened was a single high-speed-camera frame, six and a half kilometres per second, and a steel disc that has never been seen again. According to the physicist who designed the test, that disc is the fastest object ever launched from Earth \u2014 faster than any rocket, any space probe, any meteor escaping Earth&#8217;s gravity. It is also, almost certainly, no longer with us. But the question of where it went, and how fast it really went, has been argued about for the better part of seventy years.<\/p>\n<div style=\"background:#f5f5f5;padding:16px 20px;margin:18px 0 24px;border-radius:8px;font-size:15px;line-height:1.7\"><p style=\"margin:0 0 8px;font-weight:700;color:#333;font-size:16px\">Quick Facts<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Test:<\/strong> Pascal-B, Operation Plumbbob<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Location:<\/strong> Yucca Flat, Nevada Test Site<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Date:<\/strong> 27 August 1957, 11:35 PDT<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Device yield:<\/strong> 300 tons TNT equivalent<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Shaft depth:<\/strong> 152 m (500 ft)<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Cap:<\/strong> ~900 kg steel plate, 4 in \/ 10 cm thick<\/p><p style=\"margin:6px 0\"><strong>Estimated launch velocity:<\/strong> ~66 km\/s (~240,000 km\/h) \u2014 ~6\u00d7 Earth escape velocity<\/p><\/div>\n\n<div style=\"max-width:560px;margin:0 auto 28px\"><iframe src=\"https:\/\/www.instagram.com\/p\/DYtALviDgIV\/embed\/\" width=\"100%\" height=\"700\" frameborder=\"0\" scrolling=\"no\" allowtransparency=\"true\" style=\"border:1px solid #ddd;border-radius:12px\"><\/iframe><\/div>\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">Pascal B and the man who designed it<\/h2>\n<p>Operation Plumbbob was a full-scale series of atmospheric and underground nuclear tests at the Nevada Test Site. Between May and October 1957, scientists detonated twenty-nine nuclear devices in airbursts, balloon shots, tower shots and \u2014 for the first time \u2014 underground in vertical shafts. The first underground test of the series was Pascal-A, on 26 July 1957. The shaft was left open at the top. The fireball, the radiation and the shock wave all came shooting straight out of the borehole and produced one of the most spectacular plumes of the entire series. Robert Brownlee, the Los Alamos physicist responsible for the test, watched it from the control bunker and concluded that an open shaft was clearly not the way to do this.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\" style=\"margin:0 0 24px\"><img data-opt-id=950285847  fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/ml5psubhxdln.i.optimole.com\/cb:0e0_.b970\/w:auto\/h:auto\/q:mauto\/ig:avif\/https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2026\/05\/nevada-test-site-1957-atomic-test.jpg\" alt=\"Nevada Test Site, 1957 atomic test\" style=\"max-width:100%;height:auto;border-radius:6px\"><figcaption style=\"font-size:13px;color:#777;text-align:center;margin-top:6px;font-style:italic\">A T-33 trainer photograph from the same 1957 Nevada Test Site series. Twenty-nine devices were detonated during Operation Plumbbob. Photo: US National Archives \/ Wikimedia Commons (public domain).<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>For the next shot \u2014 Pascal-B, a 300-ton-yield device set 152 metres down a parallel vertical shaft \u2014 Brownlee designed an iron concrete plug and a four-inch-thick welded steel cap to be bolted across the borehole. The intent was to contain the fireball. The expectation, in Brownlee&#8217;s own words later, was that the cap would not survive.<\/p>\n<p>It did not. When Pascal-B detonated, the explosion sent a shock wave straight up the shaft. The compressed air ahead of the shock front accelerated the steel cap upward at, by Brownlee&#8217;s calculations, several hundred thousand g&#8217;s over a fraction of a millisecond. A high-speed motion-picture camera positioned to film the borehole had been taking roughly one frame per millisecond. The cap was visible in exactly one frame. Then it was gone.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">66 kilometres per second \u2014 and a frame of film<\/h2>\n<p>From that single frame, Brownlee calculated the cap&#8217;s velocity at roughly 66 kilometres per second \u2014 about 240,000 km\/h. Earth&#8217;s escape velocity is 11.2 km\/s. The cap was launched at almost six times the speed needed to leave Earth&#8217;s gravity. If it had survived its trip through the atmosphere, it would have departed the planet.<\/p><p>Brownlee was always careful to call the number an estimate. It was a one-frame measurement, from which only a rough lower limit could honestly be calculated, and he assumed the cap was vaporised before it ever cleared the atmosphere \u2014 though, as he admitted, nobody knows for sure.<\/p><h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">Did it actually leave Earth?<\/h2>\n<p>Almost certainly not. The cap accelerated through several hundred metres of atmosphere at six times escape velocity. The atmospheric heating at that speed and density \u2014 vastly greater than what any meteor experiences during a &#8220;regular&#8221; entry \u2014 would have vaporised the entire mass within a fraction of a second. The cap probably became plasma somewhere between Yucca Flat and 30 kilometres altitude.<\/p>\n<p>It is also worth noting that even if the cap had survived intact, it would not have been an &#8220;object in space&#8221; in the meaningful sense. A vertical trajectory launches an object that comes straight back down \u2014 minus its sideways orbital velocity, it cannot orbit anything. It could, theoretically, have escaped Earth&#8217;s gravity well on a hyperbolic trajectory if its speed sufficed (it did). But the atmospheric drag would have killed it long before it got there.<\/p>\n<h2 style=\"padding-top:22px\">And yet \u2014 fastest manmade object?<\/h2>\n<p>Probably. Even the Parker Solar Probe, currently NASA&#8217;s record-holder for highest spacecraft velocity, only reach about 192 km\/s during its closest perihelion passes \u2014 and those are measured well after launch, after gravity assists. At the moment of launch, no human-built object has ever moved faster than the Pascal-B cap. By Brownlee&#8217;s calculation it was launched at roughly a third of Parker Solar Probe&#8217;s peak operational velocity, in a single millisecond, with no rocket motor.<\/p>\n<p>The Pascal-B cap is, in 2026, a fixture of physics undergraduate problem sets, science-YouTube videos, and the kind of dinner-party trivia that turns into an argument about how fast escape velocity actually is. It is also, in a small but real sense, a piece of nuclear-test history that went almost unmentioned in public for decades. Brownlee&#8217;s account is now in the public record. The cap itself is not. Probably nobody ever will find it. It has, with reasonable scientific confidence, been gone for sixty-eight years.<\/p>\n<figure class=\"wp-block-embed\" style=\"margin:0 0 28px\"><div style=\"position:relative;padding-bottom:56.25%;height:0;overflow:hidden\"><iframe src=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/embed\/NSeL5c65v-g\" style=\"position:absolute;top:0;left:0;width:100%;height:100%;border:0;border-radius:6px\" allowfullscreen><\/iframe><\/div><figcaption style=\"font-size:13px;color:#777;text-align:center;margin-top:6px;font-style:italic\">How a Manhole Cover Became the Fastest Manmade Object Ever \u2014 full explanation of the Pascal-B test, Brownlee&#8217;s calculation and what almost certainly happened to the cap.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p><em>Sources: Robert Brownlee, &#8220;Learning to contain underground nuclear explosions&#8221; (2002); Operation Plumbbob official report (US DOE); Carey Sublette, &#8220;The Nuclear Weapon Archive \u2014 Operation Plumbbob&#8221;; Institute of Physics, &#8220;The speedy steel plate.&#8221;<\/em><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>At Yucca Flat in the Nevada desert, on the morning of 27 August 1957, the United States Atomic Energy Commission detonated a small nuclear device at the bottom of a 152-metre vertical shaft. They sealed the shaft with a four-inch-thick welded steel cap, weighing about 900 kg, partly to contain fallout, partly to find out [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":23,"featured_media":1323373,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","editor_notices":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[666],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1323397","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-history-and-legends"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.8 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Did a 1957 Nuke Just Launch a Manhole Cover to Space? | MiGFlug.com Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"At Frenchman Flat in the Nevada desert, on the morning of 27 August 1957, the United States Atomic Energy Commission detonated a small nuclear device at\u2026\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/migflug.com\/jetflights\/pascal-b-nuclear-manhole-cover-fastest-object-1957\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Did a 1957 Nuke Just Launch a Manhole Cover to Space? 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