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Radura (for Nuclear Legacies):

radura symbol

successfully uploaded radura to CW Nuclear Legacies: Radura

Nuclear Test symbol for Radiation Legacies: Nuclear Test Sites or Nuclear Legacies: The Role of Nuclear Testing http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/16/Mushroom_cloud.svg/120px-Mushroom_cloud.svg.png

nuclear testing mushroom-cloud symbol

successfully uploaded nuclear test symbol to CW Radiation Legacies: Nuclear Test Sites

Orbits (for Nuclear Legacies: Power and Energy): http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/92/Rutherford_atom.svg/300px-Rutherford_atom.svg.png this one is more complex and colorful

symbolizing nuclear energy

successfully uploaded atom symbol to CW Nuclear Legacies: Power and Energy

Some additional symbols: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/de/Nucleaire01.svg/106px-Nucleaire01.svg.png this one is simply 3 elipses with a dot in center

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e2/Stylised_Lithium_Atom.png/256px-Stylised_Lithium_Atom.png this conists of lithium atom in center ball of three elipses

for Nuclear Legacies: Nuclear Power Fuel Cycle: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ad/Hydrogen300.png/120px-Hydrogen300.png


WMD symbols for Nuclear Legacies: Weapons of Mass Destruction http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2f/WMD_symbols_variant_horizontal.svg/120px-WMD_symbols_variant_horizontal.svg.png

symbols for nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons

successfully uploaded WMD sybols to CW Nuclear Legacies: WMD

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Radiation_warning_symbol-US.svg CAUTION: RADIATION AREA

CAUTION: RADIATION AREA

successfully uploaded to CW Legacies section CW Radiation Legacies.

Other Sections for Cold War Legacies are Radiation Legacies, Nuclear Legacies, Military Legacies, Security Legacies, Institutional Legacies, Economic Legacies. These links were inserted at end of each Section.

Arzamas figure will go in Institutional Legacies (this is a half-page size):

File:Thermonuclear weapons Arzamas-16.jpg
Soviet thermonuclear missile shrouds at Arzamas-16 nuclear-weapons museum with official visitors. Official photograph in 1993 of two authentic Soviet thermonuclear missile shrouds at the restricted Arzamas-16 nuclear-weapons laboratory museum, with official visitors in foreground. Standing in the center is Dr. Yuri Alekseyevich Trutnev, former chief weapons designer and Hero of Socialist Labor. To Trutnev’s left is Dr. Vladimir E. Minkov and to his right is Dr. Alexander DeVolpi, both physicists and official visitors from the U.S. Argonne National Laboratory. On the far right is Dr. Vitaly Shchukin, physicist from the Chelyabinsk-70 nuclear-weapons laboratory, and on the far left is a member of the Arzamas-16 management. Other nuclear weapon models on display included the Soviet Fat Man derivative, based on espionage directed at the Manhattan Project, which lead to the nuclear test designated RDS-1, and the first indigenous Soviet design which resulted in the RDS-2 test.

. Not sure where to put Chelyabinsk figure yet (this is a half-page size):

File:Tsar Bomba Chelyabinsk-70.jpg
Tsar Bomba at Chelyabinsk-70 nuclear-weapons museum with first official visitors. Official photo taken in 1993 at the visit of first outsiders admitted to restricted Chelyabinsk-70 nuclear-weapons museum of the former Soviet Union. The Institute’s chief weapons designer Boris Litvinov is standing between the two physicist guests from the United States Argonne National Laboratory: Dr. Alexander DeVolpi (right) and Dr. Vladimir Minkov. The large cylindrical object behind them is a casing of the Tsar Bomba, the most powerful nuclear weapon ever designed and tested. Sometimes called a “political bomb” because of its doubtful military value, it resulted from a joint project assigned to the Soviet Chelyabinsk-70 and Arzamas-16 nuclear-weapon laboratories. The air-dropped bomb with drogue parachute (visible behind casing) was tested in 1961 at approximately 50 megatons, but its design yield was purportedly up to 150 megatons, roughly ten-thousand times more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Many other types of nuclear weapons were on display, including one designed to be delivered by a Scud tactical ballistic missile.

.

Here are full-page sizings (800px):

File:Thermonuclear weapons Arzamas-16.jpg
Soviet thermonuclear missile shrouds at Arzamas-16 nuclear-weapons museum with official visitors. Official photograph in 1993 of two authentic Soviet thermonuclear missile shrouds at the restricted Arzamas-16 nuclear-weapons laboratory museum, with official visitors in foreground. Standing in the center is Dr. Yuri Alekseyevich Trutnev, former chief weapons designer and Hero of Socialist Labor. To Trutnev’s left is Dr. Vladimir E. Minkov and to his right is Dr. Alexander DeVolpi, both physicists and official visitors from the U.S. Argonne National Laboratory. On the far right is Dr. Vitaly Shchukin, physicist from the Chelyabinsk-70 nuclear-weapons laboratory, and on the far left is a member of the Arzamas-16 management. Other nuclear weapon models on display included the Soviet Fat Man derivative, based on espionage directed at the Manhattan Project, which lead to the nuclear test designated RDS-1, and the first indigenous Soviet design which resulted in the RDS-2 test.

.

File:Tsar Bomba Chelyabinsk-70.jpg
Tsar Bomba at Chelyabinsk-70 nuclear-weapons museum with first official visitors. Official photo taken in 1993 at the visit of first outsiders admitted to restricted Chelyabinsk-70 nuclear-weapons museum of the former Soviet Union. The Institute’s chief weapons designer Boris Litvinov is standing between the two physicist guests from the United States Argonne National Laboratory: Dr. Alexander DeVolpi (right) and Dr. Vladimir Minkov. The large cylindrical object behind them is a casing of the Tsar Bomba, the most powerful nuclear weapon ever designed and tested. Sometimes called a “political bomb” because of its doubtful military value, it resulted from a joint project assigned to the Soviet Chelyabinsk-70 and Arzamas-16 nuclear-weapon laboratories. The air-dropped bomb with drogue parachute (visible behind casing) was tested in 1961 at approximately 50 megatons, but its design yield was purportedly up to 150 megatons, roughly ten-thousand times more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Many other types of nuclear weapons were on display, including one designed to be delivered by a Scud tactical ballistic missile.

.