project sundial doomsday bomb nuclear weapons Edward Teller nuclear winter

Somewhere in the fever-dream depths of Cold War logic, someone apparently said, โ€œYou know what would really secure peace on Earth? One nuclear bomb so massive it could end Earth.โ€ And instead of being promptly escorted out of the room by security and given a stern talking-to by someone with a psychology degree, they got funding. Welcome to Project Sundial, Americaโ€™s charming little brainstorm to build a single doomsday bomb big enough to erase humanity like a typo in a Word doc.

Everything Changed Forever

Letโ€™s play โ€œwhat if you were born in 1908.โ€ Youโ€™d enter a world with more horses than cars, where โ€œstreamingโ€ meant a babbling brook and not a backlog of unwatched Netflix. Fast-forward to 1945 and youโ€™d witness two world wars, the invention of television, jet propulsion, andโ€”oh yesโ€”atomic bombs. Small, glowy harbingers of doom that made traditional warfare look quaint.

Hiroshima and Nagasaki didnโ€™t just end a warโ€”they redefined what “winning” even meant. Suddenly, world leaders had to play nuclear chess, where every pawn could vaporize a city. Naturally, this meant everyone wanted their own shiny new atomic toy. Enter the Cold War arms race: brought to you by paranoia and physics.

The Race to Oblivion

In 1946, in a brief moment of clarity (or maybe guilt), the U.S. floated the Baruch Plan: give up nukes, share tech, save humanity. Predictably, the idea was shot down harder than a weather balloon in restricted airspace. By 1949, the Soviet Union had joined the Nuclear Club, and the only thing more powerful than the bombs was the ego-fueled competition to make them bigger.

By 1950: 300 nuclear weapons. By 1960: 20,000. Humanity, ever resourceful, managed to channel its brilliance into building enough firepower to destroy itselfโ€”several times over. Enter Edward Teller, a man whose idea of โ€œtoo farโ€ simply didnโ€™t exist.

But What If We Destroy Humanity More Efficiently?

Edward Teller didnโ€™t just want to improve the atomic bombโ€”he wanted to create the supervillain version. He pushed hard for the hydrogen bomb, which makes atomic bombs look like party poppers. By 1952, the U.S. tested its first H-bomb, and Pacific geography was never the same. Teller, satisfied but never quite finished, said: โ€œWhy stop at islands when you can erase continents?โ€

This led us to Project Sundial, the nuclear equivalent of rage-quitting Earth. The plan: one bomb to end them all. Not metaphorically. Literally.

The Final Bomb: Sundial

Sundial was the brainstorm to end all brainstormingโ€”mostly because it aimed to end all humans. With an estimated yield of 10 billion tons of TNT, this wasnโ€™t a bomb; it was the universeโ€™s worst birthday candle. It dwarfed Hiroshima like a sumo wrestler sitting on a Lego set.

The idea wasnโ€™t to drop it on the enemy. No, that would be tooโ€ฆ normal. Instead, it would sit cozily on U.S. soil as a last resort. Think of it as a โ€œYou hit me, I delete the planetโ€ kind of thing. Like building a booby-trapped doormat that takes the whole houseโ€”and blockโ€”down if someone steps on it wrong.

What Would Sundial Do?

Hereโ€™s a short list of what the Sundial bomb wouldโ€™ve unleashed if ever used:

  • A fireball 31 miles wide, igniting everything within 250 miles. Yes, you read that right. You wouldnโ€™t see the horizonโ€”youโ€™d see fire.
  • A magnitude 9 earthquake across the U.S., just to make sure you werenโ€™t bored.
  • Nuclear winter that drops global temperatures by 18ยฐF, tanks agriculture, and ends life as we know it. But on the plus side, youโ€™d never have to mow the lawn again.

Good News! (Wait, No, Bad News)

The good news? Sundial never got off the ground. Even Cold War strategistsโ€”whose job was literally to think of ways to win nuclear warโ€”blinked at this one. Cooler heads (relatively speaking) prevailed.

The bad news? Instead of one super-mega-doomsday button, we got 70,000 smaller ones. Today, about 12,000 nuclear weapons remain, still more than enough to turn our planet into a low-budget sci-fi wasteland. Sundial may not have happened, but its spirit lives on in every warhead chilling in a silo somewhere, waiting for humanityโ€™s next really bad idea.

More bad news? The automatic Doomsday device that was fictional in the movie Doctor Strangelove is real and is probably still functioning.

Are We Okay?

Short answer? Not really. The long answer includes trillion-dollar nuclear modernization projects, a China nuke boom, and increasingly fragile geopolitics. We’re still playing Russian roulette with a fully loaded revolver, but now weโ€™re doing it while juggling and blindfolded.

For a look at times we nearly vaporized ourselves by accident, check out this delightful article of accidental Armageddon close calls.

Maybe itโ€™s time we traded in our global death machines for something a bit less extinction-y. Like therapy. Or a really good group hug. Or, you know, functioning diplomacy.


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4 responses to “Project Sundial: The Doomsday Bomb That Could Have Wiped Out Humanity”

  1. Fascinating!

  2. Very interesting. I can’t believe I never heard of the Sundial project until recently. One small critique: A temperature change of 10 degrees Celsius is equivalent to an 18 degree change in Fahrenheit, not 50 degrees. Or in other words, if the temperature cools from 20 C to 10 C, that is the same as 68 F to 50 F.

    1. You are absolutely correct! Thank you for pointing out that error. It has been corrected, and the responsible parties from our Fact Check Department have been appropriately flogged and sent to bed without dessert.

  3. I wasn’t there (barring time travel shenanigans in which case I don’t know that I was there yet) so I don’t know for sure but I was told that the soviet invasion of Manchuria had more to do with the surrender of the Empire of Japan than the atomic bomb.

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