42 years ago today, lieutenant colonel Stanislav Petrov chose not to launch missiles against the United States while on duty in the Serpukhov-15 missile bunker after receiving what he correctly judged to be a false alarm in a early warning system.
This hasn't been formalized into a holiday so you'll find different advice online about how to celebrate, but I intend to raise a toast to Petrov and to watch the movie WarGames released the same year.
I'm not really sure how your comment would disprove the story. It seems that it's unclear if the Dead Hand was even active at this time, and also it probably triggers when impact occurs rather than on satellite detection.
Meanwhile this case was a false satellite detection which, if reported, may have caused a retaliatory launch of nukes.
Is there a technical write up of the false positive? I've long known about Petrov and his intuition, but eventually the error was confirmed and I haven't been able to find much detail as to the "how". Presumably the satellite system that failed had a lab twin, and the failure was reproduced there?
"It was subsequently determined that the false alarms were caused by a rare alignment of sunlight on high-altitude clouds and the satellites' Molniya orbits, an error later corrected by cross-referencing a geostationary satellite."
What a real hero! Is it known why he suspected it wasn’t real?
Edit: I see it here.
>In explaining the factors leading to his decision, Petrov cited his belief and training that any U.S. first strike would be massive, so five missiles seemed an illogical start.[11] In addition, the launch detection system was new and in his view not yet wholly trustworthy, while ground radar had failed to pick up corroborative evidence even after several minutes of the false alarm.
Many of us had the opportunity, at least in principle, to travel to his abode and personally thank him and bear a gift or two. I for one regret that I did not.
Hello HN,
42 years ago today, lieutenant colonel Stanislav Petrov chose not to launch missiles against the United States while on duty in the Serpukhov-15 missile bunker after receiving what he correctly judged to be a false alarm in a early warning system.
This hasn't been formalized into a holiday so you'll find different advice online about how to celebrate, but I intend to raise a toast to Petrov and to watch the movie WarGames released the same year.
Cheers to Mr. Petrov and to everyone alive that he saved.
The reality is more complicated. I put a comment a couple of days ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45367307
I'm not really sure how your comment would disprove the story. It seems that it's unclear if the Dead Hand was even active at this time, and also it probably triggers when impact occurs rather than on satellite detection.
Meanwhile this case was a false satellite detection which, if reported, may have caused a retaliatory launch of nukes.
Is there a technical write up of the false positive? I've long known about Petrov and his intuition, but eventually the error was confirmed and I haven't been able to find much detail as to the "how". Presumably the satellite system that failed had a lab twin, and the failure was reproduced there?
From wikipedia:
"It was subsequently determined that the false alarms were caused by a rare alignment of sunlight on high-altitude clouds and the satellites' Molniya orbits, an error later corrected by cross-referencing a geostationary satellite."
It is not a secret that the United States passed to the Soviets technology for PAL (permissive activation links). (Purportedly in Vienna.)
One might hope that the US has also passed the USSR/Russia technology that would make Perimeter more robust and logically airtight.
I know the story and it's really impressive, but how do we know that it is true?
What a real hero! Is it known why he suspected it wasn’t real?
Edit: I see it here.
>In explaining the factors leading to his decision, Petrov cited his belief and training that any U.S. first strike would be massive, so five missiles seemed an illogical start.[11] In addition, the launch detection system was new and in his view not yet wholly trustworthy, while ground radar had failed to pick up corroborative evidence even after several minutes of the false alarm.
Many of us had the opportunity, at least in principle, to travel to his abode and personally thank him and bear a gift or two. I for one regret that I did not.