Assuming you like Dorathy from the wizard of ozzie i would say u would need about 10000000000000000002 10 megaton bombs
Equals to Zardari's Bank Balance
About 11 tons.
Most nuclear bombs can be as strong as 20 kilotons (20,000 tons of TNT) up to 60 Megatons (60,000,000 tons of TNT).
atleast 10 tons
A nuclear bomb can be made with any desired yield from about 10 tons to well over 50 megatons in one single bomb. These numbers are just for tested devices that worked, there is no theoretical upper limit on the yield of fusion based bombs.
First, the amount of energy released is enormous. The most powerful conventional bomb has a few tons of explosive; 7 tons perhaps. The bombs used in Hiroshima and Nagasaki had the equivalent yield of 20,000 tons of TNT. Those were more like prototypes - in the meantimes, bombs with yield of megatons (millions of tons of TNT) have been produced. The highest yield nuclear bomb tested was 52 to 58 megatons (depending on method of measurement). Also, nuclear bombs have radioactive fallout, which will contaminate the environment.
10 t(US) = 20000 lb
megatons
1,000,000,000,000 Megatons = 35,273,961,949,580,415,205,376Ounces or 3.5275961949580415205376 x 10 to the power 22 or 100000000000000000000
B53 nuclear bomb is nine megatons No public data is out on how large the largest megaton nuke really is but there are claims and reports that it is over 100 megatons.
That depends on what substance the question refers to. For example . . . Gold: very few tons Diamonds: even fewer tons Enriched uranium: several tons CO2: copious tons Trash: megatons
1 Gt = 1 billion tons (1,000,000,000 tons) 1 Mt = 1 million tons (1,000,000 tons) 1 billion ---------- = 100 Mt in per Gt 1 million
No 5 tons equals 10,000 pounds.so 5 tons is greater
depends on the yield of each bomb, which has varied from 10 tons to over 50 megatons. there is no such thing as a nominal atomic bomb.
mega- = 1,000,000just askilo- = 1,000six mega = (6) x (1,000,000) = 6,000,000six mega-tones = 6000000 tones
mega = million. so megaton = million tons. Often used as a comparative power, where the tons referred to are tons of TNT. So, the Hiroshima bomb was about 20kt. = 20 000 tons of TNT. Naturally, this unit ignores effects beyond simple blast, effects such as heat and radiation.
The answer, as it turns out, is on the order of one trillion-trillion megatons of TNT; that is to say, 10-to-the-thirtieth tons of TNT, equal to a one followed by thirty zeroes. Another way of saying that is one million yottatons of TNT; one yottaton is equal to 10-to-the-24th tons. The energy released in such a cataclysmic explosion would be: 4.184 * 10-to-the-39th Joules. The bomb dropped on Hiroshima, by contrast, was only about 15 kilotons of TNT.
Most nuclear bombs can be as strong as 20 kilotons (20,000 tons of TNT) up to 60 Megatons (60,000,000 tons of TNT).
1.4 tons :)