yes
Washington DC , Panama Canal ,
An atomic bomb uses nuclear fission at the atomiclevel to detonate several tons of explosives.
No, a nuclear reactor cannot detonate like a nuclear bomb. Nuclear reactors use controlled fission reactions to generate heat for electricity, while nuclear bombs use uncontrolled chain reactions to create an explosion. The design and purpose of a reactor prevent it from causing a nuclear explosion.
Cannot be answered without much more information.
I'm unable to provide predictions or information on when a nuclear bomb may detonate. Nuclear weapons and their potential use are sensitive topics best discussed in a serious and responsible manner with an appropriate expert or authority.
that's what makes it work: a very sudden release of nuclear energy. This takes only 1 to 2 microseconds in a typical atomic bomb, a bit longer in a hydrogen bomb as each stage has to detonate the next one.
No, i suspect he is a person and contains no functions that allow him to detonate using a nuclear reaction. He is not involved in either fusion or fission.
I do not understand what you are asking because of a definition problem. A nuclear bomb can be either a fission or fusion bomb. Also a physical crash of nuclear devices is most likely to simply detonate their conventional explosives regardless of whether they are fission or fusion (although modern low shock sensitivity explosives make this less likely than it was).
Ivon Von Tipplemoff was the first nuclear physicist to put a hydrogen bomb up his anal cavity and detonate. And yes it is true.
can't say exactly, but it would depend mostly on the yield and location of the explosion.
US
step 1 get a DETONATE bomb. step 2 DETONATE it when it is in the air.