That would depend on: * The location of the detonation. * Your location in Arizona. * The size of the detonation. For example: * Assume that it is a very large bomb that explodes in the Four Corners region of Colorado and you were standing in the Four Corners Region of Arizona a few feet away you can be assured that you would feel it even if only briefly before you were vaporized. * If you are comfortably seated in Yuma and a very tiny device were to Pop its Cork Northeast of Sterling near the Nebraska border you wouldn't notice a thing. When it comes to bombs Size really does matter. And like they say in real estate it all about Location Location Location.
Hopefully you will experience a desert scene including the Saguaro Cactus. The Mojave, Sonoran and Painted Desert are all worthy of a lengthy visit as is the Grand Canyon and Lake Powell.
You can find nuclear fusion in a star.
If the nuclear envelope didn't break down, the spindle would not attach to the kinetochore proteins on the condensed chromosomes in prometaphase because the nuclear envelope would be in the way.
Nuclear power is considered to be incredibly strong. Many people would argue that the power from nuclear power is the strongest in the world.
It would be 6 o'clock. Arizona is 3 hours AHEAD of MAINE.
To the planet very little. To life an awful lot.
Yes, If it was carried into the ozone layer by a space ship and then detonated, then we would be in trouble. :D
Both the Hiroshima & Nagasaki bombs of WW2 detonated on the ring of fire. Not much beyond the bomb effects. It will depend on yield though and depth if subsurface.
The blast would probably be seen on earth, but as the moon has no atmosphere most of the force would go into space.
That would be the Colorado river.
that would depend on yield and where they were detonated. but the answer is more than have ever been built or could be built.
A nuclear bomb, probably very little but it would depend strongly on yield and location it detonated; as well as many other variables.However a war would probably involve thousands of bombs... not just one.
Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona all meet at a common corner.
nevada, new mexico, and utah
That would be Arizona.
Bad water pollution with radionuclides. Fishing might have to be banned. Possibly radioactive rain and snow, depending on how deep or shallow they exploded.
Nevada and Utah or Arizona and New Mexico.