Yes, once we had the atomic bomb it was absolutely right to use it to end WW2.
depends on the size of the nuke, and how many you drop
This depends on many variables including yield, weather, height of burst, "salting" of the tamper, etc. Without knowing these your question cannot be answered. The idea that these bombs "implode then explode" has something to do with the range of the effects as given in the expert answer is complete nonsense. Especially since gun type nuclear bombs do not implode during the assembly of a supercritical mass. Some effects like fallout and EMP can reach distances of many thousands of miles under the right conditions!
No. Just like dropping a firecracker won't cause it to explode.
You take a bomb then use some radiation and some light some explosives and then drop it on your neighbors house
There are two forces on the bomb when it is dropped; horizontal, and vertical. The vertical force is gravity, and the horizontal force is the velocity of the plane when the bomb is dropped. In order to determine how far away the bomb will drop from the initial point of release, it is necessary to know the height that the plane is at, and the velocity of the plane, which is also the initial horizontal velocity of the bomb (it is constant, neglecting air resistence.)
Most people think so.
That depends on how big the nuclear bomb is.
President Truman.
No, that was America
ronald regan
no!!! nuclear weapons have not been used since ww2.
to end the war, ASAP.
take a b-2 bomber and drop a nuclear bomb on it
Widespread radioactive contamination
depends on the size of the nuke, and how many you drop
Build a missile for launching satellites into orbit. Build a nuclear bomb. Replace the satellite payload of your missile with that nuclear bomb. Adjust the missile guidance system to drop the bomb on a selected target instead of injecting it into orbit. Simple?
A B-29 bomber, named Enola Gay, carried the first nuclear bomb. It was used to drop the atomic bomb, "Little Boy," on Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945.