Nuclear weapons are governed by international agreements such as the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), which aims to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. Additionally, there are regional and bilateral agreements that regulate the use and possession of nuclear weapons among specific countries. Some countries also have domestic laws pertaining to nuclear weapons possession and testing.
the UK did some of its nuclear weapon test shots there.
France is part of the "nuclear club" so we would assume that the most powerful weapon in France is some kind of Hydrogen bomb/warhead.
google broken arrow, there have been far too many to list here
Some nuclear weapons can be fitted to missiles. In the case of an ICBM (Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles) a nuclear weapon can be outfitted so that it can reach distant points on the globe.
A nuclear weapon is any device which utilizes the power produced by either nuclear fission or fusion (mostly fission) to inflict damage upon some type of target. Almost all, if not all nuclear weapons are explosives, either bombs or missile warheads.
Human history has shown that no civilization lasts forever. A "Loose Nuclear Weapon (Loose Cannon)" is going to cause some problems.
Richard Rhodes books "The making of the Atomic Bomb" and "Dark Sun" have some reasonable diagrams to go by.
NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) - trade agreement Plan Merida - security agreement
Yes. But it'd probably require some sort of typo while attempting to put the system in standby before going to lunch.
All modern nuclear weapons use plutonium. There may be a uranium component in some modern weapons as well, usually in the secondary or added on in rings to adjust the yield of the weapon.
About 180 million degrees Fahrenheit upon detonation, which is some 10,000 times hotter than the surface of the sun.