Depends on the type of bomb.
Bombs are explosive devices designed to cause damage and destruction. They can be used for various purposes, such as military attacks, terrorism, or demolition. It is essential to handle and dispose of bombs safely to prevent accidents and harm.
Both can be created on earth, and both have been. Fission has been used in atomic bombs, and fusion has been used in hydrogen bombs.
The most common materials used as "fuels" are plutonium, oralloy (i.e. highly enriched uranium), and lithium deuteride. Smaller amounts of deuterium and/or tritium gas are used in some devices. For the nonnuclear parts of the bombs many other materials are used, much as they would in conventional bombs.
Cesium is not a typical material used in the construction of atomic bombs. The primary materials used in atomic bombs are uranium or plutonium. Cesium may be a byproduct of nuclear reactions in atomic bombs, but it is not a key component.
Einsteinium is not used in bombs.
It was used in olden day bombs but not today!
Protactinium is not used in bombs.
The bombs used on Nagasaki and Hiroshima were both fission bombs, not fusion bombs.
Too many to list, from the fissile and fusiondble fuels, explosives, electronics, inert casing materials, etc.
torpedoes and dive bombs
Magnesium, white phosphorus, and jellied gasoline (napalm) are the typical fuels in conventional incendiary bombs. They are not used in conventional high explosive bombs or in nuclear bombs.
Uranium which is a fuel is used in atomic bombs and in nuclear power stations.