Too many to list, from the fissile and fusiondble fuels, explosives, electronics, inert casing materials, etc.
Thorium was not used in nuclear weapons.
Yes. U-235 is one of the two primary fissile materials used in nuclear weapons. The other is Pu-239. They are used as the core for the A-Bomb, and as the primary for the H-Bomb.
In the Nagasaki bomb, about 14 pounds. Design criteria on later weapons is classified.
No - though it's released as a by-product of nuclear fission (bomb explosions or reactors), it's not used as a primary component in either prior to fission.
Depends on the type of bomb. The first nuclear weapons were fission weapons- they used a heavy metal such as Uranium or Plutonium. These metals, when compressed by explosives, would undergo nuclear fission, and break into lighter elements, releasing heat and radiation. Later, larger bombs were fusion bombs. They used a fission bomb to start the nuclear reaction, but then used that energy to FUSE light elements, such as Deuterium and Tritium into heavier elements, releasing LARGE amounts of heat and radiation.
To make deadly Nuclear bomb
The nuclear material used to make the bombs was from Oak Ridge TN
What do you mean by nuclear chemicals?
Thorium was not used in nuclear weapons.
to develope nuclear power
Nuclear. At the time it was called an atom bomb.
No.
A nuclear bomb and an atomic bomb are virtually synonymous. The two terms are both used to refer to a nuclear weapon. Even Wikipedia agrees. The use of either term as a search argument redirects the answer to the article Nuclear Weapon. A link is provided. from benjaminmarkiewicz that dont make any sense a nuclear bombs blow travels 100s of miles and is more powerful cause its the newly invented bomb and the atomic bombs blow travel is under a nuclear bombs travel rate
Nuclear fusion.
It wasn't just one bomb.. It was a huge nuclear bombardment during the Great War with China.
United States in a bomb!
Only the USA