incendiary
Historians prefer to use the term INCENDIARY devices or INCENDIARY bombs; Especially when referring to WW2 in Europe. Napalm bombs/devices are INCENDIARY bombs, but contain another category of chemicals in them such as "Naphthenic & Palmitic" chemicals. During WW2, cities such as Dresden and Tokyo were struck heavily with INCENDIARY devices. Casualty figures are not reliable, but are documented for those cities. Data is also available for the Korean War (1950-1953). Due to the sensitivity of the Vietnam War, casualty figures on the INCENDIARY bombs used in the Vietnam War, commonly referred to as "Napalm Bombs", are not commonly available.
All incendiary devices can be (or are).
This question makes no sense as an atomic bomb is a nuclear bomb and vice versa. They are the same thing.
a crime committed involving fire
what is an Incendiary bomb and what damage does it cause
Incendiary means designed to start fires or provoke conflict. It can refer to materials or devices that initiate fires, as well as language or actions that spark hostility or violence.
An incendiary device is something that will cause a fire. It can anything from a match to a bomb.
incendiary
An incendiary bomb it designed to set fire to it's target.
Incendiary.
high explosive material or incendiary material
A fire bomb is a conventional incendiary bomb: magnesium, napalm, etc. A nuclear bomb uses fission and/or fusion and is mostly a blast effect weapon.
The types of aerial bombs that create blast are "high explosive" (HE). The type of bomb designed to cause fires is an "incendiary" bomb.
conventional explosive and incendiary bombs. also poison gas bombs.
The only weapon I can imagine this referring to was Greek fire. It was hardly an atom bomb, however. In one form it was an incendiary bomb that could be thrown by a catapult. In another, it was a flame thrower.
a bomb!