You detonate it. Various instruments set up nearby collect data that is later evaluated to see how the bomb performed.
That depends mostly on the instrumentation you want to collect data on the test blast. The bomb itself is cheap.
There is no data about it.
There is no unique Israeli atomic bomb. Once developed in the US various countries have used the same technology to put together their own bombs. Data theft, shared information and good engineering is all that it takes.
Purchased data is research data, secondary research, done by outside organizations. Examples would be Gallup or Roper data.
That would depend on the purpose of the bomb and its design. The lightest bomb I have data on was roughly 50 pounds (a one man portable demolition charge or landmine) while the heaviest was over 570 tons (a custom built test device). The two bombs used on Japan in WW2 were roughly 5 tons each.
desk research, feild research, primary data, secondary data xx desk research, feild research, primary data, secondary data xx
What is data presentation on research
Numerical data is quantitative research
Nevada neither participated in the creation nor production of the atomic bomb. However both atomic bombs and reduced yield hydrogen bombs were tested at the Nevada Test Site north of Las Vegas from 1951 to 1992 (above ground atmospheric tests ended in 1962). The test results were used by the design labs (Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore) to optimize the bombs and design variants of existing bombs. The Nevada Test Site does continue to be used for underground subcritical atomic device testing to get data for optimization of computer models used for atomic bomb design.
Data research procedure include information on how data is collected, when it was collected, and who is responsible for data collection. Where data was stored and how to ensure data is correct are also part of data research procedure.
A scatter chart would be the best candidate to spot trends and extrapolate information based on research data.