100
Reading Richard Rhodes books: The Making of the Atomic Bomb and Dark Sun will help you understand this.
No. Atomic bombs were used during WW2 in Japan, but they were "fission" weapons, which derived their destructive power from splitting apart the nucleus of an atom. Hydrogen bombs derive their destructive power from "fusion" reactions, or the merging of two Hydrogen atoms. This is the same chemical reaction that powers the sun. Hydrogen bombs were tested for the first time on November 1, 1952.
I suggest reading Richard Rhodes books:The Making of the Atomic BombDark Sun
The usual idea of the atomic model is a nucleus composed of protons and neutrons, surrounded by electrons in orbit in shells of increasing diameter. This helps to visualise the difference between atoms. Quantum theory is that this simple model is not accurate, but it does have the virtue of being easily understood.
You see it every day, it's called the sun:)
the sun, atomic bombs, nuclear power plants
Its probably best if you read Richard Rhodes books: The Making of the Atomic Bomb and Dark Sun.
Reading Richard Rhodes books: The Making of the Atomic Bomb and Dark Sun will help you understand this.
To equal the energy output of the Sun in one second, you would need to detonate about 9.2 x 10^24 nuclear bombs. The Sun's energy output is equivalent to about 3.8 x 10^26 Watts.
The energy production of the sun & the atomic bombs used in world war ll
To say how many nuclear bombs it would take to blow up the sun is almost impossible. Actually the sun is a continuously exploding thermonuclear bomb, that's where the energy comes from - fusion. It doesn't matter how many bombs you shot into the sun, it would just get hotter.
Is a neutron bomb hotter than the sun ______________________________________ No, not generally. A thermonuclear explosion (a hydrogen fusion bomb, unlike the earlier uranium fission bombs) will approach the temperature of the Sun, but will not equal it, and it will only last for a fraction of a second.
Probably the best unclassified sources of this information are Richard Rhodes books: The Making of the Atomic Bomb and Dark Sun.
Imagine the heat that a 1000 atomic bombs would create if they all went off in a second. That's basically our sun. A fiery explosion going off every second.
No. Atomic bombs were used during WW2 in Japan, but they were "fission" weapons, which derived their destructive power from splitting apart the nucleus of an atom. Hydrogen bombs derive their destructive power from "fusion" reactions, or the merging of two Hydrogen atoms. This is the same chemical reaction that powers the sun. Hydrogen bombs were tested for the first time on November 1, 1952.
Without knowing the yield of your hypothetical nuclear bombs it is not possible to answer this question. Please clarify.
there is no atomic emission from the sun.