keroa of coarse Let me look into my crystal ball and tell you...
The attack was a nuclear one. In the epicenter of the explosion, people were disintegrated. Further away, only bones remained. Further away, people were burned to death. Further away, people lived with horrible burns. At last the people further to the epicenter, look good but began dying in next days of nuclear poison.
don't look at me, I don't know....
Without going into rigorous scientific detail, an atomic bomb works by nuclear fission. That is, large atoms - namely uranium or plutonium - are split into smaller atoms in an uncontrolled chain reaction. One atom splits, neutrons from that split strike and split more atoms, which release more neutrons, and so forth, in what is called a chain reaction. This releases a tremendous amount of energy all at once. Thus a single bomb, weighing no more than a few hundred pounds, explodes with the force of tens of thousands of tons of TNT.When we look at a hydrogen bomb, which is also a type of nuclear weapon (though strictly not an atomic bomb), we see that it works by nuclear fusion. That is small atoms - namely isotopes of hydrogen - are fused together to make atoms of helium. This releases even more energy. Thus a hydrogen bomb has a force of hundreds of thousands, or even millions of tons of TNT. Fusion requires fantastic temperatures and pressures to occur. The only way to create those conditions is to set off one or more atomic fission bombs. Essentially, a hydrogen bomb is a nuclear fusion device that requires an fission bomb as a detonator.Both types of bombs produce several effects: a blast wave, thermal (heat) energy, prompt (i.e. immediate) radiation, and fallout (long-term radiation), as well as intense electromagnetic disruption. The exact amount of each depends on the design of the weapon, its size, and where it was detonated.For the more detailed technical answer, use the link you'll find below for the related question.
There are several different types of atomic/nuclear bombs.gun fission bombs (e.g. little boy, nuclear artillery shells): these are long, as they are built around a gun barrel.implosion fission bombs (e.g. fat man, davy crockett, little john): these are spherical, but are usually packaged in ellipsoidal cases to improve aerodynamics.fusion bombs (so called hydrogen bombs): these are cylinders, with a fission bomb of one of the above types at one end to initiate the fusion reaction. the casing around the cylinder varies widely - from a round or pointed nose on the front and fins on the back for aerial bombs to cones for missile warheads.)depending on the application and use a nuclear weapon of any of the 3 types can have a very wide variety of external appearances.aerial bombs dropped from planes have the same appearance whether nuclear or conventional. some nuclear aerial bombs designed with many different missions in mind are packaged as a cylinder containing the bomb itself with a wide variety of different attachable noses and tails that the weaponeer can choose from for the mission.artillery shells shot from guns have the same appearance whether nuclear or conventional, except nuclear artillery shells are usually longer than conventional artillery shells used in the same gun, to make room for the gun bomb inside them.nuclear landmines look roughly like oil drums.torpedoes shot from submarines and other ships have the same appearance whether nuclear or conventional.depth charges dropped by ships or airplanes to attack submarines have the same appearance whether nuclear or conventional. rockets are typically used on ship based nuclear depth charges to get them a safe distance from the ship.nuclear demolition charges vary in appearance from spheres roughly the size of a bowling ball, up to oil drums.nuclear missile warheads are usually hidden inside the missile nose cone on a mechanism called a "bus", the warheads themselves are cones designed to tolerate the heat and friction of reentry. in early single warhead missiles the nose cone itself was the warhead and there was no "bus".
Like a nuclear bomb exploded in japan.
Well, there are two types of Nuke, A bomb and a missile or commonly referred to as 'Nuclear Bomb' and 'Nuclear Warhead (or missile)'. It looks like a standard bomb in shape but not size. But there are two versions of Nuclear bomb, Fission and Fusion. The Fission one is more like a standard bomb but larger and the Fusion one looks like a Mini-Missile but is still dropped like a bomb. The Nuclear Warhead (or missile) looks like a missile obviously. The easiest way to answer this question is to look on Google Images and next time you wonder something like this, Please, Don't waste the good people's time to answer your stupidity and minor amount of common sense.
Well if you don't know its a bomb and its actually called nuclear bomb, nuke is short for nuclear. It has the power to destroy a whole NATION. And to answer your other question it looks a missle. if don't know what a missle looks like, you can look up Missles and or nuclear bomb on Google images
Look up "The Manhattan Project"
See the link below for images of the FIRST atomic (nuclear) bombs.
That's what a real life bomb looks like
Nuclear is an adjective. It has no appearance.
keroa of coarse Let me look into my crystal ball and tell you...
the snowflakes look like her techer's pictures of the fallout from a bomb
No, Infinity Ward made an official statement. If you look on youtube, it doesn't show anybody getting one, except for people who hacked and made it look like a nuke
regulates the exchange of materials like protein
Super cool lol