if you mean how to try survive a real nuclear war it is very hard. not only because of the nuclear radiation but as there would be a lot of looting and crime. If you did stock up on food you would probably be attack by people. but general tips wash everything you eat. don't go outside for too long. wash everything you go outside in. but depending how far away you are you could just be vaporized or melt as the temperatures can rise to over 6000 degrease.
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The novel Pulling Through by Dean Ing includes an appendix describing how to make the various items you will need to try to survive. But whether you will survive or not is another issue.
The two forces are the strong nuclear force and the electromagnetic force. The strong nuclear force acts to hold the nucleus together by overcoming the repulsive electromagnetic force between positively charged protons. This creates a delicate balance between the attractive strong nuclear force and the repulsive electromagnetic force, resulting in a "nuclear tug of war" within the nucleus.
It's a general term used to apply to the time following the advent of nuclear technology. It could have begun when the first controlled nuclear chain reaction took place, or when the first nuclear bomb was detonated. That was in the 1940's.
They can survive just about anything but Raid and a shoe. They can stay under water 30 minutes, will eat anything including paper, clothing, crumbs. If a nuclear weapon went off they would probably survive that.
Cockroaches would out-survive humans when being exposed to increased levels of radiation. However, most other insects can out-survive cockroaches, and some microbes can out-survive insects. A reason most insects can endure high levels of radiation is that their cells divide less frequently. Radiation interferes with the way cells divide. Every division multiplies the damage caused by radiation. If a cell divides less frequently, accumulation of damage will occur with less speed. Insects are thus less affected by radiation.
An atomic winter is another term for a nuclear winter, a predicted drop in global temperature following a nuclear war due to dust in the upper atmosphere.
Yes. Everyone is very scared of the nuclear war, once the nuclear war have broken out no one will survive. Hope that the nuclear war will not happen.
Some can.
Cockroaches would survive a nuclear war. Since lawyers are an even lower life-form they should too.
If you can find a very deep underground bunker that is stocked piled with many years of food and water, you may survive a nuclear war.
posibly it depends
Studies have shown that cockroaches have an excellent resistance to radiation, leading to the expectation that they will survive a nuclear war. Even so, we can't really know for sure what will survive a nuclear war until we actually have one. WW II doesn't count, even though two atomic bombs were used, at the end of the war.
Underground bunkers or shelters specifically designed to withstand nuclear blasts and radiation would be the most likely to survive a nuclear war. These structures provide protection from the initial explosion and fallout, increasing the chances of survival for those inside.
To prevent tough guys to play with the war. If we use the nuclear weapon, nobody will survive. Nobody should play with the war.
insects and protozoa are likely to do ok
Noboby can survive a nuclear bomb if he is within explosion distance.
It depends on how large of a nuclear war. If India should have a nuclear war with China or Pakistan, the human race would probably survive it. However, if the US had exchanged nukes with the USSR during the Cold War, there might have been no safe place in the world from the radioactive fallout.
Survive - Nuclear Assault album - was created on 1988-06-13.