yes yes it is I had to search for 1 week
No, liquid paraffin (also known as mineral oil) is not explosive. It is a type of lubricating oil derived from petroleum and is generally non-reactive and stable under normal conditions.
Semtex explosive is typically made from a mixture of the explosive compound RDX, plasticizer, and binder. Additional ingredients may include mineral oil and stabilizers.
Mount St. Helens is generally regarded as an explosive volcano, but like most stratovolcanoes, it can produce both explosive and non-explosive eruptions.
No, Mauna Loa is not an explosive volcano. It tends to be non-explosive.
Yes. Stratovolcanoes usually alternate between explosive and non-explosive eruptions.
No, liquid paraffin (also known as mineral oil) is not explosive. It is a type of lubricating oil derived from petroleum and is generally non-reactive and stable under normal conditions.
Semtex explosive is typically made from a mixture of the explosive compound RDX, plasticizer, and binder. Additional ingredients may include mineral oil and stabilizers.
High explosive (in a favela) and Armor piercing (in an oil rig)
I only know of it being either a fertilizer used in agriculture or explosive used in mining. I believe they both look similar (small round balls) but are of different grades with the mining grade being more refined and expensive. The mixture is an emulsion similar in character to mayonaise. It requires a high explosive detonator to realy the potential energy. The AN for explosives is called "prill" and only differs from the fertilizer by be manufactured to make the surface porous so the Fuel Oil can become intergarated intothe structure of the prill for increased explosive power.
nitro is an explosive if added to other substance like nitro fuel which the nitro adds more octane for a bigger explosion except that nitro fuel has oil in it to lube the engine
Oil can burn. If finely dispersed in air, it can burn real fast. So fast that it'll look like an explosion.
Lando Calrissian mined liquid Tibanna, which is like a heating oil and is highly explosive.
No, dynamite is not the most available explosive agent. Other commonly used explosive agents include TNT, nitroglycerin, and C-4. The availability of these explosive agents may vary depending on regulations and restrictions in different regions.
The previous answer was obscene and irrelevant. I removed it. Engine oil is combustible (i.e., flammable), whether it's new or old and dirty. It is a liquid petroleum product, and as such it's flammable. But if you mean combustible as in the term, "internal combustion engine", it is not a suitable fuel. In an internal-combustion engine, the rate of burn must be very rapid, or "explosive". Engine oil is not explosive under normal pressures. However, if pressure were very high, and if the motor oil were sprayed in tiny droplets into an oxygen-rich environment, it could become explosive enough to serve as a fuel for an internal combustion engine.
No. Typical explosive fillers for bombs are things like TNT, RDX, HMX, Octol, PETN, etc. Peanut oil is not a component of any of those.
explosive
Chicken is not an explosive.