it may take up to 100 years for the explosion area to become livable once again
It will if it is fused for airburst. This is selected to maximize the area and severity of blast and thermal flash effects.
The immediate destruction of a nuclear explosion is caused by the release of a large amount of energy in the form of heat, blast pressure, and radiation. This leads to the creation of a shockwave that destroys buildings and infrastructure, causing widespread devastation in the surrounding area.
The explosion radius of a nuclear bomb can vary depending on its size and design, but a typical range for a strategic nuclear weapon is a blast radius of several miles and a thermal radiation radius of several more miles. The effects of the blast, heat, and radiation can cause widespread destruction and casualties over a large area.
The area that a nuclear explosion can damage depends on the size of the bomb and the altitude at which it detonates. A large nuclear bomb detonated at ground level can create a blast radius of several miles, while detonating a smaller bomb at higher altitudes can generate an electromagnetic pulse that can affect a much larger area.
The distance a nuclear bomb can reach depends on various factors such as the size of the bomb, the altitude at which it detonates, weather conditions, and landscape. Generally, a large nuclear bomb could have a blast radius of several miles and cause destruction over a wider area through the effects of heat, blast, and radiation.
It will if it is fused for airburst. This is selected to maximize the area and severity of blast and thermal flash effects.
A nuclear bomb can create extreme heat and pressure which can vaporize people near the blast site, turning them into dust. However, the effects of a nuclear bomb also include radiation exposure which can cause further harm and widespread destruction beyond the initial blast area.
The immediate destruction of a nuclear explosion is caused by the release of a large amount of energy in the form of heat, blast pressure, and radiation. This leads to the creation of a shockwave that destroys buildings and infrastructure, causing widespread devastation in the surrounding area.
The explosion radius of a nuclear bomb can vary depending on its size and design, but a typical range for a strategic nuclear weapon is a blast radius of several miles and a thermal radiation radius of several more miles. The effects of the blast, heat, and radiation can cause widespread destruction and casualties over a large area.
The area that a nuclear explosion can damage depends on the size of the bomb and the altitude at which it detonates. A large nuclear bomb detonated at ground level can create a blast radius of several miles, while detonating a smaller bomb at higher altitudes can generate an electromagnetic pulse that can affect a much larger area.
Nuclear weapons are dangerous because they can kill thousands in the initial blast, and leave an area dangerously radioactive for decades. Any who are exposed to this radiation may either die shortly after, or receive cancer.
The distance a nuclear bomb can reach depends on various factors such as the size of the bomb, the altitude at which it detonates, weather conditions, and landscape. Generally, a large nuclear bomb could have a blast radius of several miles and cause destruction over a wider area through the effects of heat, blast, and radiation.
That depends on many factors and the type of effect:yieldburst height/depthif burst is subsurface, material around burst (e.g. dirt, rock. concrete, water)weatherterraintype of constructionetc.
An island is a habitable area of land surrounded by water. An islet is an inhabitable small area of land surrounded by water. A cay (or key) is a habitable small area of land surrounded by water.
No, a single nuclear weapon is not powerful enough to blow up an entire continent. The destructive power of a nuclear weapon is concentrated in a relatively small area known as the blast radius. The impact would be devastating locally, but the effect would not extend to an entire continent.
Little Boy was the nuclear bomb detonated over Hiroshima. It used uranium and had an explosive blast equivalent to 12,500 tons of TNT. A 1 megaton hydrogen bomb, hypothetically detonated on the earth's surface, has about 80 times the blast power of that 1945 explosion. Considering the tonnage of a bomb to be contant, The blast radius varies dependent on whether it is a ground burst or an airburst. Further, the height of the airburst above ground affects the radius too. At a height of 1900 feet above ground, Little Boy produced a blast radius of 1 mile; an area of some 4.7 square miles.
The affected radius of land from nuclear fallout after the Hiroshima bombing was roughly 10 km (6.2 miles) from ground zero. This area suffered substantial damage and contamination from the blast and radiation.