Hydrogen bombs give off a tremendous amount of energy in the form of heat, light, and radiation when they detonate. This energy release is the result of the nuclear fusion process that occurs in the bomb's core.
The main difference between atomic bombs and hydrogen bombs is the source of their energy. Atomic bombs rely on nuclear fission (splitting atoms), while hydrogen bombs use a two-stage process involving both fission and fusion (combining atoms). Hydrogen bombs are more powerful and destructive than atomic bombs.
Atomic bombs use nuclear fission, where heavy atomic nuclei split into smaller ones releasing energy and radiation. Hydrogen bombs use both nuclear fission and fusion, with fusion reactions involving the combining of light atomic nuclei to release even more energy and radiation. Hydrogen bombs are typically more powerful and produce higher levels of radiation compared to atomic bombs.
Thermonuclear or hydrogen bombs are significantly more powerful than atomic bombs. These bombs use a two-stage process that combines nuclear fission and fusion reactions, resulting in a much larger explosive yield.
Countries known to have hydrogen bombs in their possession include the United States, Russia, China, France, and the United Kingdom. Israel is also believed to possess nuclear weapons including hydrogen bombs, though they have not officially confirmed this.
An atomic bomb is a fission bomb, which uses a type of heavy radioactive metal (usually uranium 235 or plutonium 239). Neutrons split this metal up, resulting in a release of a lot of energy (this is what happens in nuclear power stations). A hydrogen bomb is a fusion bomb, which comes in two parts: a fission device (A-bomb) and a fuel cell composed of hydrogen. The fission device is detonated and the radiation fuses the hydrogen together to form helium, thus also releasing a lot of energy (this is what happens in stars).
Yes, America does possess hydrogen bombs
Atomic bombs, not hydrogen..The U.S. in August 1945.
The main difference between atomic bombs and hydrogen bombs is the source of their energy. Atomic bombs rely on nuclear fission (splitting atoms), while hydrogen bombs use a two-stage process involving both fission and fusion (combining atoms). Hydrogen bombs are more powerful and destructive than atomic bombs.
Of course, hydrogen bombs are real from more than 60 years.
No.
There were no hydrogen bombs (fusion bombs) detonated during WWII.
They never used hydrogen bombs in Japan. They used nuclear bombs which produces gamma rays not the lethal doses of x-rays produced by the hydrogen bomb.
Hydrogen bombs have never been used in war. They have only been exploded in test shots.
Of course not, it was just for fun (by the way the bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki were uranium bombs and not hydrogen)
Hydrogen bombs use the same process of nuclear fusionthat powers the Sun.
No. Atomic bombs use fission, hydrogen bombs use fusion (and are more powerful)
No.