Depending on the distance from the blast, the shockwave will burst all your internal organs and break bones, then in less than a second, the intense heat will cause your entire body to explode into steam/gasses in less than a half a second, leaving very little material, that will be dust. Maybe less than a teaspoon.
nuclear fusion in a massive star that ended its life in a supernova explosion.
After death, the energy in a human body is released in the form of heat and is eventually transferred to the environment. The body decomposes, and the energy is dispersed into the surroundings.
Depends mostly on where you are relative to it and the yield. Other variables include:weatherterrainyour clothsif you are in a building, its constructionwere you near a windowetc.
You won't know it as your body will have been converted to fully ionized plasma at a couple million degrees by the x-rays from the bomb in less than 100 microseconds after detonation. It would take your nerves a couple milliseconds to tell your brain about the detonation and those nerves and your brain won't exist that long.
In space, a human body experiences changes due to the lack of gravity. These changes include muscle and bone loss, fluid redistribution, weakened immune system, and potential vision problems. Astronauts must exercise regularly and follow strict health protocols to mitigate these effects.
Some of the effects on the human body from a nuclear explosion are death (from thermal energy/blast effects or super lethal radiation exposure), infertility and blood disorders.
No, fission does not naturally occur in the human body. Fission is a nuclear reaction that involves the splitting of atomic nuclei, which is not a process that happens in biological organisms.
Directly inside a nuclear explosion the temperature is several million degrees. At this temperature everything turns to plasma (highly ionized gas). You would not become ash, dust, or get charred; you would vaporize to gas and most of the electrons would be stripped from the atoms of the gas. Sometime later as this material cooled your atoms would condense out on tiny particles that had been lifted by the updraft into the mushroom cloud and you would become part of the radioactive fallout.Note, you could not be at the exact center of a nuclear explosion, as this point is inside the physics package of the device which is usually much smaller than a human.
First of all, EMPs don't really explode like a nuclear bomb. It releases alot of energy like a nuclear bomb. EMP's do not affect the body... that much.
nuclear fusion in a massive star that ended its life in a supernova explosion.
I think that the body can get very sick and explod!
That makes no sense!
They are crushed
Well you die.
When UV strikes human body, it causes:Skin cancerEye cataractSuppression of immune system.
The nuclear membrane in the human body is similar to the skin, as it acts as a protective barrier that controls the passage of substances in and out of the cell nucleus, much like how the skin acts as a barrier for the rest of the body.
you die