About 180 million degrees Fahrenheit upon detonation, which is some 10,000 times hotter than the surface of the sun.
It does not have any particular temperature, the nuclear reactions are not influenced by temperature, though the behaviour of a nuclear reactor does depend on its temperature since this influences the neutron spectrum. In a PWR the coolant exit temperature is about 325 degC.
No. LLNL even tested several Uranium-Hydride bombs in the 1950s. Even though their computer models said the devices should explode, none gave a nuclear yield. One could use the waste from the reactor as a Radiological Weapon, but the reactor itself is not useful as a weapon.
The average temperature of a nuclear reactor can vary depending on the type and design of the reactor. In general, most nuclear reactors operate at temperatures ranging from 500 to 700 degrees Celsius (932 to 1292 degrees Fahrenheit).
Temperature Fahrenheit = Temperature Celsius(1.80) + 32 Temperature Fahrenheit = (39.4o Celsius)(1.80) + 32 = 102.9o Fahrenheit ==============
The temperature scale based on the keyword "Fahrenheit" is the Fahrenheit scale.
The meaning of the word nuclear weapon, is a weapon that has a nuclear warhead on it.
It does not have any particular temperature, the nuclear reactions are not influenced by temperature, though the behaviour of a nuclear reactor does depend on its temperature since this influences the neutron spectrum. In a PWR the coolant exit temperature is about 325 degC.
This nuclear weapon is called an atomic bomb or a nuclear bomb
Nuclear weapon detonations
If by "bomb" you mean a conventional explosive weapon, then the nuclear weapon is more powerful.
nuclear chemicals such as plutonium
The temperature between 8 Fahrenheit and -12 Fahrenheit is -2 Fahrenheit.
NO
no
No. LLNL even tested several Uranium-Hydride bombs in the 1950s. Even though their computer models said the devices should explode, none gave a nuclear yield. One could use the waste from the reactor as a Radiological Weapon, but the reactor itself is not useful as a weapon.
the first nuclear weapon was issued in WW2 created by the americans in a chicargo squash court
plutonium + weapon