Radioactive material was shot 16,404.1995 feet in the Chernobl explosion in 1986.
yes
really really dense material that comes from a supernova explosion
That depends on the material. Different explosives burn at different rates.
The force that pulls the material of a nuclear explosion back into a star is gravity. Gravity is the attractive force between objects with mass, and in the case of a star, it is the force that keeps the star's material gravitationally bound together despite the energy released in a nuclear explosion.
The blast zone of an explosion is the area directly ajacent to the detonating material, and may stretch as far as several hundred feet depending on the size of the explosion. Essentially, the blast zone is the place where everything is destroyed.
dark brown or black
fire and explosion hazards and health hazards
An implosion is when material is blasted inwards with the intent of creating a neat pile of debris. The opposite is an explosion were material is blown outwards generally making a really big mess.
fire and explosion hazard data
Yes.
The atomic bombs are nuclear weapons that use a nuclear chain reaction to create a Hugh explosion. The by-product of the nuclear blast is radiation.Atomic explosion is created by setting off a lot of dynamite around a core of nuclear material. The blast compresses the material together and makes it unstable.A hydrogen bomb is a much more powerful bomb. It is the result of a small nuclear explosion that compresses more powerful radioactive material together and thus creating an explosion that is 100 times greater than an atomic bomb.