Donate SIGN UP

nukes

Avatar Image
dannyday5821 | 04:16 Fri 07th Dec 2007 | Science
7 Answers
i found this website, sonicbomb.com, and it shows loads of videos of nuke test from a load of different countries. what i dont understand is...why is chernobyl out of bounds because of a nuclear reactor that blew up, yet when a nuke goes off it doesnt seem to be a problem...? So whats the big deal about nuke warfare destroying earth? weve already tested loads of nukes, does it make a difference if their all set off together? ah - i clearly dont know enough - but id love to learn more!

Gravatar

Answers

1 to 7 of 7rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by dannyday5821. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
It's all dangerous.

The areas that were used to test the nuclear bombs are like Bikini Atol, in the middle of the Pacific (i.e., not much human life).

Chernobyl's right in the middle of a pretty densely-populated area, in comparison.
Early tests were done above ground - partly because we knew no better, partly because we didn't know if they'd actually work and partly because, them being bombs and all, we wanted to see just how effective they'd be at destroying cities and incinerating people. Later once we'd put two and two together (this took one hell of a long time) we decided that it would be better to test the bombs underground. The fact remains that a lot of the crud that's killing people today was released by our and other Governments, oh and our taxes paid for them to be able to do it!

In terms of destructive power even the nukes we have pale into insignificance beside a really good volcano or better yet a plummeting meteor, but it's the insidious nature of radioactivity and the really nasty way it alters our bodies that does (and should) scare us.

Today I don't think enough people are scared enough of nuclear warfare. It's all a bit remote. The Cold War's over. It's the terrorist who scares us now. The generation that lived through WWII and Korea and came home to Civil Defence and the Cuba Missile affair - they were worried. That's why you saw little old ladies from the Home Counties at Greenham Common. Call it a Cruise Missile and maybe people will think it's sponsored by P&O. Call it what it is, the modern day equivalent of the Nazis' V1 only capable of killing 10,000 people from 600 miles and they might not be so happy.

That said - shoot me with a clean, traditional, environmentally-friendly .303, or 7.62mm, or mortar bomb, or grenade and I'll be just as dead - it's simply that you'll be able to handle the body immediately afterwards without adopting a radiation protocol.

Please pardon the length of the rant - I make no apologies for the tone!

Man is the only animal who can blush - or who needs to - Mark Twain
-- answer removed --
do you really mean 20 micro sieverts? The max allowable dose for a member of the public is 1 milliSievert and for a radiation worker is 20milliSievert. Natural background radiation will give you some 500milliSieverts per year.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
Modern nuclear bombs are hydrogen fusion bombs. The direct products of fusion reactions are not radioactive.

However the neutrons they release do cause materials to become radioactive. Moreover they are detonated with a fission explosion. The products are radioactive. However the amount of radioactive material even in a fusion bomb is quite small compared to a power reactor.

Nuclear power plants are fission reactors. The fuel and reaction products are very radioactive and there is a lot of it.

1 to 7 of 7rss feed

Do you know the answer?

nukes

Answer Question >>