Test 219 was just under 25 MT, detonated over Novaya Zemlya. And there were a handful of shots with yields over 16 MT.
@zapa1pnt3 ай бұрын
"the consequences of harnessing nuclear energy" No. This is the consequences of Misusing nuclear energy.
@fuffoonАй бұрын
Don't be a grinch. It's fascinating.
@ΓΙΑΝΝΗΣΛΑΣΠΟΥΛΑΣ8 ай бұрын
First H-test was Ive Mike, November 1952 with 10.4 MT yield
@keyss788 ай бұрын
Mike was a liquid fuelled behemoth of a contraption, Castle Bravo was the first solid fuel test which vaguely resembled a deliverable bomb.
@rogerlevasseur3978 ай бұрын
@@keyss78 And allowed the military that was already planning to build liquid type bombs to discontinue that work.
@borntoclimb71167 ай бұрын
@@keyss78 correct
@sparky2008sparky5 ай бұрын
Yes! And actually, the first boosted bomb test was the 225kT George shot. The George shot was designed to prove out the principles of radiation implosion used in the following Mike shot and eventually the Li-D ‘fueled’ Bravo test.
@daleshelden83945 ай бұрын
Ivy Mike
@jloiben127 ай бұрын
I like Teller’s math that says a nuclear bomb of more than 100 megatons is functionally useless because substantially all of the incremental power just gets sent out to space
@genghisgalahad84657 ай бұрын
And that's not troublesome?
@jloiben127 ай бұрын
@@genghisgalahad8465 No? Shooting energy into space isn’t troublesome
@shayne1097 ай бұрын
he was right in the sense that producing a higher yield is pointless as most of the extra energy is wasted to space so the law of diminishing returns applies as far as a practical weapon is concerned a larger yield won't result in further destruction on the ground so there is no practical purpose making very large warheads.
@rjamesm6 ай бұрын
Not if it’s underwater.
@DavidEarle7866 ай бұрын
@@jloiben12 It has to pass through the atmosphere, though, right? That would be troublesome to the atmosphere I would think
@TyMoore955038 ай бұрын
Teller-Ulam used Radiation Implosion to cause compression. The radiation bottle is an outer casing of high-Z material (usually a thin shell of depleted uranium) which in just about 100 nanoseconds is filled with thermal x-rays which heats the cylindrical tamper of the fusion secondary. That tamper is usually also depleted uranium surrounding a hollow cylinder of lithium deuteride. Down the length of the lithium deuteride is a rod of plutonium-239 to act as a spark plug.
@TyMoore955037 ай бұрын
The actual mechanism of compression is caused by the surface of the tamper vaporizing...this causes an almost perfectly symmetric compression shock which delivers compressive energy thousands of times greater and dozens of times faster than high explosives could. By the time the compression wave reaches the plutonium sparkplug...the lithium deuteride is in a state of maximum density...as the plutonium fissions, the fast neutrons released begins to fission the lithium into tritium and helium-4 ( in the case of Li-7, and Tritium and helium-3 in the case of Li-6.) The newly formed tritium and deuterium, already heated to tens of millions degrees, fuse almost instantly, releasing a flood of high speed neutrons...the first of these neutrons aid in fissioning the rest of the sparkplug, and forming additional tritium...the fusion burn is essentially complete by the time 1 microsecond has lapsed...the dense cloud of energetic neutrons slams into the also very dense uranium-238 tamper causing much of it to fission as well... boosting the energy yield of the bomb by 100% or so (essentially doubles energy output.) The physics of this process is a fascinating balance involving statistics, optimization, and reaction rates.
@violetzitola83856 ай бұрын
@@TyMoore95503 I'd love to see an ultra highspeed video of this reaction. Much easier to visualize these reactions.
@aloysiusbelisarius99924 ай бұрын
And all of that which you described so eloquently (seriously, it was quite eloquent) is what nullified one of the two big sales pitches of fusion weaponry: That about the fallout risk being all but eliminated. The end result was the overwhelming majority of the yield coming from fission of the depleted uranium and plutonium used to build the thing. With so much fission involved in the design, it no longer was a hydrogen bomb, but a boosted-fission bomb on the order of Greenhouse-George or Greenhouse-Item, only exponentially larger (what I coin "steroided").
@BjarneLinetsky3 ай бұрын
All of this happens within a few microseconds.....the shockwave generated by the high explosives is glacial compared to the fission reaction and resultant fusion reaction. The risetime of the initial flash from a fission weapon is less than 100 nanoseconds, or one tenth of a microsecond. At these energy flux levels the temperature/pressure in the case rise to solar core proportions in microseconds. The case only needs to contain all of this for a few microseconds before it vaporizes. The inward directed inertia of the tamper and fuel keeps everything together for the fusion burn to commence. At this point, the matter of the bomb is in a state called degenerate plasma. no atoms, just fundamental particles in a sort of dense fluid, much denser than even gold.
@TyMoore955033 ай бұрын
@@BjarneLinetsky Correct. The radiation bottle actually achieves thermal equilibrium within a few hundred nanoseconds...and the low Z carbon foam keeps the radiation channel clear for the X-rays to more or less evenly heat the tamper of the secondary. It is the ablation of the secondary's tamper that causes it to implode...amazing physics.
@fletchb29378 ай бұрын
I really wish people would quit mislabeling the parts of nuclear weapons. The way they're assembled and the individual components aren't a secret anymore.
@BjarneLinetsky3 ай бұрын
If you want a weapon you need a huge industrial base. That is the real control of proliferation.
@tombryant50293 ай бұрын
@@BjarneLinetskyNot necessarily. Take a look at Pakistan as an example.
@BjarneLinetsky3 ай бұрын
@@tombryant5029 I believe that Pakistan may have acquired technology and components from either Russia or China. Same with DPRNK
@tombryant50293 ай бұрын
@@BjarneLinetsky OK I'll bite: which components exactly. Triggers, x-units, explosives, other timing and fusing related circumstances or the weapons grade materials. Which ones of these require a massive industrial base like Hanford or Oak Ridge Y-12?
@BjarneLinetsky3 ай бұрын
@@tombryant5029 you left out the huge intellectual infrastructure necessary to calculate and design all of these components. Face it. You can't make a nuclear bomb out of coconuts and coral.
@johnnymnemonic698 ай бұрын
Here for the comments about the tsar bomba
@scottpitner42986 ай бұрын
and Bikini Asholl
@davidripley29168 ай бұрын
They should have known about lithium 6 and 7's cross-sections ( ability to fuse) Proof that Hindsight is a 20/20 deal
@aloysiusbelisarius99928 ай бұрын
That also is a very popular error that I have tried to correct and have been lambasted for it. The catastrophic fallout had very little to do with the solid lithium-deuteride fuel. Lithium-deuteride simply does not have a complex-enough atomic construction to cause fallout like that. What caused the unexpected high yield and the fallout was the *uranium* tampering shell they constructed around the fusion fuel. The fusion reaction of the Li-D core was more efficient and more powerful than the liquified deuterium used in Ivy-Mike, yes; it managed to cause an even more efficient fission reaction in the uranium shell. Natural uranium cannot undergo fission by conventional-explosive means. However, when you apply the atomic fusion of lithium-deuteride (or even liquid deuterium, as with Ivy Mike), that *IS* enough to cause natural uranium to undergo fission. With as much uranium as they used just to construct the shells of those bombs, it really is no surprise in retrospect that nuclear fission could give off multiple megatons of explosive energy. Now, it's not like this was actually an unknown random factor; the yield of Ivy Mike was also for the most part caused by thermonuclear-boosted *fission:* 73% of that test's yield came from fission of the uranium components used in that bomb. The Castle-Bravo yield was similar: 67% of that yield came from *fission.* Somebody knew this would happen, yet still insisted on carrying on with the use of uranium as tampering material. As a consequence, these weapons were not actually "hydrogen bombs"; they were boosted-fission bombs, like Greenhouse-George or Greenhouse-Item, on steroids. Had they used something more docile to build the tampers, like lead, the Castle-Bravo test and the other Castle tests would have been right on point with the outside estimates of yield. It was the uranium components, not the Li-D components, that made the Bravo test into a runaway nuclear disaster. As a hard lesson learned from that operation, the DoD was then essentially forced to make weapon designs that were more-accurately labeled "hydrogen bombs," designing them with lead tampers instead of uranium. There were a few designs that were deliberately meant to poison (or "salt") regions of land, yes, but that is another topic for another discussion.
@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor7 ай бұрын
@@aloysiusbelisarius9992 now that you mention lead tampers, I have read that tsar bomb initially was meant to yeld 100 megatons through the use of an uranium tamper, but in order to give the airplane barely enough time to escape they nerfed the bomb down to a half: 50 mt by switching to a lead tamper instead.
@aloysiusbelisarius99927 ай бұрын
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingFor Yes...but there was more to it than just the weight and giving the plane escape time. A 50-megaton *fission* explosion would have rendered northern Europe and over half of Russia uninhabitable. I'm not sure how much Khrushchev grumbled over having to accept the modification, but the oligarchy did acknowledge and accept the change. After all, it was still a very big bang.
@vernmeyerotto2556 ай бұрын
Lithium-7 was assumed to be inert, and only the Lithim-6 would contribute to the bomb's energy budget. This is fundamentally the case, but on the scale of a thermonuclear bomb, the energy flux occurs in millionths of a second. This caused the Lithium-7 to breakdown into Helium (Tritium) which also fused.
@ghinckley683 ай бұрын
Wow you got virtually nothing correct. You got the dates correct at least.
@be2the4out2 ай бұрын
my thoughts excactly
@XB-70Valkyrie-x6iАй бұрын
Yep I wouldn’t trust this guy to build my pushbike….😅
@ArjayMartin8 ай бұрын
Tsar Bomba was the biggest: 50-58 MT
@TheMrGREENRay2 ай бұрын
and it was eco friendly, lol (Castle Bravo was very dirty.). Modern warheads are "clean" too.
@josephpacchetti59978 ай бұрын
Some Facts, Ivy Mike was the first full-scale test of a hydrogen bomb, It took place on the island of Elugelab in Enewetak Atoll on November 01 1952, this was the Teller-Ulam design, a staged fusion device, the Yield was 10.4 megatons, THX for posting. 🇺🇸
@aloysiusbelisarius99924 ай бұрын
Well, calling it a "hydrogen bomb" is debatable at best, as I indicated; but it was certainly the first-ever thermonuclear test of its kind. Of course, to weaponize it, one would have to load it on a drone freighter ship and steam it into an enemy harber. Not a very practical means of delivery. But on the other hand, deliverability was not a test goal, not yet.
@ladyhawk740829 күн бұрын
this is an AI channel your lucky it even got Castle bravo correct.
@Neo-Bladewing7 ай бұрын
"Pulverized coral radioactive and falling like ash was begin to carry unexpected wind toward unexpected people." Okay, I've had a couple drinks, but like what
@dmanduff91083 ай бұрын
Yeah this was super cringe-worthy. I'm so tired of AI narration.
@graemecouch501012 сағат бұрын
This Is The Best Doco On Castle Bravo Yet ! Simple & Easy To Understand !
@renekauts83237 ай бұрын
"Castle Bravo" was very impressive test indeed but it was not the first H-Bomb! The first was "Ivy Mike"! And "Castle Bravo" crater was not 200m. wide. It was 2000m. wide.
@mtthwpnn3 ай бұрын
Ivy Mike wasn't a bomb, it was a thermonuclear instalation. A monstrosity that could only be delivered "by ship or ox cart"
@allangibson84943 ай бұрын
@@mtthwpnnI’d like to see an ox cart carrying 24 tons of steel…
@jasonzbell2 ай бұрын
Yep, a big difference for sure!
@khundeejai79457 ай бұрын
Thank you for the clip, it's so fantastic!
@Rico-oy3dc7 ай бұрын
Please correct the detail of this video.
@SuperAgentman0076 ай бұрын
And the main cars was the scientists. They didn’t realize the lithium atoms ⚛️ was going to change its structure during the explosion they thought it was going to cause a negative effect, but in fact, it caused a positive effect
@MattII333 ай бұрын
You should probably change your inaccurate title about it being the largest nuke ever detonated
@Dr_Larken6 ай бұрын
1:03 sounds like this is the story on how to overcook your fish! I love these videos!
@minerran5 ай бұрын
In theory, there is no limit to the maximum yield of a fusion bomb. But the limits are practical and a more powerful bomb is heavier. Average yields have actually decreased since the 1960's because contrary to popular belief, the primary purpose of nuclear weapons is not to kill cities. Its to kill military targets, city destruction is secondary. Missiles are more accurate now so bomb yields can be smaller due to the margin of error in hitting "the bullseye". Smaller, lighter missiles shooting lighter but more accurately placed warheads is better than the monstrously large ICBMs of the 1960's with multi-megaton warheads used to hit a military base or enemy ICBM site.
@rolandgustafson98173 ай бұрын
The big ICBM is still to kill mega cities in the US.
@SidorovichJr7 ай бұрын
love the npcs t-poses
@ChrisMorton7 ай бұрын
as wicked as the fusion bomb is, the mechanism is genius
@michaelhicks86037 ай бұрын
The “huge explosion” is just a result of the heat output of the combined reactions in air. If you teleported a teaspoon of the suns core into a small bunker on a remote island, you would get the exact same result.
@neeyotube4 ай бұрын
4:14 Uh..... what? If you're going to use garbage TTS software instead of a real narrator, at least use a script that makes sense.
@SuperLordHawHaw2 ай бұрын
This is the "teller-ulam" bomb design. 2:34 The igniters have to extremely accurate to perfectly synchronize. They even measure the wires leading to them to make sure the pulses arrive at the same time. If it fails to explode properly you can end up with an asymmetric blast and a "dirty bomb". In the center of the Pu "pit" is an empty space with a tiny gold neutron emitting "seed", sometimes coated in polonium. They even fuss over the texture of this seed. Its job is to initiate the fission of the imploded Pu pit as it reaches critical mass. The beryllium casing was to reflect neutrons back into the Pu pit during implosion. The lithium deuteride fusion fuel consisted of Li 6 and 7. It was expected that the Li-6 would participate in the explosion but not the Li-7. Fast neutrons however caused the Li-7 to produce more tritium and neutrons than expected causing the much bigger yield. The Pu core in the secondary is called the "spark plug". A thermonuclear bomb is as much a conventional fission bomb as a fusion one. All of this occurs at almost the speed of light. The bomb's materials participate for a tiny fraction of a second.
@princejohnson900515 күн бұрын
How many amps of currents required to detonate the lens?
@TheDesertraptor6 ай бұрын
Biggest nuclear bomb ever detonated is the Tsar Bomba. NOT Castle Bravo
@code-inc6 ай бұрын
In 🇺🇸
@fuffoon8 ай бұрын
This is back when nukes were fun.
@antipattern03 ай бұрын
Fun fact: 1 kg of Antimatter would yield a 15 MT detonation
@Crypto_Prophets3 ай бұрын
If weapons of the 1950’s caused that kind of destruction I can’t imagine today’s weapons. God help us
@theholt2ic2192 ай бұрын
They are actually less powerful. I think most nuclear weapons today are about 50-500kt not mt. Since weapons of this magnitude don’t make sense for military use. They are just scare tactics and ego science experiments. Weapons the size of Nagasaki are more than capable of leveling cities and Military targets. And testing bombs of this size or larger would probably never happen again with today’s politics. Only an outer space threat would make the use of it possible imo
@davmor15588 ай бұрын
What about Tsar bomb
@Yegorij6 ай бұрын
it was less powerfull because the Tsar Bomb fireball was 4.5 miles in diameter only but the Castle Bravo was 5 miles :)))))
@JDDC-tq7qm5 ай бұрын
@@Yegorijbur who had more power
@Indrid__Cold8 ай бұрын
Nicely animated!
@phillipdavis33168 ай бұрын
You should have also mentioned how fast the reaction occured like you did with your tsar bomb video.
@DougguoD3 ай бұрын
Big bomb. Got me wondering how large the plutonium rod was - "1.3 cm thick hollow cylindrical rod of plutonium" so that component wasn't exactly huge 👀
@TeslaBro28 ай бұрын
1 st comment from INDIA LOVE❤❤
@rickhibdon115 ай бұрын
There is very, VERY little in this video that's acurate
@davidseal8375Ай бұрын
It was a teller / ulam design....there was no pentane filled polystyrene coupler....the uranium outer tamper enclosed the entire device....
@KamAbbott8 ай бұрын
Well that was complete word salad....
@stevenwilgus89827 ай бұрын
Very well done video. Liked and subbed
@erikhadinger76553 ай бұрын
It was a good video. You needed to include why Castle Bravo was a lot stronger than projected
@zapa1pnt3 ай бұрын
I guess, you didn't watch that far, before commenting.
@SJR_Media_Group7 ай бұрын
*_love it...great video_***..hope more soon.*
@AnEmperor-TheKingofTheKingsАй бұрын
❤Well done Bravo❤
@pip121113 ай бұрын
Ivy Mike was the first Thermonuclear detonation
@TheTibetyak6 ай бұрын
Ok. I have access to wire and to polystyrene foam. About 1/3 of the way there?
@svenmorgenstern95066 ай бұрын
Yep. Now to score some plutonium and depleted uranium. Try Harbor Freight. 🎉
@ProjectHMF5 ай бұрын
😎
@BjarneLinetsky3 ай бұрын
A few years ago i read a story in the Atlantic Monthly called "The Radioactive Boy Scout" about a high school age science nerd who managed to acquire enough knowledge and radioactive materials to make a small, unshielded breeder reactor in his parents backyard garden shed before he was apprehended. From stuff like old radium painted clock dials, collector's minerals, smoke detectors etc. The genie is out of the bottle.......
@TyMoore955038 ай бұрын
The Tzar Bomb was intended to be a super heavy ICBM warhead: the missile that would have carried it was the UR-500, which became the space launch vehicle known as Proton.
@tardiscommand181218 күн бұрын
Just think, with all that styrofoam it was a really advanced pool toy.
@CowboyCree634 ай бұрын
The Castle primary was more like the bomb detonated over Nagasaki, plutonium implosion type, than the Hiroshima bomb which was a uranium gun type. And the Castle detonation was nowhere even close to the deadliest.
@ahmedawan33707 ай бұрын
amazing video
@potatoman73578 ай бұрын
Ivy Mike was the first Thermonuclear test
@iitzfizz7 ай бұрын
Exactly what I said
@potatoman73577 ай бұрын
@@iitzfizz I didn’t read the comments first my bad
@jimparsons68033 ай бұрын
Interesting. So gamma rays, energizing the dickens out of the shell of the metal Uranium, some of the U atoms sort of "fall apart," the bits then tunnel (as they are pretty excited) to the deuterium atoms, where they interact with the deuterium nuclei.
@jamestyrer90720 күн бұрын
No.
@TerryWest-p8z2 ай бұрын
Also along with "fussion", the primary was not the same as the device used on Hiroshima, rather it was basically the same as the plutonium fission device used on Nagasaki.
@Sweetthang93 ай бұрын
I mean, there were definitely "deadlier" bombs....hell....deadlier nuclear bombs.
@slayerd3575 ай бұрын
This guy has a lot of history to get through. Look up Tsar Bomb. 55ish Megatons.
@JohnSmall3146 ай бұрын
Err, Castle Bravo wasn't the first thermonuclear weapon detonated by the US. Ivy Mike was the first. As others have already pointed out
@Hey_MikeZeroEcho22P8 ай бұрын
Hard to Believe ..... that my styrofoam cup had that much P O W E R !!!! /s
@DanielWhalen-m8w5 ай бұрын
The Primary portion of Castle Bravo was like the Fatman Bomb droped on Nagasaki. A Plutonium Implosion weapon. Little Boy used a Gun Barrel design and HEU for its fuel.
@gregorymeeker28672 ай бұрын
Actually, this was not our first thermonuclear or fusion bomb test. It started with Ivy Mike in late 1952 and had several in between that and Castle Bravo. Not the first, and not the biggest.
@Zoomer30_6 ай бұрын
You know things got out hand when we had a bomb that used an atomic bomb as a detonator.
@roquefortfiles7 ай бұрын
Castle Bravo was not the first Hydrogen bomb. Ivy Mike was
@nofungrachman8055 ай бұрын
Castle Bravo's fallout hit a Japanese fishing boat and contaminated the ocean, that's why they create the Godzilla to warn about the danger of nuclear weapon.
@joeypc875 ай бұрын
Tsar Bomba wad the biggest thermo nuclear bomb of mankind ever detonated. It is around 50MT.
@ชื่อนี้เสียไม่ได้-ษ3ฎ5 ай бұрын
😂😂👎🏻🇷🇺
@DeltaWolf-5 ай бұрын
Upload the world's tallest skyscraper in the the Burj Khalifa in the United Arab Emirates
@danncorbit36237 ай бұрын
The US B41 warhead was 25MT, but we have no public record of test detonations.
@polvoradelrey24235 ай бұрын
The plasma doesnt compress the cylinder otherwise it would make the case burst open before anything happened. The x and gamma rays are the ones doing the compression by other means.
@TonyBShooting6 ай бұрын
Makes me want to read The Sum of all Fears again
@AvadithaNekandhuku8 ай бұрын
2nd comment from INDIA 🇮🇳❤❤
@TeslaBro28 ай бұрын
😁😆😆😅
@AvadithaNekandhuku8 ай бұрын
@@TeslaBro2 😅
@RonaldMcdonald-ow3kh8 ай бұрын
Congratulations and sorry you didnt make 1st.
@hianxi805 ай бұрын
3:20 amazing styrofoam can bc such an imperative component to a thermonuclear bomb. how did they even figure this out? who thinks to do these things to see what happens?
@Hemidakota5 ай бұрын
When it comes to the Sun temperature, not likely but it still interesting.
@Doubler007455 ай бұрын
Fun fact, the entire yield of this weapon would only sustain the global energy consumption for 54 minutes.
@Galihdutasuseno7 ай бұрын
so a hydrogen bomb mimics how the sun works, so fusion is much more powerful than fission
@novemberzed91634 күн бұрын
Tsar bomb has entered the chat.
@shangrilorrt56525 ай бұрын
At 1:25 the fission bomb wasn't the same as Hiroshima. Indeed, Hiroshima bomb called Little Boy used uranium 235 not plutonium. Moreover, the mechanism wasn't the same in Little boy because it consisted of an explosive charge projected a block of uranium 235 against another block to reach the critical mass allowing fission to begin. In fact, what is shown at 1:25 is the same mechanism as Fat Boy, the second bomb which was dropped above Nagasaki. Here plutonium 239 was used, and it worked thanks to a compression of the plutonium ball by explosive lenses.
@sammencia79453 ай бұрын
Warehouse sized H-Bomb. Worked, alright. Vaporized all instruments and left 1 mile wide crater.
@mehdibellahcene54614 ай бұрын
Vidéo passionnante, pour mes enfants et moi! Peace from France
@joshuaparrott24583 ай бұрын
Tsar Bomba "Hold my beer"
@MichaelPontisso-mx1bq8 ай бұрын
Tsar bomb was 58 megatons and it was supposed to be 100 megatons but they scaled it back to be safe.
@DavidEarle7866 ай бұрын
"In theory, the bomb would have had a yield in excess of 100 Mt (418 PJ) if it had included the uranium-238[16] tamper which featured in the design but was omitted in the test to reduce radioactive fallout.[16] As only one bomb was built to completion, that capability has never been demonstrated." It wasn't so much that they scaled it back, they just did not include the uranium-238. The actual, accepted output was 50MT.
This is NOT how it (a Teller-Ulam H-bomb) works. I don't remember exactly where I learned how it works but I think it is still classified so I no longer repeat it.
@wernerviehhauser946 ай бұрын
Let me cut this short... Most of my bad students deliver presentations with less errors......
@mray85192 ай бұрын
A world full of people willing to build and use these monstrous weapons has yet to prove it should not be utterly destroyed.
@johnwatson39488 ай бұрын
Nice but the “Styrofoam to plasma” idea was discounted years ago - started only as speculation by activist Howard Morland in the 1980’s. “expanding foam plasma” is not needed in a device where the primary X-rays slam outward and fill the void with the density of lead.
@NonEuclideanTacoCannon7 ай бұрын
Thought it wasn't styrofoam in the first place, but some sort of aerogel material codenamed "FOGBANK". Which Pantex somehow lost the formula for, and had to spend years and billions of dollars re-inventing.
@semidemiurge7 ай бұрын
How/why are you equating the density of x-rays to the density of lead?
@johnwatson39487 ай бұрын
Not equating - on detonation the X-Rays emerge with the density of a very heavy metal - like lead.
@semidemiurge7 ай бұрын
@@johnwatson3948 why use density and not flux?
@Jonhobbs644 ай бұрын
Also tzar bomba was a three stage device, all other thermonuclear devices are a two stage
@milesromanus70413 ай бұрын
No way they killed another Japanese with this nuke
@RonaldMcdonald-ow3kh8 ай бұрын
It is good video and im happy to be subscribed.
@GigglesD27 ай бұрын
Should have put in why the device was so miscalculated by not understanding the lithium 7 interactions at high mev levels. And as other pointed out Bravo was around 6 or 7 on largest detonations.
@MrAnthism6 ай бұрын
Humanity at its best!
@velnicasal97403 ай бұрын
and now bikini its a g-string HA!!! 🤘🤪
@stephencollins18045 ай бұрын
The Russian Tzar Bombe was the highest yield nuclear weapon ever detonated, with an explosive force of 57 megatons & a blast radius of 45km.
@nilamshinde5318 ай бұрын
Very interesting 😮 But I glad of this video 🫡
@M-I-k-e13016 ай бұрын
Of course it had to be a Japanese boat that gets hit by radiation
@fredbecker6076 ай бұрын
Survived the first two. Killed by a test.
@richardwadholm40195 ай бұрын
But what caused the 6 megaton bob to yield 15 megatons? That was a flaw in the design, wasn't it?
@budakRancak965 ай бұрын
The design is very human🗿
@Girls-t2t2 ай бұрын
An large Asteroid impact fireball explosive can get hotter then the sun too.
@K17ZUN34 ай бұрын
1:04 Tactical T Pose
@amyjojinkerson-b6o2 ай бұрын
this scared hell out of them
@goingoutonmyshield28116 ай бұрын
Now imagine that same amount of energy being created to empower a Nation with an energy source so abundant it would eradicate the need for certain sectors of Public Utility.
@DavidEarle7866 ай бұрын
I'm thinking of the movie Chain Reaction (Keanu Reeves). Hydrogen power, clean/free energy, except there was an 'agency' who had to keep that under wraps, because if you dump that onto the world markets, economies would crash and from there we'd all be in a world of shit.
@TheSebastian59783 ай бұрын
And not one government employee was punished. Unreal.
@InstigatorDJ6 ай бұрын
Erm, people. The largest ever detonated is the Tzar Bomba. Youre welcome.
@hans-uelijohner89437 ай бұрын
The Tsar Bomba was the biggest ever exploded thermonuclear bomb at 50 Mt!!
@kyledodge55133 ай бұрын
Definitely not the first US hydrogen bomb, that would be "Mike Shot" in the Marshall Islands
@Edward135i7 ай бұрын
4:11 you can go on Google maps and see this crater to this day, also many fans of SpongeBob believe this is where Bikini Bottom is located and that the nuclear radiation is what caused them to become humanord like.