The Devastating True Scale of Nuclear Weapons

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Science Time

Science Time

Ай бұрын

The devastating true scale of nuclear weapons began on July 26, 1945, when the Allies demanded the unconditional surrender of Japan, warning of "prompt and utter destruction" if compliance failed. Japan ignored this ultimatum. By summer, the Allies' Manhattan Project had developed two atomic bombs: the uranium-based "Little Boy" and plutonium-based "Fat Man." A top-secret mission saw six B-29 bombers heading to Hiroshima, with the Enola Gay carrying Little Boy. It was released over Hiroshima on August 6, releasing 15 kilotons of TNT, devastating a 1.6 kilometers radius.
Three days later, Bockscar dropped Fat Man on Nagasaki, resulting in a 21-kiloton explosion. These bombings led to 129,000 to 226,000 deaths, prompting Japan's surrender on August 15, 1945, ending World War II and igniting a nuclear arms race, especially between the USA and the Soviet Union.
The US's most powerful nuclear weapon today is the B83, with a maximum yield of 1.2 megatons of TNT, designed for enhanced safety and varied applications including the "Nuclear Bunker Buster" project and asteroid impact avoidance strategies.
Castle Bravo, detonated on March 1, 1954, remains the most powerful device tested by the US, yielding 15 megatons. The Soviet Union responded by developing the Tsar Bomba, detonated on October 30, 1961, with a yield of 50 megatons, marking the largest human-made explosion.
The nuclear arms race led to the development of extensive arsenals capable of mutual assured destruction (MAD), a doctrine suggesting that nuclear conflict would result in the annihilation of both attacker and defender, effectively deterring outright nuclear war. These developments have left a lasting impact on global politics and security.
Sources:
U.S. Department of Energy www.energy.gov/
Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation rosatom.ru
Screen Gems Collection, Harry S. Truman Library catalog.archives.gov/
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Ca...
National Museum of the U.S. Air Force www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/
Subscribe to Science Time: / sciencetime24
#nukes #sciencetime #nuclearwinter

Пікірлер: 3 900
@kyledodge5513
@kyledodge5513 Ай бұрын
Army Reserve CBRN here, very accurate info on everything I heard here. If this stuff doesn't keep you up at night... nothing will
@averageGoat_meh_eh_eh_eh
@averageGoat_meh_eh_eh_eh Ай бұрын
Unit 731 keeps me up at night.
@PsalmMiracle
@PsalmMiracle Ай бұрын
I would love to witness and survive it just because I want to be around to see it take place and one day speak about it aside from that I’d want to be right in the blast,
@stevenaintmyname
@stevenaintmyname Ай бұрын
ooooo so scary 🙀
@steveofthewildnorth7493
@steveofthewildnorth7493 Ай бұрын
Back in the day, the thought of been vaporized in a nuclear exchange seemed very real. Inevitable in fact. We'd joke about painting bullseyes on top of our heads so the living would envy us. Then the wall came down, the Soviet Union collapsed and China discovered capitalism. All seemed better.....until. Some things just don't change I guess.
@markpozsar5785
@markpozsar5785 Ай бұрын
You say this like being a reservist gave you authority on this topic.
@ecleveland1
@ecleveland1 Ай бұрын
The true horror is what happens after the blast. Those that are vaporized by the blast are the lucky ones.
@BOBBOBBOBBOBBOBBOB69
@BOBBOBBOBBOBBOBBOB69 Ай бұрын
Instant death or living in a doomed world.
@kawaki4277
@kawaki4277 Ай бұрын
True
@Ceezy_yt
@Ceezy_yt Ай бұрын
You get vaporized so fast you become graffiti. Look at the after math of the only nukes actually ever used. And those were tiny ones btw
@JTheraos
@JTheraos Ай бұрын
What do you mean by this? If you are talking about radiation, that's not a big issue. Nuclear weapons radiation is very rapidly dispersed around the world and doesn't have hardly any negative effects cause there is no nuclear material to continue releasing radiation.
@muranziel
@muranziel Ай бұрын
​@@JTheraos Nuclear blast causes devastation in other ways too, than just vaporization and radiation. Those who don't starve under rubble, have severe burns. Krutzegat made a great educational video about it.
@colecooper5836
@colecooper5836 22 күн бұрын
1880-1950 has to be the craziest time in the history of earth. We went from horse and buggy to jets, cars, and weapons that can blow up entire cities and were on the brink of space flight in less than 60 years.
@unnamedsoldier5446
@unnamedsoldier5446 21 күн бұрын
dont say yet now we living in more crazy time
@donaldmacallister-qz5vi
@donaldmacallister-qz5vi 21 күн бұрын
humans are not intelligent enough to control🎉 their cleverness.
@SeanWilson.
@SeanWilson. 21 күн бұрын
So then, the sweetspot is around 1914!
@wavular
@wavular 20 күн бұрын
Not natural progression. Otherwise neanderthals would have had the same technology.
@WotchTheWerldBern
@WotchTheWerldBern 20 күн бұрын
@@SeanWilson. before 1913 is best timeline.
@bryanbroacosta
@bryanbroacosta 27 күн бұрын
Always remember, the politicians that caused the situation are always safe and sound when SHTF
@MikeW-yk5tr
@MikeW-yk5tr 22 күн бұрын
Maybe, living underground for the rest of their lives. ☢️
@davidrockey7190
@davidrockey7190 19 күн бұрын
Until they meet their maker.
@sirpgm2859
@sirpgm2859 18 күн бұрын
Politicians are expendable as the rest of us. They’re just scumbag actors.
@aurynwestwield1682
@aurynwestwield1682 17 күн бұрын
@@davidrockey7190 hopefully.
@kwimms
@kwimms 16 күн бұрын
The people who write this bs are safe and sound... the rest live in their imaginations where the nuclear fallout never stops.
@adambeaulieu6868
@adambeaulieu6868 20 күн бұрын
"I don't know what WW3 will be fought with, but WW4 will be fought with sticks and stones" -Albert Einstein
@jamesgibson6509
@jamesgibson6509 17 күн бұрын
Wipeout
@kwimms
@kwimms 16 күн бұрын
Einstein had sex with his 2 cousins and his personal life was a mess, his acting life was a joke. Why quote this fool?
@Luked0g440
@Luked0g440 14 күн бұрын
@@velyris "I don't know what weapons might be used in World War III. But there isn't any doubt what weapons will be used in World War IV." "And what are those?", a guest asked. "Stone spears." replied Einstein. - March 1947, as reported anecdotally by friends at a dinner party.
@Filthy_Larry
@Filthy_Larry 13 күн бұрын
I wanna revise this; “I don’t know how we will fight world war 3, but I know where we fight world war 4, at your mom’s house”.
@michaelnick2927
@michaelnick2927 12 күн бұрын
Give it a rest. MAD assures no nuclear war. Maybe tactical nukes used on troops or bases, but not large scale nuclear war.
@catmalogen23
@catmalogen23 Ай бұрын
Nothing like the brevity of a British accent to scale up our existential nuclear dread
@lachlan1971
@lachlan1971 Ай бұрын
Which one? There are about 80 accents in Britain. Do you mean a posh English accent? That's the enemy of the British people right there.
@ohdearism
@ohdearism Ай бұрын
@@lachlan1971 Why would you even say such a thing? It's not even a posh English accent, it's received pronunciation, a voiceover artist, or as I suspect, as with many YT videos, generated text to speech. There are far more than 80 accents in Britain too.
@maddeusdoggeus1
@maddeusdoggeus1 Ай бұрын
“Screw You! That’s Funny!” 😂👍
@painthuret
@painthuret Ай бұрын
Seems like a transatlantic accent to me, the one you were hearing in the early 1900s to the 60s
@BOBBOBBOBBOBBOBBOB69
@BOBBOBBOBBOBBOBBOB69 Ай бұрын
Not a British accent, posh American.
@tzvi3660
@tzvi3660 28 күн бұрын
Man Invented the Atom bomb But No Mouse Would Build a Mousetrap, Albert Einstein
@FP194
@FP194 12 күн бұрын
You realize Albert Einstein was the one who wrote a letter to FDR that started the development of the atomic bomb So he is the one responsible for it
@FP194
@FP194 12 күн бұрын
Albert Einstein wrote a letter to FDR that started the Manhattan Project so he actually started the whole thing
@tzvi3660
@tzvi3660 12 күн бұрын
@@FP194 The Quote was said after the War, Albert Einstein Wrote that letter to Roosevelt, because the Germans were also working on A nuclear bomb, and He stressed the Importance of getting it before the Germans did
@alexanderjason434
@alexanderjason434 11 күн бұрын
@@tzvi3660 in the end it was nonsense Soviets & US beat the Germans
@tzvi3660
@tzvi3660 11 күн бұрын
@@alexanderjason434 it wasn't Nonsense, The Germans were working on a bomb, But the Americans amd Russians won the War before either country developed anything, America was first, and they used it against japan
@DonLee1980
@DonLee1980 21 күн бұрын
all i can say is, I'm glad humanity has not used nuclear weapons on each other since 1945, and may that be forever true.
@kennydacklin4275
@kennydacklin4275 16 күн бұрын
Hope so, but the ongoing wars all over the world seems like we are close for a nuclear war. Taiwan vs China, Russia vs Ukraine. Israel vs Palestine, all the wars in different lands in Africa. Eu against Russia. And USA who seems to be in everyones war.
@hadesium
@hadesium 14 күн бұрын
Lol you wish 😅
@redblade8160
@redblade8160 11 күн бұрын
@DonLee1980. There is no need to use nuclear weapons now to destroy humanity; there is a far better and more effective way to do it. Have you not heard of the COVID-Jab?
@J0EFERNY-bq1vo
@J0EFERNY-bq1vo 10 күн бұрын
THE BOMBS ARE COMING BACK SOON
@chownful
@chownful 7 күн бұрын
@@J0EFERNY-bq1vo where can i buy one
@MarkSmith-js2pu
@MarkSmith-js2pu 5 күн бұрын
Stalin knew about them before Truman did. Think about that under today’s circumstances.
@JayTheLane
@JayTheLane Ай бұрын
Sadly humans never learn the lessons of the past.
@chipmunk6386
@chipmunk6386 Ай бұрын
So true😨
@Hairy.Whodini
@Hairy.Whodini Ай бұрын
We do, but this time is gonna be different.
@echelon2k8
@echelon2k8 Ай бұрын
The humans who make these same kinds of awful decisions anyway.
@fazepkjr4645
@fazepkjr4645 Ай бұрын
👍
@SuperScottCrawford
@SuperScottCrawford Ай бұрын
What lessons? Sorry I wasn't listening.
@sierranexi
@sierranexi Ай бұрын
The B83 is the most powerful in our arsenal... Except the other ones that are off the books.
@S300V
@S300V Ай бұрын
Even the B83 is going to storage. B61 mod11/12 replaces it. Nuclear weapons are easy to build but very expensive to maintain... especially when old.
@user-kw5qv6zl5e
@user-kw5qv6zl5e Ай бұрын
They are ALL on the books ...If by that I presume we KNOW about them .. just not enabled or deployed.the B83 was the largest deemed usefully deployable but by no means the largest CAPABLE of being deployed
@JTheraos
@JTheraos Ай бұрын
​@@user-kw5qv6zl5etrust... we have nukes that the world doesn't know about. If all our enemies new the exact locations of all our nukes and how many we have, we would be at an insane disadvantage. You bet your ass Russia also slhas tons off the books.
@mattrobson3603
@mattrobson3603 29 күн бұрын
@@user-kw5qv6zl5e I'd doubt there area larger weapons in the US arsenal. There's not a lot of value in secretly having bigger bombs, there's no real technical capability being hidden. Nor is there much need for bigger bombs - getting the nuke to the target is the big deal, bigger bombs just give you a bit of leeway in accuracy. If you can deliver one right where it needs to go, you can go smaller. For targets with a larger area, you can use multiple warheads. For really deeply buried targets, a weapon designed to penetrate the earth before detonating. That's a large part of the reason that no one made bigger bombs after Tsar Bomba - they weren't going to be useful. The other part is that after that blast, and Castle Bravo, is that it became clear that there were practical limits on what it was politically feasable to test. Not that weren't advocates of bigger bombs. Edward Teller, one of the physicists working in the US nuclear weapons program, was a big fan of giant explosions, pushing for the development of ever larger devices. Never built - for obvious reasons - were the 1000MT 'Gnomon' and the 10,000MT 'Sundial'. He kept trying to get the US government to do it, throughout his life. That nerd really loved giant fireballs.
@kevinwhite7647
@kevinwhite7647 29 күн бұрын
Oh there’s so much we have that the other countries don’t know anything about.
@_TheLastWatcher
@_TheLastWatcher 26 күн бұрын
These are all impressive feats of engineering but don't let this distract you from the the fact that in 1966, Al Bundy scored four touchdowns in a single game while playing for the Polk High School Panthers.
@bigv6724
@bigv6724 21 күн бұрын
Oh dear lord, thanks for the memories! I've been getting an itch to binge watch some Married with Children. This is must be the sign I'm looking for to binge it all.
@johnmguzman7491
@johnmguzman7491 20 күн бұрын
GO B-U-N-D-Y!! 🏈
@Mrbamis22
@Mrbamis22 19 күн бұрын
I Do Recall Such A Thing 😂😂
@yepsure4202
@yepsure4202 19 күн бұрын
Gay
@TheSecretOfNem
@TheSecretOfNem 18 күн бұрын
Never forget!
@-Egor-
@-Egor- 21 күн бұрын
Peace to all of us. Greetings from Russia.
@The_void_contains
@The_void_contains 16 күн бұрын
Greetings from america
@user-qs2vs6ji4b
@user-qs2vs6ji4b 12 күн бұрын
100000% 👍 agree my orthodox brothers
@DoStuff1958
@DoStuff1958 12 күн бұрын
Leave Ukraine.
@pluto9000
@pluto9000 12 күн бұрын
I love you guys.
@tototakto4611
@tototakto4611 12 күн бұрын
@@DoStuff1958 Stop NATO expansion
@unityxg
@unityxg 28 күн бұрын
The older I get, the more I realize that humanity everywhere on planet earth does not have any business having nuclear weapons.
@wrongfullyaccused7139
@wrongfullyaccused7139 26 күн бұрын
Then you need to get a lot older . Because you are utterly wrong.
@unityxg
@unityxg 25 күн бұрын
@wrongfullyaccused7139 Yeah, I suppose so. These days, it's a necessary evil to have, even I know that. You don't have to be condescending about it though.
@wrongfullyaccused7139
@wrongfullyaccused7139 25 күн бұрын
@@unityxg : A statement of fact is never condescending. There are nations with ideologies so despicable that they would wipe out every Christian, and every American, and every jew with a wave their hand if they could. The only thing that stops them from even trying is the knowledge that they would never survive the attempt. The truly disturbing fact is that you have not yet figured that out. That is why you are so wrong. Not all cultures are equal. Goodbye.
@babybirdhome
@babybirdhome 24 күн бұрын
@@wrongfullyaccused7139 He's actually not wrong. Humanity has no business having nuclear weapons anywhere. But we do, so now we have to. It'll be our undoing one day.
@wrongfullyaccused7139
@wrongfullyaccused7139 24 күн бұрын
@@babybirdhome : As long as socialism/marxism/communism has it devotees and acolytes who blindly follow that morally bankrupt, evil ideology America had better hang on to its' nuclear arsenal. Goodbye.
@bigbluegr8ness383
@bigbluegr8ness383 Ай бұрын
If it ever comes to a nuclear war everybody loses the instant the first explosion takes place 🤦🏻‍♂️
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence Ай бұрын
ah not true. for instance if there was a nuclear explosion in ukraine, it would not trigger article 5. it would have to go outside of that. also no one really knows what would happen anyway & the brits policy is that the PM has the say so on any launch of nuclear weapons, even if the uk is completely destroyed.
@Shoelessjoe78
@Shoelessjoe78 Ай бұрын
​@@mrrolandlawrenceso they would destroy everything west of the Urals. What's your point
@technokicksyourass
@technokicksyourass Ай бұрын
@@Shoelessjoe78 I think the point is.. it's hyperbolic to say "everyone loses". If one guy has nukes and the other guy doesn't.. then, in a nuclear war the guy without the nukes loses. Obviously.
@TheJew-vc8qj
@TheJew-vc8qj Ай бұрын
@@mrrolandlawrence The UK is screwed then, if we still have Sunak in power!!!
@Ksins1
@Ksins1 Ай бұрын
Пгон "Where Soros is, there is a blow to the sovereignty of any country and any government. Including the USA. And even starting with the USA. Hence the logical protests against Israel... Meanwhile, student unrest over Palestine is growing, and it is possible that Soros has set a course for an apocalyptic scenario of a civil war in the United States," explains Dugin. Therefore, multinational corporations need... other countries to fight against countries! This is how globalists use the whole of Europe and even the United States for their own interests. It makes Americans feel bad, and Europeans feel terrible. But how all this is connected with Soros' campaign against Israel is just very interesting. There are, frankly, a lot of plans there... if the globalists get direct access to the management of all US bases, all US special services, all tons of compromising material on the whole planet - what then? They will get to rockets, to space, to submarines. And all this is just for the sake of plunging Russia and China into chaos together with America? And then, so to speak, to feast in muddy waters
@nlomas
@nlomas 27 күн бұрын
We talk about not committing war crimes but our nuclear strategy involves wiping out cities.
@danielaramburo7648
@danielaramburo7648 19 күн бұрын
It’s a necessary evil that must exist so the enemy knows the consequences of them trying do the same to us.
@minirock000
@minirock000 18 күн бұрын
Cities are not targeted just to target the populace. Only strategic targets are targeted but there are many of them. After the first strike and all your weapons have been largely successful then there really is not a need nor is there any reason to keep launching. Once the main targets have been hit the cost of maintaining more weapons begins to to great for the possible targets destroyed, diminishing returns. If there was a "bully on the block" running around threatening everybody and scaring the wholly hell out of everyone after 1945 it was the U.S. We carried weapons in bombers up to the Soviet borders every day. We ran so many sorties like that there were many, many mistakes of our planes crashing with weapons onboard or them dropping them accidentally all over the country and several places around the world. We got lucky the Soviets never thought we had actually launched and launched as well.
@TorbenRudgaard
@TorbenRudgaard 14 күн бұрын
Commentator: "Almost everyone who died was civilians" he says with a proud voice.
@The_10th_Man
@The_10th_Man 10 күн бұрын
There’s no war crime if you win.
@greatman5836
@greatman5836 4 күн бұрын
​@@danielaramburo7648Russia said hello 😊
@DrewJPS
@DrewJPS 19 күн бұрын
Castle Bravo was a complete fuck up. It was massively more potent than expected. It just goes to show that even scientist can get it wrong.
@krashd
@krashd 19 күн бұрын
Look at the atmospheric tests for fuckups, one side did it and burnt out every phone line for several hundred miles, and then the other side thought "the bastards are trying to blow up space! We need to do that too" and then they did the exact same thing, lmao. Can't remember who did it first, the US (with Starfish Prime) or the Soviets but despite the massive damage it caused to the home country the other side copied it and damaged their own country.
@Aaron-zu3xn
@Aaron-zu3xn 2 күн бұрын
but every mistake teaches us something theres a certain design that can fit in a 155mm shell that came from that
@doodskie999
@doodskie999 Ай бұрын
Humans are so good at ending lives rather than preserving it
@TheIronDuke9
@TheIronDuke9 Ай бұрын
and yet there are 8 billion of us. More than ever before
@doodskie999
@doodskie999 Ай бұрын
@@TheIronDuke9 yes, but one mistake can end all of it
@Geomasterthesecond
@Geomasterthesecond 27 күн бұрын
It's easier to destroy than to create
@briannichols9491
@briannichols9491 27 күн бұрын
not true there are more people alive today than ever before
@lotharlundgren9509
@lotharlundgren9509 27 күн бұрын
*Government
@Darronsanderson
@Darronsanderson Ай бұрын
"It's in your nature to destroy yourselves" The Terminator
@Arnoud-nf6iz
@Arnoud-nf6iz Ай бұрын
i did allready happen in paralel versions of earth.. darryl anka has some mind blowing content about it he channels a extraterrestrial
@johnfish837
@johnfish837 Ай бұрын
80 years and it hasn't happened...Probably never will.
@TheFactMan1
@TheFactMan1 Ай бұрын
“I need your clothes, your boots, and your motorcycle.” Also The Terminator
@Triggernlfrl
@Triggernlfrl Ай бұрын
Because it is not in our true nature we are here...
@TChalla616
@TChalla616 Ай бұрын
Who's to say we haven't destroyed ourselves before, and we're just doing it all over again. Life finds a way to survive, but we also have a self destructive nature, so it's like a vicious cycle repeating itself over, and over again.
@MartinOReilly-mb4um
@MartinOReilly-mb4um 25 күн бұрын
The speaker really adds the gravitas needed for such a serious, real video of facts and what it means over all of us today.
@kableguy5749
@kableguy5749 22 күн бұрын
Fun fact the fastest man made object is a manhole cover launched into space by a nuclear explosion in navada. Its currently somehere outside the solar system.
@MarinCipollina
@MarinCipollina Ай бұрын
I was born in 1957 and grew up as a child in the heart of this madness. The weekly air raid sirens were terrifying. Every week local television would show film of the latest atomic test in the Nevada desert. They were all above ground until 1965 or so.. I was told not to eat the snow due to radioactive fallout concerns.
@eazyridin7283
@eazyridin7283 Ай бұрын
That’s terrible (sorry had to edit since everything is so terrible to think of ) but don’t eat the yellow or nuclear green snow
@nnonotnow
@nnonotnow Ай бұрын
Where did you live
@MarinCipollina
@MarinCipollina Ай бұрын
@@nnonotnow At that time I wasn't far from where that broken arrow crashed near Goldsboro NC in 1961 carrying two multi megaton atomic bombs.. Fortunately, neither went off.. Only one was recovered. Six of the seven safeties had been tripped. The other one remains buried deep underground, they were unable to recover it.
@aleisterdenven
@aleisterdenven Ай бұрын
Atomic Weapons don't exist.It has been over 70 years now.70 years are a long time for a mortal.Given Human Nature if Atomic Weapons really existed;Someone would have used them to take over The World by now.Just stop and think for a moment.You have a Invention - The Atomic Bomb,which is capable of demolishing Entire Cities,which can crush The Human Spirit and which has "The Power" to literally enslave/conquer The Whole World and No One All Of This Time has tried to take over The World???It doesn't make any sense.Some people might say this is because of "Mutually Assured Destruction",but my devastating point is this:The Americans were "seemingly" the first to develop Atomic Weapons years before Anyone else,so if The Americans were the first to develop Atomic Weapons and had Atomic Weapons,then why didn't they use them to take over The World.They could have bombed every other Country in The World and then enslaved the survivors.No Army in The World could have stopped them at the time.People will say what about Hiroshima and Nagasaki?What about All the pictures,photos,videos,destroyed buildings and dead bodies?When I look at those pictures and videos of destroyed buildings;they look "burned","scorched" and "incinerated" to Me;not by "One Giant Brutal Super-Bomb",but by Thousands,Tens Of Thousands maybe even Hundreds Of Thousands of "Mini-Firebombs".To Me those devastated buildings don't appear to have been "Crushed" by "One-Single Mega-Brutal Crushing Super-Force",but by "Innumerable Smaller Burning-Forces".Hiroshima and Nagasaki look like burned Towns/Cities instead of Towns/Cities that were completely wiped out by "One Enormous Force".Now this is only Theoretical.I could be very-wrong,but if Atomic Weapons truly existed - by My estimates a Atomic Bomb would have not only "Completely Flattened" a Entire City to a pancake,but it would have also left "A Giant Crater" in the ground.The sheer "Monstrous Crushing Force" of a falling Atomic Bomb would have not only flattened The Entire City to ground-level it would have also "Torn-Apart The Very Ground From The Ground Itself".The Entire City would have been "Grinded Into Dust"- there would be Absolutely Nothing and Nobody left except "A Enormous Crater".There would be no clue that a City even existed.Example:If You build a Sandcastle on The Beach ( The Sandcastle is The City and You are The Atomic Bomb ) and then jump and stomp on it or punch it with All of Your might;it will Completely Flatten and You may even carve a Deep Hole in the ground.The Demons and The Fallen Angels who rule over this World need "Human Life Blood".Hiroshima and Nagasaki were "Satanic Human-Sacrifice Rituals".All of those Hundreds Of Thousands of people were being sacrificed to Demons and Fallen Angels for their blood.Many Ancient Civilizations from The Past were also sacrificing people for their blood,because The Demons and The Fallen Angels told them so.The Wars in The World are Human Sacrifice Rituals.Nothing has changed.Atomic Weapons are a monstrous deception designed to frighten The Public out of their Minds in order to create a Future situation where A False Saviour or False Saviours can rescue them.If Atomic Weapons truly existed;Someone would have used them to take over The World by now,but Nobody has and maybe this is because Atomic Weapons don't exist!
@MikeJones-rk1un
@MikeJones-rk1un Ай бұрын
Were milk cows eating fallout grass? Did we drink it as children?
@cmdrclassified
@cmdrclassified 20 күн бұрын
It's all MAD! Well done! I spent a lot of time researching nuclear weapons and technology, and you work is spot on. Tell you narrator that he sounds like Mark Strong. That's a compliment, BTW. Have a great day. o7
@anty66
@anty66 22 күн бұрын
Excellent clarity of the spoken word. No music sheer bliss.
@Rich5131
@Rich5131 Ай бұрын
In all of WWII about 2.5m tons of TNT was dropped from bombers. A single 2.5 megaton bomb is the quivalent therefore of all of the bombs dropped during WWII, in a single event.
@rael5469
@rael5469 Ай бұрын
The US doesn't use megaton bombs anymore. They currently have warheads in the kiloton range. I don't know about the Russians. However, for instance during the 1980s when I was in the service a B-52 could carry 12 weapons. The SRAM missiles alone each had about a 180 kt warhead. EACH of those was ten times the yield of the ones dropped on Japan. I think the gravity weapons were more like 400 kt. It's all mind boggling. 12 nuclear weapons totaling 3 megatons being signed for by a three stripe high school drop out.
@Rod_MolinaBachmann
@Rod_MolinaBachmann Ай бұрын
Unofficial reports state the Russians have the largest number of nuclear weapons, more than all the rest of the countries combined. Most of them are mobile, fitted to submarines. Russian also developed the GBM which can do loops around the globe, thanks to their built-in mini nuclear reactors that provide almost endless propulsion fuel. And yes, the yield in the warheads for the latter ones are in Mega Tons.
@williamp8305
@williamp8305 Ай бұрын
Unit of measurements you have used are incorrect: m= milli (10^-3) M= mega (10x^6)
@rael5469
@rael5469 Ай бұрын
@@Rod_MolinaBachmann Russia are losers as is proved by their bungling in Ukraine. Our military has all of their nukes targeted.....including their noisy submarines.
@Cd5ssmffan
@Cd5ssmffan Ай бұрын
@@rael5469 If u think they only have kiloton bombs then you are either a fed or probably just mistaken
@equusasinus
@equusasinus 27 күн бұрын
"Gentlemen! You cannot fight in here: this is the War Room." (Peter Sellers in 'Dr Strangelove.')
@stevestinnett6777
@stevestinnett6777 14 күн бұрын
Excellent video, thank you. I’m sure it took a tremendous amount of research to produce it.
@stuartgilbert3969
@stuartgilbert3969 17 күн бұрын
Thanks for the Great Vid.
@kenstrauss5841
@kenstrauss5841 Ай бұрын
My uncle was part of the Manhattan project in WW2. He’s 102 years old and still doing well
@josmclove4426
@josmclove4426 Ай бұрын
Awesome!❤
@lillarry1872
@lillarry1872 Ай бұрын
He is the last Ronin
@ps5home
@ps5home Ай бұрын
Incredible. Best luck!
@chelsea321123
@chelsea321123 Ай бұрын
Why you lying for?
@TChalla616
@TChalla616 Ай бұрын
Who is your uncle?
@ryanquick1824
@ryanquick1824 28 күн бұрын
perhaps THE SCARIEST aspect of this video IS how out of date the described technology MUST BE in order for it to be declassified AND made publicly available. MAKES YOU WONDER WHAT SORT OF UNIMAGINABLY ADVANCED WEAPONRY MIGHT BE OUT THERE AT THIS POINT already...
@User-jr7vf
@User-jr7vf 27 күн бұрын
On the other hand, tests of nuclear weapons have decreased significantly since the end of the Cold War, which is probably an indication that the tech hasn't evolved that much, because you can't improve without testing.
@DocHydroponic
@DocHydroponic 27 күн бұрын
Direct Energy Weapons
@interstellarsurfer
@interstellarsurfer 26 күн бұрын
There's no need for furthur development.
@marcosvidal4940
@marcosvidal4940 26 күн бұрын
they have NOT developed anything more powerful when it comes to nuclear bombs, because of a problem of diminishing returns--2x the megatons does not cause 2x the damage, but way less than 2x. That's why the US keeps a nuclear arsenal with bombs of up to 1.2 megatons "only", when they could build much more powerful bombs than that. Pretty much all technological advancement has been focused on the delivery systems, and the missile defenses
@futuresick100
@futuresick100 26 күн бұрын
@@User-jr7vf Naw. They run simulations on supercomputers. Not as good as the real thing, but sufficient for data gathering.
@renevanderlinde6221
@renevanderlinde6221 20 күн бұрын
great vid ,, thank you
@elliottberkley
@elliottberkley 21 күн бұрын
We should go back to fist fighting before we force ourselves to go back to fist fighting.
@philandjana
@philandjana 29 күн бұрын
Imagine being told that your mission to test drop a bomb for science only had 50% odds of survival. I guess saying "no" had 0% chance of survival.
@sbultitude-paull303
@sbultitude-paull303 27 күн бұрын
I'd be willing to bet it was calculated at much lower odds than that. 50% was giving them some hope.
@Captainumerica
@Captainumerica 27 күн бұрын
They should have installed a lead coated small room for the crew to settle in after the explosion.
@matbroomfield
@matbroomfield 27 күн бұрын
Imagine being told that you are about murder 200,000 innocent men, women and children.
@foxmulderfbiufo1770
@foxmulderfbiufo1770 27 күн бұрын
​@@matbroomfield did you forget what the Japanese did too the Chinese? They slaughtered by hand and gun over 150,000 in a week it was genocide and 85% of them were women and children
@ATomRileyA
@ATomRileyA 25 күн бұрын
Yeah i don't think personal choice and communism ever go hand in hand lol.
@ZamboneeMan
@ZamboneeMan Ай бұрын
this is why billionaires are running to space lol
@herrseekadett1172
@herrseekadett1172 26 күн бұрын
Of course ,what would you do ?
@sc4708
@sc4708 25 күн бұрын
They ain't going nowhere lol 🤣
25 күн бұрын
Space won't save us, there will be a Death Star one day
@toxlaximus3297
@toxlaximus3297 25 күн бұрын
A few have become toothpaste at the bottom of the ocean.
@useryggfdcc
@useryggfdcc 25 күн бұрын
The common sheep finance the billionaires to try and escape through Naza.
@gregorv4951
@gregorv4951 23 күн бұрын
excellent done..thank you. And for metric units:)
@jimgaul67
@jimgaul67 Ай бұрын
I remember in grade school in the 60’s when the teachers would make us drop and cover if there was ever a nuclear attack. This scared the crap out of us and was useless against a nuclear attack. Then came the Cuban missle crisis. Thirteen days we were waiting for Armageddon. Now kids lose it if the Wi-Fi goes out. 🤯
@user-on7vr4cs7l
@user-on7vr4cs7l 29 күн бұрын
Woefully unprepared. So is everyone else
@onehitpick9758
@onehitpick9758 29 күн бұрын
There was an era around the 70s when most rugged schools and many homes had an underground fallout shelter. That's better than under a desk, but still wouldn't survive decades of contamination and nuclear winter. Putin and his sad followers want to bring this era back.
@kevinp3550
@kevinp3550 29 күн бұрын
OMG!!! THE STRESS of not knowing if you still have the most expensive iPhone in your circle of friends! And, and, and maybe The Taylor gets, like dumped. Worst of all, not knowing if you can afford a sex change, or a new rack... Times have never been worse...
@Squeakypickles619
@Squeakypickles619 29 күн бұрын
​@@kevinp3550LMFAO😂
@androidemulator6952
@androidemulator6952 29 күн бұрын
LOL ;)
@michaelgarrow3239
@michaelgarrow3239 Ай бұрын
Fun fact! Modern thermonuclear weapons are cleaner and more fuel efficient than old bombs made in the 1940’s. 😎
@Rod_MolinaBachmann
@Rod_MolinaBachmann Ай бұрын
Environmentally friendly Nuclear Warheads ! No way. This is awesome ! Now I want one of them to drop in my school yard to make the Apricot Trees grow faster !
@michaelgarrow3239
@michaelgarrow3239 Ай бұрын
@@Rod_MolinaBachmann 200# apricots? 🙈
@Rod_MolinaBachmann
@Rod_MolinaBachmann Ай бұрын
@@michaelgarrow3239 200 sounds about right, Cobber.
@Onionbaron
@Onionbaron Ай бұрын
So happy humanity is still progressing!
@rcritic2910
@rcritic2910 29 күн бұрын
I'll keep that in mind while my flesh is burning, at least is burning clean.
@JBeamGT3
@JBeamGT3 17 күн бұрын
Fun fact about castle Bravo: The blast was so much bigger than they initially thought it would be, that many natives to the Atoll and many fishermen nearby were affected by the blast, it killed some natives from gamma exposure.
@thedrewster0408
@thedrewster0408 4 күн бұрын
Also there was a Japanese fishing boat called the “Lucky Dragon No. 5” that got caught up in the blast and twenty-three crew members were contaminated by the nuclear fallout and suffered from acute radiation syndrome, including the death of the boat’s chief radioman, Kuboyama Aikichi, who died six months later after the blast. This particular incident caused many anti-nuclear protests across Japan and was often compared to the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This incident was also one of the main inspirations for the now iconic movie monster, Godzilla.
@nonzerosum-my3hx
@nonzerosum-my3hx 25 күн бұрын
@ 4:35 What a stunning panoramic! The camera starts to the right of the Earth with high exposure so the stars are visible and the night side of the Earth is lit, then pans to the left to show how bright the day side of the Earth is, while lowering the exposure to reduce the brightness, so it looks normal, while the stars and the night side of the Earth go dark. I've never seen that before, anywhere. Now I'm going to be upset with every sci-fi movie and video game that doesn't feature an example of this.
@ScienceTime24
@ScienceTime24 24 күн бұрын
Thank you for noticing it
@nelsonbonelversaillesrieu5310
@nelsonbonelversaillesrieu5310 Күн бұрын
Those were completely different frames though! And are computer generated with advanced tech making it look semi real!
@nunyabiznez666
@nunyabiznez666 Ай бұрын
It's absolutely bonkers that something so small can wield such an awesome power 😬😳
@ronaldturner4849
@ronaldturner4849 Ай бұрын
E = m c squared
@chupacabra304
@chupacabra304 Ай бұрын
Look up cobalt salt bombs 🤪 thats some depressing wicked stuff
@southstalk
@southstalk Ай бұрын
I feel this is both a good and a bad time for...That's what she said 😅
@anthonymiller2038
@anthonymiller2038 Ай бұрын
@@southstalk I can only hope that someday my wife will say something like that! 🤣
@inutero10
@inutero10 Ай бұрын
Thats what i tell the chicks about myself
@rodgerm5311
@rodgerm5311 Ай бұрын
I guess the "" duck and cover "routine that I learned in grade school in the late 1950's would not work today.
@joaoneves5701
@joaoneves5701 Ай бұрын
Neither in that time😅
@blakena4907
@blakena4907 Ай бұрын
Nope. Thermonuclear weapons make Fat Man and Little Boy look like firecrackers comparatively.
@blakena4907
@blakena4907 Ай бұрын
​@@joaoneves5701With proper shelter underground, they'd have survived, but considering this was something the world hadn't seen before, yeah. They had no clue, and it wasn't survivable back then. Can you freaking imagine being there, when the first atomic weapons were dropped within a 5-10km radius..?
@jimslancio
@jimslancio Ай бұрын
"Duck and cover" could make a difference if you're far enough from Ground Zero.
@allangibson8494
@allangibson8494 Ай бұрын
It actually still works - if you are far enough away to see the flash, it’s the glass from your windows blowing in that will kill you. Thermonuclear bombs have a three second black window between the initial nuclear blast and following thermonuclear blast caused by ionisation of the atmosphere - enough time to duck from the immediate radiation bloom and following sonic velocity shrapnel.
@holdonasecondamigo599
@holdonasecondamigo599 18 күн бұрын
Well done. Great documentary.
@ChickenatorJr
@ChickenatorJr 25 күн бұрын
great vid
@epiccurious3536
@epiccurious3536 Ай бұрын
I'm glad you highlighted the fact that it could be "The Great Filter" beyond which no civilization ever survives.
@sukuna9142
@sukuna9142 Ай бұрын
Considering we are in a simulation, what's the longest amount of time humanity has survived prior to us getting rebooted, by a being on a higher dimensional level... I see us like one of those old box TVs .. like pushing the button with the initial flash in the center of the screen,accompanied by nothing but static
@sukuna9142
@sukuna9142 Ай бұрын
A❤❤❤❤😊❤010101010101❤
@epiccurious3536
@epiccurious3536 Ай бұрын
@@sukuna9142 Maybe someday we'll be able to really know what reality is. If we're in a simulation it could be just a game being played. When we extinguish ourselves the game is over? Boom, rinse, repeat?
@alicorn3924
@alicorn3924 Ай бұрын
​​@@sukuna9142 considering we are in a simulation? what? why are you saying it as if it was a fact?
@carlix8035
@carlix8035 Ай бұрын
@@alicorn3924It is a fact though. The question is, does it reboot all the way back to the beginning or just this portion of planetary events? If it’s the latter, that would suggest every other historical event never happened. What a mind f**k.
@dnice374
@dnice374 Ай бұрын
The great filter reference at the end only cemented my sub. Glad i found this channel, very nice
@ScienceTime24
@ScienceTime24 Ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@GLARebel
@GLARebel 20 күн бұрын
Sometimes I feel so defeated and depressed I'm like I don't even care if this happens, but imagine surviving a nuclear attack. That's gotta be a whole new kind of hell to experience and knowing my luck I won't have the luxury of being vaporized immediately.
@2412Bec
@2412Bec 2 күн бұрын
It tears me up how the USA believed this was "okay" Then, criticise "dictatorship " in other countries who 'threaten ' use...... I've no answer, unfortunately, but i don't like hypocriy
@glenndavis4452
@glenndavis4452 29 күн бұрын
This was common knowledge. Even for kids in my generation. It’s been so long, that some people today don’t think it’s a big deal. No, it’s an end of civilization event.
@johnr.timmers2297
@johnr.timmers2297 23 күн бұрын
Most British people who have lived on the island all their life can't comprehend the size of the US. People's perceptions of nukes are the same, but opposite. Nuclear weapons have been so dramatized that many people falsely believe that nuclear weapons can have a blast radius in the tens of miles and put out radiation that would make it forever unlivable. When in reality the blast radius is smaller and the radiation dissipates quite quickly, especially in an air burst. The fact is most of us aren't emotionally invested. The people worshiping nukes cannot say the same
@glenndavis4452
@glenndavis4452 23 күн бұрын
@@johnr.timmers2297 Modern nukes have a lethal radius of tens of miles. Ten to a hundred times Hiroshima is not a small explosion. The heat flash and radiation generated are bigger than the actual blast area. No big deal ?
@americanpatriot4227
@americanpatriot4227 20 күн бұрын
@@glenndavis4452 NO they dont, or rather the have a blast effect radius of the planet, as in a butterfly in China affects the weather in the US, but the Serious damage radius is less than 5 miles - The Burn Radius ( MODERATE ) is about 7 miles for a 1 Megaton weapon. NEARLY ALL Weapons are less than 1 MT now. Your simply ill informed or a cool aid drinker living in fear. Put down the glass, and do some research.
@EH-the-1
@EH-the-1 20 күн бұрын
@@johnr.timmers2297 What does living on an island have to do with this? The only one who can't comprehend, as far as we're concerned, is you.
@daytonaofcv6856
@daytonaofcv6856 19 күн бұрын
It's only a big deal if it happens. Being born right before the end of the Cold War. Nuclear weapons are just a part of life. We've been lucky so far. But if it happens it happens there is literally nothing we can do about it. We obviously can't disarm like stupid liberals want us to so we can be bullied by states with bombs. But MAD has worked so far. As long as someone doesn't launch multiple nukes I don't see the world ending. Plus there are so many other threats to human existence. Nukes almost seem merciful. Compared to gray goo, super pathogens, AI enslavement, micro plastic contamination, near complete ecological failure, humans beings replaced by AI, just to name a few.
@benmcreynolds8581
@benmcreynolds8581 Ай бұрын
It really frustrates me that such a positive, useful advancement: Nuclear Energy, has gotten sadly lumped together with these devastating weapons of war.. I wish we didn't have mental trauma that ties these weapons to such helpful advancements in energy production. Things have improved so much since the early days of nuclear energy and learning about radiation safety measures.. If only we could utilize it.. Too many people fear nuclear energy tho.. I hope that changes one day.
@jaquigreenlees
@jaquigreenlees Ай бұрын
I think it is the radioactive wastes from the expended fuel that bothers most people. With at least 2 reactor meltdowns having happened ( Chernobyl and one recently in Japan after an earthquake and tsunami ) without killing us off it's the dangerous waste products and safely disposing of them that will be the biggest concern.
@Fangman123789
@Fangman123789 Ай бұрын
If you really want to be frustrated, google Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors, find the wikipedia article on it, and read the "advantages" section. Its not a perfect source but it gives you an idea of what an amazing design for nuclear power LFTR's are and its very frustrating we never went with them partly due to initial construction cost being higher (though its much cheaper in the long run) and their inability to make nuclear weapons from the waste. They use about 99% of their fuel, and the waste is 83% short-lived but more radioactive and decays in hours to days instead of the 24,000 years a majority of current nuclear waste would take. The remaining 17% takes around 300 years to reach background levels, this is vastly better than current models achieve. To power the USA for a year would make about a briefcase sized amount of waste. Thorium is much more abundant than uranium (and silver, tin, and mercury) and is currently a nuisance byproduct of rare earth mining, we already have enough buried in the nevada desert to power the world for hundred of thousands of years. Also theyre 45% thermally efficient compared to 33% from BWR's and could reach 54% thermal efficiency with theorized improved processes and models since the 1960's. LFTRs require enriched uranium or spent nuclear fuel from current reactor models to kick start their reactions (great way to get rid of current nuclear waste thats radioactive for thousands of years otherwise) but then dont need enriched fuel to maintain their reaction, which is 1 of 4 reasons LFTRs are terrible for nuclear weapons proliferation attempts. They are inherently safe for multiple reasons. 1: if the core fuel heats up and begins to react too much the fuel expands and leaves the core and self limits itself, 2: the graphite rods that moderate the reaction have a similar thermal feedback limiting function, 3: The LFT salt also absorba more neutrons the hotter it is which is a 3rd form of negative temperature coefficient creating passive inherent safety limits to the reactions in the core. 4: Passive fail-safe, if power were lost or the plant abandoned it would melt a salt plug and self drain to a storage tank below and could be recovered later even. 5: If it spills its not really a huge deal, whatever it touches is radioactive but thats it and itll also drain into the storage tank due to the kitchen sink like design of the core room. 6: The fuel is extremely stable and will not react with air or water explosively or anything. 7: And the reactor can operate at atmospheric pressure. 8: Core doesnt need concrete or lead shielding. The worst thing about it is the corrosiveness which beryllium, nickel, lithium, and molybdenum is what would mainly be required to make LFTR's, plus theyre scalable if you want, they dont need concrete or lead shielding, the core is jacketed by the liquid fluoride thorium salt and absorbs the radiation and is converted into the uranium isotope needed for fuel and then pumped into the core in a continuos cycle that doesnt need to shut down to "refuel". Due to the molten liquid nature of the fuel/waste salt you can remove nuclear waste selectively by half life and remove xenon gas byproduct build up during operation to both stop xenon poisoning AND the gas is dissolved in the salt and cant build up pressure or require a shutdown to remove it, like conventional reactors. And thats literally just the tip of the iceburg, theres an unreal amount of pros to this tech and it irks me everyday that we arent going full steam ahead with it.
@MalachiWhite-tw7hl
@MalachiWhite-tw7hl Ай бұрын
Spot-on comment. I would further add that that trauma was not by accident. Certain organizations and environmentalist activist groups WANTED such a misunderstanding to occur to further their own ends.
@ice9594
@ice9594 29 күн бұрын
"Helpful advancements." Yeah, like the Fukushima nuclear disaster. The plant is still leaking 300+ tons of highly radioactive water into the Pacific -- daily since 3/11/11. It can't be stopped. Huge coverup. It's spreading to oceans worldwide, killing & radiating ocean life, causing cancer in people. Some of the radioactive elements have 1/2 lives of hundreds of years or more. I stopped eating all fish.
@lalacrypto1
@lalacrypto1 29 күн бұрын
We have been capable of building more efficient nuclear power plants since the beginning. They took longer to build so in the race with the USSR, we didn't build them. We can adapt what we have and recycle most of the waste we already produced to a tiny fraction of what we had. A small 5×5×5 inch cube per person for their whole life could be used.
@gefiltafish2187
@gefiltafish2187 25 күн бұрын
Underwater nuclear torpedo, should scare you more. Especially if it does achieve its target precisely ( meant to be aimed at sea shelves thus creating a huge tsunami due to mud displacement)
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 15 күн бұрын
The test-device fired in the Castle Bravo was the TX-21S SHRIMP device: Length: 179.5 in Diameter: 53.9 in Weight: 23,500 lb
@jeffreymarshall4572
@jeffreymarshall4572 Ай бұрын
Threads is a great movie that depicts how depressing it would be to survive a nuclear apocalypse.
@HaxxorElite
@HaxxorElite Ай бұрын
Great movie
@debndavid
@debndavid Ай бұрын
Agreed watched at school was terrified for years even now I'm scared of nuclear bombs
@HaxxorElite
@HaxxorElite Ай бұрын
@@debndavid Well if you live near a big city you'll probably die instantly so it's not all bad lol
@ortho-g9826
@ortho-g9826 29 күн бұрын
Threads barely comes close.
@morbidmanmusic
@morbidmanmusic 27 күн бұрын
you mean will be
@sueelliott4793
@sueelliott4793 29 күн бұрын
This should be shared worldwide.
@arjanmuyen3684
@arjanmuyen3684 21 күн бұрын
did u share it? 😉
@Greenpoloboy3
@Greenpoloboy3 21 күн бұрын
Ok, Just one final video before bedtime. Am sure it will be a nice one.
@brandonp8198
@brandonp8198 15 күн бұрын
Kilometers? Can someone remake this video with the tongue of a Bald Eagle?
@co.agmusic
@co.agmusic Ай бұрын
Incredible work on this video
@ScienceTime24
@ScienceTime24 Ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
@DennisCambly
@DennisCambly Ай бұрын
Did you hear +100,000,000 C (for Americans it's about 180 million F) and some folks believe they could survive 1000s of these nukes being dropped.
@shawnsanders6113
@shawnsanders6113 Ай бұрын
The only way to survive is to not drop them in the first place
@spagooter1807
@spagooter1807 Ай бұрын
I think some of us would make it but very few the real worry is radiation turning everything that wasn’t sealed before the blast life threatening, you’d have to cover your plants use light systems in a greenhouse and get soil from 10 feet down to ensure you aren’t creating food with alpha particles around after the fact and I don’t think sunlight would be showing so you better fight for that gasoline for your generators and even then I don’t know how you’d grow anything but you better figure it out quickly. Not to mention you’d have to be somewhere the wind didn’t travel after the attack. I’m not sure what you can grow in minimal light conditions but you’d have to find something that can consistently be grown without much sunlight cause you’ll be relying on generators and then find a way to sustain those light systems for the next 100 years. Assuming the sun won’t be out for awhile after that.
@DennisCambly
@DennisCambly Ай бұрын
@@spagooter1807 Wind from the nuclear tests in Nevada carried radiation north to cover a big piece of eastern Canada. With all the blasts shown in the video every pipe carrying water, sewer, gas, oil etc would be cracked. Would there be any remaining hospitals and first response facilities? Radiation sickness killed over 150,000 in Hiroshima years after the blast. Internet and everything electronic would fail to operate. For me I'd rather be standing facing the blast. Non-human inhabitants a million years in the future may wonder how a shadow appeared on the rocks.
@DennisCambly
@DennisCambly Ай бұрын
@@shawnsanders6113 A 1980's movie War Games with Matthew Broderick shows the insanity.
@gillesashley9314
@gillesashley9314 Ай бұрын
​@@spagooter1807The after radiation is the main issue with nuclear war. It's terrible.
@journeyon1983
@journeyon1983 25 күн бұрын
When doing videos like this, could you please show a conversion number from metric to American? I cannot conceptualize what a kiloton is or those other metric terms you use.
@awalk5177
@awalk5177 4 күн бұрын
The bombs were not "used in armed conflict", they were dropped onto civilians in what would be classified as a terrorist attack, a war crime and a crime against humanity.
@Support_Ad_Blocker
@Support_Ad_Blocker 10 сағат бұрын
Part of a pattern consistently exhibited by the U.S.
@jamesfrank3213
@jamesfrank3213 Ай бұрын
Imagine if Tsar Bomba was tested at its full potential yield...
@AlbertaGamer
@AlbertaGamer 28 күн бұрын
The Day After was the scariest TV movie I ever saw while growing up in the 80's
@rickhensen3278
@rickhensen3278 25 күн бұрын
It was scary, BUT it was too clean; BBC's docudrama "Hiroshima" REALLY depicts the nightmare of a nuclear weapon; interviews of survivors from Hiroshima giving eye-witness accounts of what they experienced & saw ; personal stories; from drinking "black rain" (radioactive raindrops) , charcoal bodies, people walking with their flesh hanging off them to 100's drowning in the river because of massive dehydration from buirns & them crawling over other people drowning the people beneath them. the slow agonizing death from radfiatin poisoning - This film depicts the horror of horrors of a nuclear weapon. And, Hiroshima was just one bomb & by todays scale , was very small ~15ktons vs todays typical yield of 92 to 495 kton warheads.
@tommyslavic898
@tommyslavic898 24 күн бұрын
@@rickhensen3278 Threads (1984) available on Vimeo is a UK movie showing UK before, during and after nuclear attack.
@americanpatriot4227
@americanpatriot4227 20 күн бұрын
And it was pure bullcrap. I guess the China Syndrome movie scared you all to pieces as well.
@soberthinking2102
@soberthinking2102 19 күн бұрын
Don't forget TESTAMENT. That was a great movie too. Wikipedia: Testament is a 1983 drama film based on a three-page story titled "The Last Testament" by Carol Amen (1933-1987),[2] directed by Lynne Littman and written by John Sacret Young. The film tells the story of how one small suburban town near the San Francisco Bay Area slowly falls apart after a nuclear war destroys outside civilization. It was one of the films, along with The Day After and Threads that portrayed life after a nuclear war, mostly in response to an increase in hostility between the United States and the Soviet Union. Originally produced for the PBS series American Playhouse, it was given a theatrical release instead by Paramount Pictures (although PBS did subsequently air it a year later). The cast includes Jane Alexander, William Devane, Leon Ames, Ross Harris, Lukas Haas, Roxana Zal and, in small roles shortly before their rise to stardom, Kevin Costner and Rebecca De Mornay. Alexander was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance.[3]
@kevinowens6010
@kevinowens6010 19 күн бұрын
Threads is a great movie to remove your happy thoughts. The best in getting a nuclear fix.
@macahdahma7382
@macahdahma7382 19 күн бұрын
Subscribed.
@RiseAtlantis
@RiseAtlantis 26 күн бұрын
I can never get over the fact how a car size nuke can leval a whole city voodoo science
@whosrobertseed
@whosrobertseed Ай бұрын
0:45 the sneaky fallout theme is subtle, but a nice touch.
@Dlf212
@Dlf212 27 күн бұрын
War ... War never changes .....
@csdn4483
@csdn4483 Ай бұрын
Note - on Castle Bravo, the reason the expected yield was so much lower than what the final yield was, is they didn't realize how much of an effect the Lithium 6. When they calculated the yield, they thought only the Lithium 7 would increase the yield and didn't account that 40% of the Lithium used, Lithium 6, would react.
@ericb592
@ericb592 23 күн бұрын
Yes, and when ignited, Li7 produces Tritium which significantly boosted the yield.
@davidjr4903
@davidjr4903 17 күн бұрын
muricun scientists too dumb
@atoriusv5070
@atoriusv5070 17 күн бұрын
Soooo why was the explosion for Hiroshima bigger on the size chart despite being 6 kilotons smaller?
@pop5678eye
@pop5678eye 11 күн бұрын
The Castle Bravo location shown is incorrect. The test was in the northwest corner of the atoll.
@twistedyogert
@twistedyogert Ай бұрын
*"Comrades! If we're not all dead after this sucker explodes, the vodka is on me. Lenin help us."* -TU95 pilot (probably)
@I_Fight_Instacart
@I_Fight_Instacart 20 күн бұрын
*"Guys! Let's name our plane after the dirty perverts who will indoctrinate American children in public schools and libraries 80 years from now!"* - Americans (probably)
@edwardpate6128
@edwardpate6128 Ай бұрын
The B53/W53 were the largest warheads ever deployed at 9 Megatons. The W53 was the warhead on top of the Titan II missile. At one point in the early 60's they were working on upgrading that yield to 25 Megatons.
@rickoshay5525
@rickoshay5525 27 күн бұрын
I thought back in the 1960s, the US B-52 bombers carried each 2 20-megaton bombs, and Russia tested out a Czar/Tsar Bomb, which was 50 megatons.
@tomyost2249
@tomyost2249 26 күн бұрын
Titan II Launch crew member here. We were so young and our job was to end civilization.
@rickhensen3278
@rickhensen3278 24 күн бұрын
FYI: As targeting improved, they reduced the yield ; they didn't have to destroy everything in a 10 mile radius for that one little ammunition depot; Just everything in a 5 mile radius:). Depending on yield of course.
@ericb592
@ericb592 23 күн бұрын
Actually the Mk-41 gravity bomb was the largest yield US weapon deployed at 25MT...To this day it still has the best yield to weight ratio of any nuclear weapon. They were retired in the late 70's
@caseylocke4474
@caseylocke4474 9 сағат бұрын
2:255 - When showing the scale of the nuclear weapons, why is the 21 kiloton explosion graphic smaller than the 15 kiloton one?
@snorttroll4379
@snorttroll4379 25 күн бұрын
I thinkbsmall autonomous drones might be the great filter as those work like neutron bombs
@davidwilder7542
@davidwilder7542 24 күн бұрын
Truly a top short documentation.
@AluminumOxide
@AluminumOxide Ай бұрын
Thanks for using the metric units
@SuiLagadema
@SuiLagadema 29 күн бұрын
Former grunt here. It is my highest hope that humanity will never use any kind of WMD ever, be it chemical, biological or nuclear. I still cling to the hope that rational and logical people will never press the "red button" ever again.
@davidsmith5094
@davidsmith5094 21 күн бұрын
Joe Biden is trying hard to start a nuclear war with Russia !! And it's all about Nato expansion !! Point is,,,not a lot of people understand why there's a Nato in the first place! There's no Soviet union anymore,,,all Russia want is to live in peace and security... What's so difficult about that ?
@user-uj9cc5ch5p
@user-uj9cc5ch5p 20 күн бұрын
I really think people should give serious thought about firing or even testing Nuclear arms. It is very bad for planet Earth. Mr. X
@jansenwilder1335
@jansenwilder1335 17 күн бұрын
My condolences to those woman and children who died in the blast and those that suffered the radiation..
@aandc2005
@aandc2005 Ай бұрын
That was one of the best nuke documentaries I've seen well done!👍
@bricefleckenstein9666
@bricefleckenstein9666 29 күн бұрын
We had a "wargame" simulated nuclear attack once when I was stationed on USS Ranger. Apparently at least one of the "nuke tosser" aircraft got within a couple miles or so and managed to "simulate" release of at least one weapon. After about 5 minutes of silence, the exercise was declared over. Yes, nukes cause that major of shockwaves AND displace that much water forming a tidal-type wave to sink a carrier on a "not all that near" miss.
@User-jr7vf
@User-jr7vf 27 күн бұрын
Given that air defences have improved significantly, do you think the US would be able to shoot down all the nuclear missiles before they reach their targets in the US?
@bricefleckenstein9666
@bricefleckenstein9666 27 күн бұрын
@@User-jr7vf Not this year. We don't have ENOUGH of them to cover all targets, and inland targets mostly are not covered AT ALL (most or all of our ICBM nuke defenses are Aegis ship based, and I'm not sure how well they would work against sub-launched missiles given the short response time - probably OK if those defenders are already at a high alert level when the launch happens, otherwise iffy to "forget it"). Perhaps in a decade if we start widely deploying comparable land-based defenses we'll be able to get 90% or more of them.
@superchuck3259
@superchuck3259 26 күн бұрын
@@User-jr7vf Russia has a 1,000 MT nuclear torpedo that is launched near (30miles) of US shoreline when looking at underwater geography could cause a several 100 foot high tsunami. Basically tossing docked aircraft carriers onto the land. But since the both sides are equally diabolical, both sides likely have something insane like this developed.
@sterix_gg
@sterix_gg 25 күн бұрын
@@superchuck3259 They supposedly have something similar around the UK just in case they need to sink the island lmao... I'm so glad to know we humans have planned well in regards to mutual self-destruction... actually... there is no "we".. I never planned for this. See the problem?
@Snipergoat1
@Snipergoat1 22 күн бұрын
@@User-jr7vf No It is one thing to shoot down cruise missiles or low altitude ballistics. It is another matter to shoot down a warhead from a true ICBM. They come down somewhere in the mach 25 range. We have gotten good at missile defense (in the age of computer targeting, speed isn't nearly the defense it used to be) but that kind of speed is quite different than couple of mach we usually deal with. A luckily place ship might, might get a lucky hit....maybe but the fact is even if they were prepared and waiting they are unlikely to be able to protect a city. That would take some very tricky and extremely expensive interceptors and associated guidance and tracking systems to do and frankly I don't think that we could make them reliable enough to justify the costs. Oh and while it is unlikely that a nuke will detonate if destroyed in the air, there is still that possibility. (The damage somehow sets off the ignition explosives before destroying the containment chambers.)
@alanwatts9232
@alanwatts9232 12 күн бұрын
I've often wondered what effect these weapons tests had on the ozone layer, and then they blame it on aerosol cans.
@christinel6616
@christinel6616 11 күн бұрын
I was born in Los Alamos in 1951. My father was an electrical engineer working on the projects there.
@treasuretrails
@treasuretrails Ай бұрын
Why did I get roped into this chaotic world man?.....
@TheIronDuke9
@TheIronDuke9 Ай бұрын
horny parents
@rushzeen
@rushzeen Ай бұрын
the most dirtiest war tactics ever used by mankind, its like if one cant win a hand to hand combat, pushing the opponent to fire while the opponent turns back to rest.
@CharlesVaughn-bm9gq
@CharlesVaughn-bm9gq Ай бұрын
The atomic bombs saved hundreds of thousands of American casualties in the planned invasion of Japan and perhaps millions of Japanese casualties.
@dsm3759703
@dsm3759703 Ай бұрын
The idea that warfare is fought with any sense of fairness is so naive it's heart warming. I have weapon that has a range of 100 meters....you have a weapon that has a range of 200 meters... The premise that you would willingly come within 100 meters of me, in the pursuit of "fairness", is laughable.
@TheNomad2727
@TheNomad2727 Ай бұрын
yeah the Japsanese during ww2 were well known for never doing anything "dirty"... just ask the POWs and the residents of Nanking
@rianmacdonald9454
@rianmacdonald9454 Ай бұрын
@@TheNomad2727 I like how you choose the Japanese as an example there - Name one country that hasn't done anything ''dirty''.
@TheNomad2727
@TheNomad2727 Ай бұрын
​@@rianmacdonald9454read the comment Im replying too dummy! are you so delusional you think I think Japan are all alone in being dirty?
@Yjn75
@Yjn75 20 күн бұрын
How considerate of the USSR to minimize the fallout of Tsar Bomba. Then again they're detonating in their own territory. Can't say the same for the US. The poor Pacific islanders and South East Asians didn't have anything to say.
@armadillotoe
@armadillotoe 25 күн бұрын
Just to put things in focus, we have had well over 2000 nuclear explosions on Earth.
@krashd
@krashd 19 күн бұрын
Someone made an animation of them all and by the time it really heats up in the 1980's it sounds like a video game with all the explosions popping off. One of the coolest animations I've seen.
@user-xb3td6ho5b
@user-xb3td6ho5b Ай бұрын
6min26sec to 6min 35 sec looks like 3 faces. One looking away, one like a chimp, and the last like a skull 💀. They start from right to left.
@jaimevalencia6271
@jaimevalencia6271 Ай бұрын
Nikita must’ve been like “ YALL WANNA SEE SOME COOL SHIT??”
@bucketsm1639
@bucketsm1639 18 күн бұрын
“A nuclear war is one that shouldn’t be fought, and cannot be won”
@sabbirtalukder2745
@sabbirtalukder2745 23 күн бұрын
"Our great filter".... It’s a nice way to put it.😅
@JustReed
@JustReed Ай бұрын
I do NOT want to survive a nuclear exchange. Any God help those that survive. The future would be hell.
@Alex.The.Lionnnnn
@Alex.The.Lionnnnn Ай бұрын
Obviously there have been many simulations run regarding the outcome of every possible scenario involving a nuclear exchange. Apparently Australia and New Zealand are the only places that have any likelihood of surviving. Partly because we aren't particularly important targets for Russia, and also because the spin of the earth causes air in the northern and southern hemispheres to spin in opposite directions keeping the two air masses largely separated. Australia has the best chance because of the sheer amount of space to grow food, so even with severely reduced sunlight, there's still the capacity to produce enough food. That's good and all, but then China became all bullish, so we're probably fucked here in Australia anyway. The moral of the story is, don't start writing comments if you haven't had your ADHD medication or you'll end up in a long rant. 😂
@JustReed
@JustReed Ай бұрын
@@Alex.The.Lionnnnn There's medication for ADHD? Crap, now they tell me. 😖
@JustReed
@JustReed Ай бұрын
@@Alex.The.Lionnnnn P.S. What medication do you take for your narcissism? Anti-anxiety meds? Just asking.
@iprofox3758
@iprofox3758 Ай бұрын
Even if you did survive we'd be coming for our land back. That you wouldn't....​@@Alex.The.Lionnnnn
@dependent-wafer-177
@dependent-wafer-177 Ай бұрын
Unfortunately, you cannot hide behind death.
@robertfindley921
@robertfindley921 Ай бұрын
You should have started with Truman's "Rain of Ruin" speech. More applicable.
@ScienceTime24
@ScienceTime24 Ай бұрын
Ughh what a miss. For some reason I didn't think of that.
@MojeeMosese
@MojeeMosese Ай бұрын
😅
@Kaotix_music
@Kaotix_music 18 күн бұрын
Sometimes i sit and think...maybe Nuclear Weapons was a necessary evil man, one way or another, was always meant to create. Wars have now become skirmishes in small factions or both sides being afraid to push one side further into the other in fear of a nuclear weapon being used. Politicians who make decisions of war now tread more lightly on other nations who hold the same power, in fear the other guy is more crazy than they are. Talks are more encouraged, Summits are now the norm, and geopolitics seems more "friendlier" than they were pre-1945. Not a single missile or bomb was dropped on the other side during the Cold War (which I argue never really ended), and we never had a war as massive as WWII ever since. A netflix documentary about WWII reminded me of the pure MASSIVE scale WWII really was. Humanity cannot handle another WWII and the answer to preventing it from ever happening again, was probably the strangest answer we never expected
@lilliancruz5029
@lilliancruz5029 21 сағат бұрын
It's horrible, I pray that people on both sides, every side can work it out, talk it out with out using weapons of mass destruction.
@tmoosy
@tmoosy Ай бұрын
@4:20 the non nuclear variant of the B83 is designed to deliver a nuclear warhead...
@jdiamatti
@jdiamatti Ай бұрын
I for one am not proud of the destructive horrors we've created as a species.
@luis.f6133
@luis.f6133 13 күн бұрын
No matter how much time passes, I know that Japan will never really forget these bombings....
@tompage6421
@tompage6421 11 күн бұрын
Shouldn't have started a war then. 💀🇬🇧
@Damion_morrison
@Damion_morrison 4 күн бұрын
Why are we destroying our planet, this is the only planet we got
@bobbyrayvictory6905
@bobbyrayvictory6905 Ай бұрын
Everytime I see these things I'm so happy in the past two years my family and I have left any population centers. We are definitely in the occupied fighting zones, but not the nuke zones. We are not populace enough to waste such an expensive weapon. F this crap. Get an acre or more, some chickens. Some good peoples, and a garden.
@jeremiahbell7496
@jeremiahbell7496 Ай бұрын
6:33 do you see the skull face appear
@jsp7205
@jsp7205 Ай бұрын
Yes
@TheIronDuke9
@TheIronDuke9 Ай бұрын
Ok whatever
@Ed_Stuckey
@Ed_Stuckey Ай бұрын
pareidolia
@petehuckleberry5068
@petehuckleberry5068 Ай бұрын
​@@TheIronDuke9you don't see it kid?
@gabrielmorales156
@gabrielmorales156 Ай бұрын
I see a skull face and an ape face.
@Yuki_Ika7
@Yuki_Ika7 26 күн бұрын
i have seen the actual plane Bockscar at the Air force museum in Dayton Ohio (i live about 2 hours away from there), it is the plane i always get the most erie vibes from, i don't like being around it for too long
@Illegalsnotwelome
@Illegalsnotwelome 3 күн бұрын
It's amazing that the testing alone didn't throw the world off its axis
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