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As the new footage shows, the Tsar Bomba was enormous, weighing 27 tons (24 metric tons) and measuring about as long as a double-decker bus. An aerial bomber carried the massive weapon high over the Novaya Zemlya islands in the Russian Arctic, then dropped it via parachute before clearing the area. The explosion was so powerful that it actually knocked the aircraft out of the sky, causing the plane to plummet 3,000 feet (900 m) before the pilot could right it, according to Popular Mechanics.
Thankfully, no human casualties have been attributed to the Tsar Bomba detonation, and no bomb matching its power was ever tested again. In 1963, the United States, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and the United Kingdom signed the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, which prohibited airborne nuclear weapons tests.
www.livescience.com...
originally posted by: ManSizedSquirrel
a reply to: gortex This new footage is incredible to say the least. It's hard to really wrap my head around the size of this explosion. It's also very sad to think about this as being one of man kinds "greatest" achievements. Great post! S/F
originally posted by: Edumakated
originally posted by: ManSizedSquirrel
a reply to: gortex This new footage is incredible to say the least. It's hard to really wrap my head around the size of this explosion. It's also very sad to think about this as being one of man kinds "greatest" achievements. Great post! S/F
Go to this website and it overlays blast damage of known nuclear blasts on google maps to give you an idea. I am in Chicago, the tsar bomb would have essentially destroyed the entire city and suburbs going 40 miles out in any direction.
Nuclear Secrecy
The most powerful bomb in the history of mankind, the AN602, better known as the Tsar Bomba, or Kuzkina's Mother, was detonated on October 30, 1961. The power of the explosion of a thermonuclear bomb is estimated by various sources at 50-60 megatons. The diameter of the fireball from the explosion was 4.6 kilometers. The nuclear mushroom rose above the stratosphere, reaching an altitude of 67 kilometers. As a result of these tests, it was proved in practice that the maximum power of a nuclear charge, in principle, is not limited by anything, except for the availability of appropriate delivery vehicles. ~ Russian Troll
originally posted by: ManSizedSquirrel
originally posted by: Edumakated
originally posted by: ManSizedSquirrel
a reply to: gortex This new footage is incredible to say the least. It's hard to really wrap my head around the size of this explosion. It's also very sad to think about this as being one of man kinds "greatest" achievements. Great post! S/F
Go to this website and it overlays blast damage of known nuclear blasts on google maps to give you an idea. I am in Chicago, the tsar bomb would have essentially destroyed the entire city and suburbs going 40 miles out in any direction.
Nuclear Secrecy
Ah yes, I have spent many an hour on that site when things are slow around the office.
An underground nuclear test could go forward âwithin months, probably not years,â Walter said, adding âa fully diagnosticâ test that produced âlots of data, all the bells and whistles, so to speak,â would likely be years away. He said that he believes the NNSA has a borehole at the Nevada National Security Site that would be suitable for such a rapid test.
originally posted by: NoCorruptionAllowed
a reply to: EndtheMadnessNow
Trump is going to Burn the swamp! Yeah!
Actually any new nuke testing of any kind is not something the world needs. AT ALL