![]() ![]() Which is a twisted way to look at nuclear blast planning programs, I know, but when it comes to nuclear armaggeddon, you take your jollies where you can. Everything inside the fireball radius (inner yellow line) is vaporized fatalities in the larger. Each of the tools is useful, but Outrider’s is the most graphically impressive and most enjoyable to use. The impact of the Tsar Bomba, the largest Soviet nuclear bomb ever tested, on New York City. Light damage to a radius of 8.8 miles (243 sq. Moderate damage to a radius of 5.8 miles (106 sq. The detonation of the Tsar Bomba, the world’s most. Heavy damage to commercial buildings would extend to a radius of 3.2 miles (32 sq. A new study offers insights into how the United States reacted to Tsar Bomba, a planet shaker that made the deadly Hiroshima blast look tame. Ground Zero is another tool that does something similar using Google Maps. You can also select between a surface blast or airburst, and four different bombs: the 15KT ‘Little Boy,’ North Korea’s 150 KT Hwasong-14, the US’s 300KT W-87, and the 50,000 KT Tsar Bomba. Destruction of all but hardened facilities would extend to a 0.6 mile radius (area of 3 sq. Outrider’s map is a sequel, of sorts, to Alex Wellerstein’s NUKEMAP, a stripped down and less graphically impressive website that does the same thing. A surface blast greater radioactive fallout while an air burst would cover a wider geographic area. A handy drop down allows users to pick various nukes to see their effects-including the North Korean Hwasong-14-and see the difference between a surface detonation and an air burst. Outrider’s interactive nuclear blast map allows users to quickly put in their data and get a nice map of the fireball, shockwave, radioactive ring, and heat blast. if a nuclear bomb as powerful as the infamous 'Tsar Bomba' was detonated on them. Well, now there’s a nuke map tool that’s pretty and fits your busy schedule. As an example, you can use the model to estimate what would happen to the largest cities in the U.S. ![]() It’s a pressing question in our modern era of refreshed nuclear anxiety. The Doomsday Clock is closer to midnight than it’s been since the Cold War and everyone is wondering-just how dead would I be if a nuclear weapon hit my town or city? North Korea has nuclear weapons, Russia is rapidly modernizing its nuclear arsenal, and there’s a chance Washington won’t renew it’s denuclearization agreements with Moscow. ![]()
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