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Here are the 10 countries with the most nuclear weapons: United States - 5,550. China - 350. France - 290. United Kingdom - 225. Pakistan - 165. India - 156. Israel - 90. North Korea - 50. More items...
Godzilla is a fictional, dinosaur-like, monster that has atomic breath. Godzilla looks a bit like a tyrannosaurus rex (it has tiny arms) and its...
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A small bucket or large bowl can be filled with warm water and a face washer or cloth is all you need to get a thorough clean. For travelling...
Read More »It is estimated that there are approximately 13,080 nuclear warheads in the world today. While this is far fewer than either the U.S. or Russia possessed during their Cold War peak, it is notable that there are more countries with nuclear weapons than there were 30-40 years ago. At present, Russia maintains the highest number of nuclear weapons, with an estimated 6,257 total warheads. Of these, 1,458 are actively deployed (current START II treaty limits both the U.S. and Russia to 1550 deployed total), 3039 are inactive but available to be made active, and 1,760 are retired and awaiting dismantling. The United States follows closely behind with 5,550 total nuclear weapons: 1,389 active, 2,361 inactive but available, and 1,800 in line to be dismantled. A nuclear weapon is an explosive device that derives its destructive force from nuclear fission, nuclear fusion, or a combination of the two. Nuclear weapons are alternately called atom bombs, atomic bombs, A-bombs, nuclear bombs, nuclear warheads, or simply nukes. All nuclear weapons fit into one of two broad categories: fission and combination weapons, or the even-more-destructive fusion-based designs, which are technically thermonuclear weapons and may also be referred to as thermonuclear bombs, fusion weapons, hydrogen bombs, or H-bombs. Nuclear weapons unleash enormous amounts of explosive force, which is measured in kilotons (1,000 tons of TNT) and megatons (1,000,000 tons of TNT), as well as heat and radiation. They are easily the most fearsome weapons on Earth, capable of producing more death, destruction, injury, and sickness than any other weapon. To date, nuclear weapons have been used in war only twice. At the end of World War II, the United States dropped a nuclear bomb called Little Boy on Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945, and a second bomb called Fat Man on Nagasaki, Japan, on August 9, 1945. Little Boy detonated with an explosive force of approximately 15 kilotons, which leveled most buildings within a 1-mile radius. The shock wave was followed by a blast of heat at 6,000°C (10,830°F), which ignited or incinerated anything flammable and turned the blast zone into a firestorm. Finally, the explosion produced lethal ionizing radiation and lingering radioactive fallout, in which debris blasted into the stratosphere by the initial explosion is held aloft by atmospheric winds and settles back to Earth over the next several days. All told, the bombing of Hiroshima was estimated by a 1945 government report to have resulted in 66,000 deaths and another 69,000 injuries. Nagasaki's totals were a lesser, but still devastating 39,000 deaths and 25,000 injuries.
The People Who Live Off the Grid The part time off-gridders, those with off-grid second homes/cabins. Off grid by choice. Unable to pay their rent...
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Hitting and destroying this point at the back of the human head with a single bullet causes the person to instantly and completely collapse without...
Read More »The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki established nuclear weapons as the ultimate weapons of war, which kicked off an arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union. A major component of the "Cold War," in which the U.S. and U.S.S.R. openly competed without actually declaring war on one another, the stockpiling of nuclear weapons continued into the late 1980s. According to the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, the nuclear arms race reached its peak in 1986, by which time the Soviet Union possessed more than 40,000 nuclear warheads and the United States had 23,000 (down from more than 31,000 in 1967). Much of this proliferation was based around the idea of "mutually assured destruction," in which both sides believed that the best way to avoid nuclear war was to have so many nukes that the opponent would not launch an attack because they feared they could not destroy enough of the target country's arsenal to avoid being devastated themselves by a retaliatory attack. After the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, thousands of nuclear weapons on both sides were dismantled.
Read More Books If you don't read much, you may want to set your goal at a smaller number like reading 12 books this year (that works out to 1 per...
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When hardwoods are burned in good conditions for a fire, they produce very little smoke or unhealthy particulate matter. A few examples of the most...
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Loving kindness, justice and righteousness make Him happy. God not only delights in these things, but does them! God not only delighted in loving...
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Once we have food, water and shelter we must feel safety, belonging and mattering. Without these 3 things humans crave we can not get in their...
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