Thanks for the memories, I was serving in the RAF and our squadron got posted there during Operation Grapple. I remember that morning very well, we sat on the ground with our backs to the detonation, at zero count the heat felt like someone had just placed an electric fire on your back, the brightness was so vivid we could see the bones in our hands that covered our eyes. A moment in my life that will live with me forever.
As bright as the sun. The dynamic range of film and a correct white balance, captured the brightness of the explosion so well, that it makes you realize how bright these things can be. It's like having a mini sun just show up on top of the ocean.
Wow, that is the most mushroom like mushroom cloud I've ever seen. The music makes it seem hypnotic, even peaceful. And the reality is something unimaginably violent....
If I'm one of the unlucky ones who isn't immediately vaporized, I'll have to remember this soothing music as my teeth turn black and my organs begin to liquefy. Hopefully I'll already be over the fact that my clothes and my skin are now fused together so I hope I wear a nice outfit when that day comes. This music will get me through it. Survivors will just have to follow Steve Guttenberg's example in 'The Day After Tomorrow.' If you're looking for a film that is probably the closest thing to what really happens, when one of these 'gadgets' goes off in a metropolis, watch "Threads."
Watching this video makes me so emotional. My grandad lived the horror….. but i get to watch this and be in ore at the beauty of how dangerous we can be. My Grandad said that after this he was never the same. Common thoughts amongst them were’ what have we done ‘
"what have we done?" Operation grapple happened like 12 years after WW2. I think at that point, when you're developing mass weapons of destruction, and you know they are mass weapons of destruction and have already seen what they can do... You're kinda past the point where you can ask "what have we done". You know what you did and why lmao
I can't think of a reason thermonukes should ever be deployed on earth, but I suppose they might become useful in the future to deflect asteroids or terra forming other planets and moons, so we can't eliminate them completely.
@@chrisk1208 it's relatively small compared to the all timers such as Castle Bravo and Tsar Bomba, but you are right - 3MT is very much in the heavyweight division. Adius is also correct of course - of this is the size and scale of 3MT then warheads with yields 5x, 10x etc larger are absolutely baffling.
@@iitzfizz The US had 500 B41 air-dropped bombs in service for a while, each with a 25 megaton yield. That's a combined yield of 12,500 megatons! Compare that to Britain's current arsenal that's maybe 4.8 megatons deployed and around 20 megatons in total for the entire stockpile.
That particular aircraft on this footage is the XD818 tailcoded Vickers Valiant, exhibited in the museum of RAF Cosford. When I was there, I touched this element of the history.
From a historical perspective - it was important for Britain to maintain its status as a 'great power' as one of the big three after World War Two (with the USA and Russia) and as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations security council. At this point in 1958 only the USA and Russia were nuclear powers with both fission and fusion devices - atomic and hydrogen bombs. The testing of such devices was then followed by France and China in the 1960s. For sure such archive footage is both beautiful and awe-inspiring to watch; however, you can only wonder at the damage inflicted on the earth's stratosphere by nuclear tests like these - which probably explains why they were partially banned in 1963. Let's hope such weapons are never used in anger by ANY state.
A 2 stage nuclear munition.The first flash is a fission detonation.The second flash comes from the hydrogen fuel being lit by the first fission reaction.
@@stefanimurray8381 No. Those processes occur within microseconds. The double flash humans can perceive relates to the shock front becoming opaque to the light within. This short time period between light maxima increases as the yield increases. For example, a 2-stage nuke with a yield of 20 kt would not have a noticeable double flash. But if a single stage 100% fission bomb had a yield like this one, it would have the same double flash. Ivy King is the largest nuclear test using a fission device (500 kt). It produced a clearly noticeable double flash.
@@SuperpowerBroadcastingOrange herald was the largest fission bomb, it was detonated during early grapple series test after 1st iteration of British H bomb produced disappointing yield.
@@deletdis6173 no orange herald was, it had some fusion fuel added but later analysis showed that it didn't boost yield. Ivy king didn't have any fusion fuel and was efficient, getting 500kt from 60kg of HEU, orange herald got +700kt from 120 kg of HEU though of lower enrichment. Both bombs were ment as a backup option. Ivy mike was physically large and heavy so ivy king design was produced till deliverable megaton range bombs became available after castle test series. Orange herald development followed same thinking but because it used up a very large chunk of British HEU production none were produced for stockpiling. By the time stockpiling decision had to be made britain had overcome its initial difficulties with H-bomb, after testing multimegaton bombs there was there was no reason to continue with a very fissile material expensive fission bomb.
IWM has copyrights to most grapple test videos and they are ruthless with unauthorised uploads, let's see how long this one stays. French also behave similarly, I don't know what's there problem with uploading nuclear test footage on RUclips.
"Oh dear!" "What is it?" "I've spontaneously combusted." "Oh I am sorry, but that may have been the thermonuclear fireball." "Oh that's quite alright, I've grown tired of living." "Ah, very good then."
Not at all, it would take several of these to completely destroy NY city. During the cold war the USSR had 5 - 7 strategic nukes targeted on London, and NYC is bigger than that.
@@TransoceanicOutreachIndeed, NYC is Massive. There's so many parts to it that One Tsar Bomba can do the job, if hit in the right place. But smaller yield nukes it would take several well placed ones to take NYC out.
@@paladin56 well a 3mt would definitely make the drop zone uninhabitable (so your right about that), but to take out NYC, the Tsar Bomba would wipe out NYC. Think of the Chain reaction it would cause for all the underwater pipes, gas lines etc. Also you can't forget that it was known (we will never know for sure), that the Shockwave circled the earth I think it was twice, now at the epicenter of that bomb, it would be more hell than it is right now. Okay at least 80% destroyed if that sounds fair.
Beautiful horror. Whatever one might feel about thermo-nuclear weapons this was an incredible technical achievement as Britain had been forced out of American efforts and had to go it alone. It is amazing to think it was Jeremy Corbyn's hero, Clement Attlee, who sanctioned its development.
Thats right. the British actually helped the U.S. develop their first atomic weapons, but when they wanted the U.S. to help them develop their atomic bomb, the U.S. refused. and so they had to wing it and come up with their own atomic weapons with what they had learned from helping the U.S., plus their own research they had done.
What I'd like to know is if there was a film camera in the drop-aircraft's Bombay showing the release of the test-device? If so I hope that the footage will be declassified.
They had no idea what they were there for. My Grandad hardly spoke of it, he told me that they had x-ray vision. My dad was already born by then, and they never had more children. It looks incredible but we get the benefit of watching it from history
@@MrShoopdawoop97 Except they didn't. Many of them died of cancer, but many servicemen who were there also died of cancer because they smoked like chimneys and were exposed to all kinds of toxic chemicals during their military service. Imagine being in a tank crew or working in a ship's engine room back in those days when the air would be filled with a mist of oil and fuel and you were breathing in exhaust gases all day long, not to mention asbestos exposure for many of them. All that toxic stuff builds up in the body and being in that environment wrecks your lungs. Even things like burning rubbish produces incredibly toxic byproducts that are still poisoning veterans and killing them with cancers and all kinds of other terrible diseases.
Weird opinion I know but I would love to live in an alternate reality where creations this powerful are used as art rather than weapons. I can’t imagine the feeling of experiencing this in person and I think many people would enjoy it if they knew it wasn’t for destructive purposes. Nuclear explosions are some of the most beautiful things I’ve seen but I feel like I’m missing 99% of the experience watching only videos of them. There would need to be far more precautions of course but I think they could be used safely with enough work.
New Year's Eve fireworks, but in International waters. Nations strive to out-do each other with beautiful and unique atomic explosions. The children look comical with their clunky safety goggles. Camaraderie and goodwill permeate the global audience, especially those gathered in the vast circle of in-person viewers, aboard ships and planes and skiffs and cruise liners, moored at safe distances. The spectacle goes on all day, with the greatest detonations saved for just after dark, and for a time, all the world is one.
Absolutely! If America announced one more atmospheric test of a 50-100kt device and a 5Mt device, and anyone was free to come and see them, I'm on a plane and I'd pay up to a few thousand dollars to be at the best viewing distance from both. I don't ever want to see one used in anger, but in a test scenario? Hell yeah.
It's also a better test in terms of how the bomb would actually be used. Aside from the initial heat pulse hitting more people due to lack of shade from low lying buildings, the shock front directly from the detonation itself is reinforced by the ground reflected shockwave when a bomb is detonated at the right altitude. This altitude varies with the yield of the bomb.
They wanted to test whether the bomb worked and did so as expected, but they didn't want to damage anything on the ground if it could be avoided. As tom mentioned, having the fireball touch the ground causes large amounts of soil and rock to be vaporised and smashed to dust which then gets heavily irradiated and mixed with radioactive materials from the bomb itself. That would have resulted in a massive amount of potentially very dangerous and persistent fallout, whereas a high altitude burst produces only a tiny fraction as much.
To see this and be in bewilderment of beauty and awe, yet how scary it is because this was 16x less powerful than the Tsar Bomb. What is even scarier and crazier to think about it how the Tsar had the ability to be 33x time more powerful than this. Just crazy.
The flash is almost blinding to watch! In reality, it must be like being engulfed in light and intense heat. Let me be right underneath the damn thing so I don't know about it! 😂
It still tries to be. That's why we bought Trident SLBMs from the USA in the 1980s - and will probably upgrade them to last well into the 21st Century ! It's probably a very good reason, too, why the UK agreed to Brexit from the European Union - to show the world that we are STILL a major player in the world - and we can go it alone without having to kowtow to 'nasty', greasy foreigners who don't like fish and chips and warm beer or endless conversations about the weather !
I love the way fans of the videos word things. “This MUST be grapple Y” sounds cool, but you topped it off with the only appropriate word for a nuclear test, a shot.
@@USViper it's hard for me to structure a sentence complimenting somebody's choice in words. Also, I may be the only person on the planet who finds the term "shot" to be be extremely cool when describing nuclear tests.
How utterly comforting that we need no longer rely upon God to end this world. (Technically, "destroy the biosphere," but there is an element of "if a tree falls in the forest ..." to it.)
These videos can’t give us any idea of the scale, even Trinity you’re seeing a video from 10 miles away Not sure if with IMAX or something it’s possible to give us an idea of the true scale of these things but probably not
So pretty but so deadly. All the radioactive fallout would give survivors under it instant cancer who would live only weeks at best. Many more would have died of their degree burns all over. The lucky would have been vaporized and never suffered a thing. 😮
Careful what you wish for, chap. Your choices, categorized by proximity to the hypocentre, are: (1). Very close: instantaneous death due to the heat. No time to appreciate the beauty at all. You'll be a one-man carbon footprint before the shockwave has even been created. (2). Moderately close: instant death due to the primary or secondary effects of the shockwave. Failing that serious or moderate injury. This will be followed by severe radiation sickness over the following few days, or months, or possibly years. Dreadful death, either directly by the radiation sickness or by the appallingly cruel cancers it spawns, is highly likely. An enormous price for the beautiful view of the blast which, incidentally, you never saw: either because you were looking away, or because you were looking at it - in which case you will have been instantly and permanently blinded by the light. (3). Not close. See above re: blinded by the light, if you happen to be looking in the right direction, and for the non-view if your back was turned. Either way, you are unlikely to die, which negates the entire point of your stated wish. You're welcome, @MilanPutnik Anytime pal.
Most nuclear weapons are now less than a tenth of TNT equivalent of this one. There is no need to have such huge devices when you can place them within 5 metres of the intended target.
Thanks for the memories, I was serving in the RAF and our squadron got posted there during Operation Grapple. I remember that morning very well, we sat on the ground with our backs to the detonation, at zero count the heat felt like someone had just placed an electric fire on your back, the brightness was so vivid we could see the bones in our hands that covered our eyes. A moment in my life that will live with me forever.
Fake
@@johnnylongfeather3086 Bet you are a young person?
@@johnnylongfeather3086I understand your pov Johnny but my money's on Legit.
cap
Thanks for sharing and thank you for your service.
🇬🇧 🤝 🇺🇸
Only two things I love watching on RUclips..
Cute cat videos and hydrogen bombs.
Buhahahaha 😅 the utube comments are always gold...
I'd just say Mushroom Clouds in general.
Either way I still agree.
la dualidad del hombre
Damn! My evil twin!
As bright as the sun. The dynamic range of film and a correct white balance, captured the brightness of the explosion so well, that it makes you realize how bright these things can be. It's like having a mini sun just show up on top of the ocean.
Not only as bright, it's literally performing the same process. Turning Hydrogen into Helium and releasing a ton of energy in the process!
Indeed... For a few microseconds it is as bright (per unit area) as the core of a star!
Much brighter than the Sun to the observer for a few seconds. We are talking 100+ calories per square CM near the fireball.
Wow, that is the most mushroom like mushroom cloud I've ever seen. The music makes it seem hypnotic, even peaceful. And the reality is something unimaginably violent....
The video is absolute perfection because of what you described so poetically. A special production indeed
@@JC-AussieDocostrue
I’d like to know how many miles across the mushroom cloud is at the end at its peak
Even Britain's Hydrogen bombs are neat and proper like wtf 😂
Scary and beautiful, I didn't think that a hydrogen bomb explosion could be beautiful. The shooting is gorgeous and musical accompaniment!
Wow 1:48 what a light.
2:15 what a view of the explosion.
2:34 the best view.
3:18 looks like a movie.
4:00 this scene is scary, sad and awesome.
This was evidently the test known as Grapple Y, carried out on 28 April 1958. 3 megatons.
Thanks, you are right with those dates.
Even their mushroom clouds look British
All orderly and cricket
One of the most beautiful thermonuclear explosions ever.
Not as beautiful as you
Is there any such thing?
@@heftosprod Yes.
Jup
An one of the deadliest 💀
If I'm one of the unlucky ones who isn't immediately vaporized, I'll have to remember this soothing music as my teeth turn black and my organs begin to liquefy. Hopefully I'll already be over the fact that my clothes and my skin are now fused together so I hope I wear a nice outfit when that day comes. This music will get me through it. Survivors will just have to follow Steve Guttenberg's example in 'The Day After Tomorrow.' If you're looking for a film that is probably the closest thing to what really happens, when one of these 'gadgets' goes off in a metropolis, watch "Threads."
1:31 you know it's a huge bomb when the distance between the flashes is that big
3 Mt for anyone wondering
The largest yeild britain ever tested
Grapple Y, right?
Yes @@victorvianna2512
@@victorvianna2512Yappers
Watching this video makes me so emotional.
My grandad lived the horror….. but i get to watch this and be in ore at the beauty of how dangerous we can be.
My Grandad said that after this he was never the same. Common thoughts amongst them were’ what have we done ‘
"what have we done?"
Operation grapple happened like 12 years after WW2. I think at that point, when you're developing mass weapons of destruction, and you know they are mass weapons of destruction and have already seen what they can do... You're kinda past the point where you can ask "what have we done". You know what you did and why lmao
@@Nopulu uhhh WW2 happened over 75 years ago and plenty of people STILL wonder "what have we done".. idk what youre on about lol
Awe* but yes
@@mateuszjokiel2813 It's her instinctive Minecraft callouts!
as an American scientist stated, I can't remember who, but his words were, 'and now I have become death, the destroyer of worlds'.
I can't think of a reason thermonukes should ever be deployed on earth, but I suppose they might become useful in the future to deflect asteroids or terra forming other planets and moons, so we can't eliminate them completely.
Would they deflect asteroids though? No Shockwaves in space.
"OMG it's so fluffy, I'm gonna die!" Despicable Me.
Enormous power. Baffles me how they continued to make bigger and bigger bombs when this was the nature of a relatively small one. Incredible size.
3MT is not small, the majority of warheads remain below the 1MT yield
@@chrisk1208 it's relatively small compared to the all timers such as Castle Bravo and Tsar Bomba, but you are right - 3MT is very much in the heavyweight division. Adius is also correct of course - of this is the size and scale of 3MT then warheads with yields 5x, 10x etc larger are absolutely baffling.
@@michaelfoley906 Castle Bravo messed up though.
Crazy how they were fielding the titan 2 with a single 9 MT warhead, 3x the size of this..
@@iitzfizz The US had 500 B41 air-dropped bombs in service for a while, each with a 25 megaton yield. That's a combined yield of 12,500 megatons! Compare that to Britain's current arsenal that's maybe 4.8 megatons deployed and around 20 megatons in total for the entire stockpile.
That particular aircraft on this footage is the XD818 tailcoded Vickers Valiant, exhibited in the museum of RAF Cosford. When I was there, I touched this element of the history.
That really gave a size comparison the way that was filmed. That was huge.
Agreed. This is one of the very few videos of nuclear weapons tests that really show the unbelievable size of the explosions. Very well filmed IMO.
I like how peaceful and profound sounding the music track is, considering the showcasing of a WMD.
And finally UK service veteran will get a medal from these test
Doubt it
Got the medal now but still they insist we were not at risk. I saw 5 of these things
Mushroom cloud was a perfect 10/10 in shape.
Shame you were not in it's epicenter with a comment like that !
From a historical perspective - it was important for Britain to maintain its status as a 'great power' as one of the big three after World War Two (with the USA and Russia) and as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations security council. At this point in 1958 only the USA and Russia were nuclear powers with both fission and fusion devices - atomic and hydrogen bombs. The testing of such devices was then followed by France and China in the 1960s.
For sure such archive footage is both beautiful and awe-inspiring to watch; however, you can only wonder at the damage inflicted on the earth's stratosphere by nuclear tests like these - which probably explains why they were partially banned in 1963. Let's hope such weapons are never used in anger by ANY state.
This is some great footage! I love the plane follow shots too. 3:14 is beautiful. Thanks for sharing
Beautiful yet dreadful.
Video: BOOM
Music: ✨S E R E N I T Y ✨
That was the prettiest mushroom of them all.
How British of them
High yield air bursts are beautiful, just beautiful.
What a sick human you are
You can see the shockwave rocks the palm trees at 4:19. That's just awesome.
Well spotted! 👍
How far away was that?
I think that's called wind
Grapple Y - the most powerful britain thermonuclear detonation.
One of the prettiest mushroom clouds. Got to be top 3.
More than Castle Bravo mushroom ? 😮
More than Castle Bravo's ?
@@princesymenouh2949more pure
Now, this is how you make a nuclear explosion video!
Perhaps the "best" footage of a nuke I've seen, except for maybe the under water Bikini one...
I would like to know who chose the soundtrack, and who/what it is. This kind of video makes all of RUclips worth it.
Wow, incredible double flash...
A 2 stage nuclear munition.The first flash is a fission detonation.The second flash comes from the hydrogen fuel being lit by the first fission reaction.
@@stefanimurray8381 No. Those processes occur within microseconds. The double flash humans can perceive relates to the shock front becoming opaque to the light within. This short time period between light maxima increases as the yield increases. For example, a 2-stage nuke with a yield of 20 kt would not have a noticeable double flash. But if a single stage 100% fission bomb had a yield like this one, it would have the same double flash. Ivy King is the largest nuclear test using a fission device (500 kt). It produced a clearly noticeable double flash.
@@SuperpowerBroadcastingOrange herald was the largest fission bomb, it was detonated during early grapple series test after 1st iteration of British H bomb produced disappointing yield.
@@SciolistI thought Ivy King was the largest fission weapon?
@@deletdis6173 no orange herald was, it had some fusion fuel added but later analysis showed that it didn't boost yield. Ivy king didn't have any fusion fuel and was efficient, getting 500kt from 60kg of HEU, orange herald got +700kt from 120 kg of HEU though of lower enrichment.
Both bombs were ment as a backup option. Ivy mike was physically large and heavy so ivy king design was produced till deliverable megaton range bombs became available after castle test series. Orange herald development followed same thinking but because it used up a very large chunk of British HEU production none were produced for stockpiling. By the time stockpiling decision had to be made britain had overcome its initial difficulties with H-bomb, after testing multimegaton bombs there was there was no reason to continue with a very fissile material expensive fission bomb.
"Precisely on schedule"
"A well sorted and proper hygrogen bomb video"
Peacefull music
Incredible footage..one of the clearest videos of this type ive ever seen
IWM has copyrights to most grapple test videos and they are ruthless with unauthorised uploads, let's see how long this one stays.
French also behave similarly, I don't know what's there problem with uploading nuclear test footage on RUclips.
"Oh dear!"
"What is it?"
"I've spontaneously combusted."
"Oh I am sorry, but that may have been the thermonuclear fireball."
"Oh that's quite alright, I've grown tired of living."
"Ah, very good then."
This was a 3 Mton bomb, more than enoght to destroy completely NY and surrounds at least to 30-40km
damn thats it? It looked bigger than castle bravo and tsar bomba for some reason.
Not at all, it would take several of these to completely destroy NY city. During the cold war the USSR had 5 - 7 strategic nukes targeted on London, and NYC is bigger than that.
@@TransoceanicOutreachIndeed, NYC is Massive. There's so many parts to it that One Tsar Bomba can do the job, if hit in the right place. But smaller yield nukes it would take several well placed ones to take NYC out.
@kevynhansyn2902 I may kot completely destroy yhe city but don't think you'd need more than one 3MT bomb to make NYC uninhabitable.
@@paladin56 well a 3mt would definitely make the drop zone uninhabitable (so your right about that), but to take out NYC, the Tsar Bomba would wipe out NYC.
Think of the Chain reaction it would cause for all the underwater pipes, gas lines etc. Also you can't forget that it was known (we will never know for sure), that the Shockwave circled the earth I think it was twice, now at the epicenter of that bomb, it would be more hell than it is right now.
Okay at least 80% destroyed if that sounds fair.
Beautiful horror. Whatever one might feel about thermo-nuclear weapons this was an incredible technical achievement as Britain had been forced out of American efforts and had to go it alone. It is amazing to think it was Jeremy Corbyn's hero, Clement Attlee, who sanctioned its development.
Windscale was the price you islanders had to pay for this, but...I think it was worth it!?
Thats right. the British actually helped the U.S. develop their first atomic weapons, but when they wanted the U.S. to help them develop their atomic bomb, the U.S. refused. and so they had to wing it and come up with their own atomic weapons with what they had learned from helping the U.S., plus their own research they had done.
@@MilanPutnik Windscale wasn't much of a price, but we lucky that it wasn't a lot worse.
What I'd like to know is if there was a film camera in the drop-aircraft's Bombay showing the release of the test-device? If so I hope that the footage will be declassified.
No, there is no such footage
Yes, there is. ruclips.net/video/8WcMm31RbMw/видео.html
3 megatons. Current strategic bombs have a yield of up to 100 megatons. The mushroom cloud would reach space.
That's like the only mushroom cloud I've seen that looks like the perfect illustrations of one
That misic would make a peaceful end..great video
Gorgeous! It must have been awesome to be there. Thank you so much for uploading!
The people who were there have ended up dying of cancer at a very suspicious rate...
Many said it was horrifying as they were told pretty much nothing beforehand
They had no idea what they were there for. My Grandad hardly spoke of it, he told me that they had x-ray vision.
My dad was already born by then, and they never had more children. It looks incredible but we get the benefit of watching it from history
That's because we were Guinea Pigs but were never told we were !!!@@Anonyomus
@@MrShoopdawoop97 Except they didn't. Many of them died of cancer, but many servicemen who were there also died of cancer because they smoked like chimneys and were exposed to all kinds of toxic chemicals during their military service. Imagine being in a tank crew or working in a ship's engine room back in those days when the air would be filled with a mist of oil and fuel and you were breathing in exhaust gases all day long, not to mention asbestos exposure for many of them. All that toxic stuff builds up in the body and being in that environment wrecks your lungs. Even things like burning rubbish produces incredibly toxic byproducts that are still poisoning veterans and killing them with cancers and all kinds of other terrible diseases.
Grapple X The first Hydrogen Bomb . No protective clothing. Blinded sea birds. Dead and rotting sea life. Not a pretty sight.
Made in the UK . When that actually meant something
Not to mention the delivery systems: Valiant, Victor, Vulcan.
My father was there that day!
Mine too.
Weird opinion I know but I would love to live in an alternate reality where creations this powerful are used as art rather than weapons. I can’t imagine the feeling of experiencing this in person and I think many people would enjoy it if they knew it wasn’t for destructive purposes. Nuclear explosions are some of the most beautiful things I’ve seen but I feel like I’m missing 99% of the experience watching only videos of them. There would need to be far more precautions of course but I think they could be used safely with enough work.
sure...let's do some acid though! ⬇️
Honestly, a VR experience in which you and friends can witness nuclear explosions live without the radiation would be amazing.
New Year's Eve fireworks, but in International waters. Nations strive to out-do each other with beautiful and unique atomic explosions. The children look comical with their clunky safety goggles. Camaraderie and goodwill permeate the global audience, especially those gathered in the vast circle of in-person viewers, aboard ships and planes and skiffs and cruise liners, moored at safe distances. The spectacle goes on all day, with the greatest detonations saved for just after dark, and for a time, all the world is one.
@@theluckyproject8044 oh man that's some beautiful dystopian scenery you got up 👆🏻 there! New type of lyrical expression permeates those sentences.😁
Absolutely! If America announced one more atmospheric test of a 50-100kt device and a 5Mt device, and anyone was free to come and see them, I'm on a plane and I'd pay up to a few thousand dollars to be at the best viewing distance from both.
I don't ever want to see one used in anger, but in a test scenario? Hell yeah.
Beautifully shaped mushroom
0:57
in a few seconds, this sound engineer will be deaf.
The Americans thought they could deny us after we helped them make their bombs. Silly Americans
🐰 NUKES ARE FOR KIDS 🐰
horribly beautiful. the real power of nature unleashed.
How high is the Plume?! Its like touching space.
my mother's rage more scary than hydrogen bomb...
I keep rewatching this to find all of the faces the cloud makes.
Beautiful shot.
The music is eerie and beautiful at the same time.
Fascinating video, thank you for posting . . . Why in the air like that? Doesn't seem like a good way to do it.
If you are asking why they detonated it off the ground- it keeps the fireball from scorching the earth, which creates far less "fallout."
It's also a better test in terms of how the bomb would actually be used. Aside from the initial heat pulse hitting more people due to lack of shade from low lying buildings, the shock front directly from the detonation itself is reinforced by the ground reflected shockwave when a bomb is detonated at the right altitude. This altitude varies with the yield of the bomb.
They wanted to test whether the bomb worked and did so as expected, but they didn't want to damage anything on the ground if it could be avoided. As tom mentioned, having the fireball touch the ground causes large amounts of soil and rock to be vaporised and smashed to dust which then gets heavily irradiated and mixed with radioactive materials from the bomb itself. That would have resulted in a massive amount of potentially very dangerous and persistent fallout, whereas a high altitude burst produces only a tiny fraction as much.
My dad Ray whitehead was there 1957-58 for all of Grapple 💔
59 squadron royal engineers.
He had no protection on the ditch and his hands to cover his eyes
To see this and be in bewilderment of beauty and awe, yet how scary it is because this was 16x less powerful than the Tsar Bomb. What is even scarier and crazier to think about it how the Tsar had the ability to be 33x time more powerful than this. Just crazy.
A true Mushroom Cloud
1:46 💥
Have you received his posthumous medal yet? I received my father's late last year.
From 2.26 on is Grapple Y, before that is I believe another test shot. Does anyone have any further information on the shots shown in this footage?
Which music is this?
Does anyone know which test of the "grapple" series this is? I'm thinking this is the Y test ( 3 Mt) , but I'm not sure.
In all probability, a boosted fission fusion fission bomb about 3 megatons max, not a true hydrogen bomb.
It looks more like a giant cauliflower near the end.
The flash is almost blinding to watch! In reality, it must be like being engulfed in light and intense heat. Let me be right underneath the damn thing so I don't know about it! 😂
Incredible footage
"Now I am become Death, The Shatterer of Worlds"
I am become gassy, the destroyer of tacos.
It looks like a floating mushroom
The nuclear power is so beautiful as terrorific.
What we have done
I wonder what happened to the original sound if there was any?
The eye of the lord! Behold
I miss the time when britain was a super power.
Isnt the U.K. still kind of a superpower? It's got insane influence on the world still.
Lets unite Europe brother
It still tries to be. That's why we bought Trident SLBMs from the USA in the 1980s - and will probably upgrade them to last well into the 21st Century ! It's probably a very good reason, too, why the UK agreed to Brexit from the European Union - to show the world that we are STILL a major player in the world - and we can go it alone without having to kowtow to 'nasty', greasy foreigners who don't like fish and chips and warm beer or endless conversations about the weather !
3:12 onwards, it's kind-of beautiful.
This must be Grapple Y... 3 megaton shot
I love the way fans of the videos word things. “This MUST be grapple Y” sounds cool, but you topped it off with the only appropriate word for a nuclear test, a shot.
@LarryStranger Not sure to say thanks, or screw off. Lol joking
@@USViper it's hard for me to structure a sentence complimenting somebody's choice in words. Also, I may be the only person on the planet who finds the term "shot" to be be extremely cool when describing nuclear tests.
There is no hope for humans with comments that I witness below
What was the total TNT equivalent for this test?
3 million tons
How utterly comforting that we need no longer rely upon God to end this world. (Technically, "destroy the biosphere," but there is an element of "if a tree falls in the forest ..." to it.)
Why have I never seen this footage before?
I don't know, have you looked for it before? Do you suffer from amnesia? So many other possible responses.
These videos can’t give us any idea of the scale, even Trinity you’re seeing a video from 10 miles away
Not sure if with IMAX or something it’s possible to give us an idea of the true scale of these things but probably not
What was the MT yield in tea?
3 mug tons
So pretty but so deadly. All the radioactive fallout would give survivors under it instant cancer who would live only weeks at best. Many more would have died of their degree burns all over. The lucky would have been vaporized and never suffered a thing. 😮
Since it's hydrogen, isn't that a non radioactive cloud? A clean nuke?
Nope, gamma rays come from every kind of bomb.
Or neutrons, which make surrounding matter radioactive.
It’s not as radioactive but still is
That it was an air burst certainly led to less fall out but still full of radioactivity.
Want to see the hydrogen sun and mushroom cloud like this over fcuking moscow ASAP.
Cheers from Ukraine! 🇺🇦
Horrific Beauty.
Omg so beautiful...🤩 I wanna die in a thermonuclear blast!!!❤️🔥
Careful what you wish for, chap. Your choices, categorized by proximity to the hypocentre, are:
(1). Very close: instantaneous death due to the heat. No time to appreciate the beauty at all. You'll be a one-man carbon footprint before the shockwave has even been created.
(2). Moderately close: instant death due to the primary or secondary effects of the shockwave.
Failing that serious or moderate injury. This will be followed by severe radiation sickness over the following few days, or months, or possibly years. Dreadful death, either directly by the radiation sickness or by the appallingly cruel cancers it spawns, is highly likely. An enormous price for the beautiful view of the blast which, incidentally, you never saw: either because you were looking away, or because you were looking at it - in which case you will have been instantly and permanently blinded by the light.
(3). Not close. See above re: blinded by the light, if you happen to be looking in the right direction, and for the non-view if your back was turned. Either way, you are unlikely to die, which negates the entire point of your stated wish.
You're welcome, @MilanPutnik
Anytime pal.
لن يستطيعوا الاختراق ابدا
In 2:13 that cloud on the right looks like hamster. 🐹
I noticed
Thinking.. every creature in the universe is scared shitless of us..
Aello mate, I'm At'm Bombb.. sounds likeh Bob, bu'a it's no'ah...
I liekh white, ju ya know wh'aah it's mean? I'm British 😂😂😂
🇺🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸🇬🇧♥️
How much megatons?
Great beard at 0.53
That was 24 kilotons bomb.
The Tzar bomba was 50 Megatons.
There are 200 Megaton bombs out there. 😬 Unthinkable actually.
There are no 200 Megaton bombs. The Tsar Bomba proved that weapons that large are a waste of material.
This was a 3 megaton bomb actually.
There was a 100 megaton bomb but it was tested to only 50 mt
This is a footage of a 3 mt blast
Most nuclear weapons are now less than a tenth of TNT equivalent of this one. There is no need to have such huge devices when you can place them within 5 metres of the intended target.