Evolution of Nuclear Bombs

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  • Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
  • Today we discuss the evolution and history of the atomic bomb aka nuclear bomb aka atom bomb aka a bomb aka nuke. Thanks for watching and be sure to subscribe for more content! (usually about tornadoes/weather)
    Contents:
    0:00 Intro
    1:02 The Trinity Test - First Atomic Bomb
    1:48 Hiroshima and Nagasaki
    2:48 Operation Crossroads - Able
    3:16 Operation Crossroads - Baker
    4:00 Operation Sandstone - Yoke
    4:50 RDS-1 First Soviet Atomic Bomb
    5:42 Operation Ranger - First at Nevada Test Site
    6:03 Operation Greenhouse George - First Nuclear Bomb over 200kt
    7:12 Operation Buster Jangle - First with Soldiers
    7:41 First UK Atomic Bomb - Operation Hurricane
    8:27 First Hydrogen Thermonuclear Bomb - Ivy Mike
    8:51 Largest Fission Bomb - Ivy King
    9:05 First Soviet H Bomb - RDS 6
    9:30 First Artillery Nuke - Operation Upshot Knothole Grable
    10:02 Largest US Atomic Bomb - Castle Bravo
    10:44 Nuke Town Operation Teapot Cue - Apple II
    11:18 Operation Wigwam
    11:36 First True Soviet H Bomb - RDS 37
    12:28 Operation Plumbbop - Largest Blast Over Continual US
    13:08 First British Thermonuclear Bomb - Grapple X and Y
    13:44 First High Atmosphere - Operation Hardtack Teak - Argus
    14:19 First French Atom Bomb - Gerboise Bleue
    14:49 Largest Atomic Bomb Ever - Tsar Bomba
    15:22 Operation Nougat
    15:35 First Nuke Launcher Operation Sunbeam - Davy Crockett
    16:00 First ICMB Test - Frigate Bird
    16:52 First Chinese Atomic Bomb Test
    18:18 Last US Test - Shot Divider of Operation Julin
    Some sick Atomic Videos:
    Nuclear Vault - 50 Megaton Tsar Bomba Declassified
    • 50 Megaton Tsar Bomba ...
    Largest US Test
    Atomcentral - Castle Bravo:
    • Castle Bravo
    Creepy Soviet Thermonuclear Test
    soviet nukes - RDS-37 Soviet hydrogen bomb test
    • RDS-37 Soviet hydrogen...
    Atomic Cannon Test
    • Atomic Bomb Test
    Atomcentral Hardtack Umbrella - Underwater Nuclear Burst
    • Hardtack Umbrella - Un...
    Atomcentral Trinity Test Latest HD Restoration
    • Trinity Test Latest HD...
    Vivid History - Operation Crossroads Baker Test
    • 1946 Report on the Ato...
    Music:
    Falling Forever
    Pinned Comment that I can copy when I upload video lol:
    Sooo I watched Oppenheimer and got really into atomic bombs last week lol Just a lil break from tornadoes and severe weather. Don't worry though as "Rare Tornadoes in Unlikely Locations" is coming out next week! I also have a few hurricane videos I'm working on :) Thanks for watching!
    #oppenheimer #history #nuclear

Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @SwegleStudios
    @SwegleStudios  10 месяцев назад +1986

    Sooo I watched Oppenheimer and got really into atomic bombs last week lol Just a lil break from tornadoes and severe weather. Don't worry though as "Rare Tornadoes in Unlikely Locations" is coming out next week! I also have a few hurricane videos I'm working on :) Thanks for watching!

    • @maxbronson204
      @maxbronson204 10 месяцев назад +34

      honestly one of the best movies i have watched

    • @Kiwii.TheGoat
      @Kiwii.TheGoat 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@maxbronson204Same. Watched it like 2 hours ago and I’m still shocked

    • @superskullmaster
      @superskullmaster 10 месяцев назад +12

      So long as you dont get a bunch of facts wrong you’ll be ok. That being said, please note that 1,000x the yield does not mean the explosion is 1,000x bigger.

    • @WXC719
      @WXC719 10 месяцев назад +1

      SAME !

    • @aaronTGP_3756
      @aaronTGP_3756 10 месяцев назад +3

      Saw it yesterday. A very tiring movie, but it was worth it.

  • @smooth_ops2942
    @smooth_ops2942 10 месяцев назад +1418

    The underground test at 17:50 really shows you the power of nuclear explosions, the whole ground moved like a wave. The force required to do that is just utter insanity.

    • @jaredloveys9617
      @jaredloveys9617 10 месяцев назад +79

      That wasn't even one of the strong bombs either imagine a 50mt explosion underground

    • @jaredloveys9617
      @jaredloveys9617 10 месяцев назад +3

      @bjek343 well yh but its not anything newr to what we can do and we don't have anything that big in the arsenal cause there's not point

    • @spingebill8551
      @spingebill8551 10 месяцев назад +48

      Also 8:56. The cameraman really captures how insanely bright and massive that explosion was. You can even see the radiation damage the film near and shortly after the explosion!
      It’s a ball of plasma as large as a city!

    • @mortem4342
      @mortem4342 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@bjek343 Wtf is level 12 on the Mercalli scale, does that transfer to the Richter scale?

    • @kali6651
      @kali6651 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@mortem4342It's seismic waves measured (Richter) and Mercalli is a twelve point scale based on observed effects.

  • @icarus1228
    @icarus1228 10 месяцев назад +1763

    My grandfather worked on operation Castle. I still have the pictures he took of the bomb tests. He said that no one was expecting any of them to be as big as they were. When they tested the bombs, he was wearing a ballcap. He was told to turn it backwards to protect his neck from radioactive fallout. It did protect his neck, but the little rectangular hole in the back of the cap made him get a radiation burn on his forehead.

    • @godzilla6911
      @godzilla6911 10 месяцев назад +152

      Castle Bravo is my favorite nuclear bomb ever. It's the real life Godzilla, yes Ishiro Honda was flying in a plane over the Pacific ocean when he looked out his window and saw Castle Bravo explode. Castle Bravo is Godzilla

    • @Bobbshandle
      @Bobbshandle 10 месяцев назад +66

      here comes the sun

    • @CallistoAndrea777
      @CallistoAndrea777 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@Bobbshandle😂

    • @jerry3790
      @jerry3790 10 месяцев назад

      @@Bobbshandleabbey road

    • @fictionsolosanyverseyounam7599
      @fictionsolosanyverseyounam7599 10 месяцев назад +9

      Anyway to see the picture

  • @SuperpowerBroadcasting
    @SuperpowerBroadcasting 10 месяцев назад +410

    12:02 The soldier wasn't simply "below" per se. He was in a trench dug about 30 kilometres from the point of burst, to give you an idea of how powerful 1.6 megatons is

    • @mazzae6084
      @mazzae6084 9 месяцев назад +2

      Was this for testing purposes?

    • @SuperpowerBroadcasting
      @SuperpowerBroadcasting 9 месяцев назад +20

      @@mazzae6084 They scaled down the blast to 1.6 megatons from the device’s 3.2 megaton rating in order to better ensure the safety of the observers. It still wound up causing 2 casualties. One was 70 kilometres away when a roof collapsed in Kurchatov.
      It should be noted the device detonated in a weather inversion which reflected a lot of the shockwave that would have blown upwards into space back down to earth. The shockwave was much stronger than predicted as a result. They didn’t know how a weather inversion would amplify the shock fronts

    • @NO20731
      @NO20731 8 месяцев назад

      wasnt rds 37 50 mt?

    • @NO20731
      @NO20731 8 месяцев назад

      nvm

    • @jcfalsebutactual
      @jcfalsebutactual 8 месяцев назад

      @@NO20731 No, that's the Tsar Bomba you're thinking of.

  • @-Hartmann-
    @-Hartmann- 9 месяцев назад +195

    As you briefly mentioned, the Tsar Bomba was supposed to yield at least 100mt, but the scientists worried it might cause irreversible planetary effects. They still made it, but fortunately never used it. They had also sketched the idea of an even more powerful one than the 100mt one, but scrapped the idea after Tsar Bomba was tested.

    • @raghav1026
      @raghav1026 9 месяцев назад +32

      This restored 1% of my faith in humanity

    • @AlexxxxxSaysHi
      @AlexxxxxSaysHi 7 месяцев назад +48

      They decided anything over 100mt was pointless as the explosion would not wrap around the curvature of the earth, so above 100mt you would just be launching debris further into space rather than destroying more targets.

    • @Zorro9129
      @Zorro9129 7 месяцев назад +8

      The reason was because the additional uranium would spread radiation far enough to prevent further tests at that location.

    • @mahazroko6753
      @mahazroko6753 7 месяцев назад +36

      They reduced its yield to give the pilots delivering it a chance to get away from the blast.

    • @prophecyrat2965
      @prophecyrat2965 7 месяцев назад

      @@mahazroko6753Autonomous Bombers Enter the Atmosphere 🦾🤖🔥☢️💀🏭

  • @coreybaumy23
    @coreybaumy23 10 месяцев назад +4006

    Being a North Dakotan my favorite piece of trivia that I bring to any nuclear bomb conversation is that at one point during the cold war North Dakota was the 3rd largest nuclear power in the world behind the US and the Soviets. Obviously we are part of the US, but it just gives you context as to how many nuclear missiles the US had if just one state had seceded and how little the rest of the world had.

    • @eastvilleholdingscorporate7881
      @eastvilleholdingscorporate7881 10 месяцев назад +185

      Actually, according to the US constitution, North Dakota did not meet the qualifications for statehood or admittance to the union. Half as Interesting has a video about it, check it out.

    • @fromthefire4176
      @fromthefire4176 10 месяцев назад +88

      Btw I never really understood why the Midwest. By the time they had icbms, being in the continental interior wouldn’t be any better than anywhere else, why not put all the silos in Alaska? They instead ensured our agricultural core would be annihilated and chilled under a debris cloud from everything burning, and then all that junk would drift east on the winds as if the east coast wouldn’t be screwed enough, and nowhere for anyone to run to escape the west to east dispersion of radiation. If we had them in Alaska, they’d have to nuke both to destroy both, and farmland doesn’t generally rank as a target worth a nuke iirc.

    • @coreybaumy23
      @coreybaumy23 10 месяцев назад +69

      @@fromthefire4176 I had the same question when I first heard about it. The only explanation that I have found was about keeping the nukes away from high population areas, but my next thought was ND's agricultural importance and it would ruin that for 100's of years. I thought about Alaska and wondered about weather and maybe its harder to keep nukes there? Though ND also has harsh winters. My own theory is that nobody really thinks ND is any threat and most people don't even know it exists and therefore they hoped they were safe haha.

    • @coreybaumy23
      @coreybaumy23 10 месяцев назад +18

      @@eastvilleholdingscorporate7881 To be completely honest, it is really annoying that whole thing happened and exists. Thanks for annoying me with that info.

    • @SnowMaverick
      @SnowMaverick 10 месяцев назад +7

      Another person from North Dakota

  • @yayhandles
    @yayhandles 10 месяцев назад +96

    Fun fact 1: When the Tsar Bomba was detonated, windows in Finland over 500 miles away shattered (maybe 600, but I couldn't remember with 100% confidence off the top of my head).
    Fun fact 2: The seismological shockwave from the Tsar Bomba went around the world 3 times.

    • @madfluffyfox8739
      @madfluffyfox8739 Месяц назад +5

      Fun fact 3: The bomb was dropped with a parachute attached to it, so that way the bomber and its crew can fly away from it and be safe enough to not immediately implode. When the bomb detonated, the plane shook so violently that the pilot said: “well. Buckle up. I’m not confident we are making it, and we’ll be in the records as the people to die to the biggest bomb in the world.”

    • @yayhandles
      @yayhandles Месяц назад

      @@madfluffyfox8739 Fun fact 4 that I can't remember if it was mentioned in the video because I'm not re-watching it: The bomb's original yield was projected to be 100 megatons, but the Soviets decided to reduce this by ~50% for the test, as they did not believe it would be possible for the bomber crew to escape the blast at full yield.

    • @themcbeehive
      @themcbeehive Месяц назад +1

      fact 5 nowun cars

    • @themcbeehive
      @themcbeehive Месяц назад

      aparently a child got in to my YT

    • @yayhandles
      @yayhandles Месяц назад

      @@themcbeehive I sincerely apologize; I reacted quite meanly.

  • @SuperpowerBroadcasting
    @SuperpowerBroadcasting 10 месяцев назад +117

    11:54 The footage of RDS-37 is absolutely spectacular. The fact that there was a casualty at 70+ kilometres from the hypocentre AND that the device was at half power is wild

  • @zewalon
    @zewalon 10 месяцев назад +271

    My Grandfather back in the day when Estonia was still in the Soviet Union was one of the guys who worked on a atomic bomb delivery system. He told a story of seeing it once, once only. How he described it was " I hope hell does not look like that "

  • @Matt-vs4zz
    @Matt-vs4zz 10 месяцев назад +599

    There was also the Vela Incident in 1979 where a US satellite caught evidence of a believed atmospheric nuclear test by Israel and South Africa. It's a little bit of nuclear intrigue that continues to this day as neither Israel nor South Africa has admitted to carrying out the test and Israel has never even admitted to possessing nuclear weapons, even though it almost certainly does.

    • @pipoargenti6912
      @pipoargenti6912 10 месяцев назад

      and seems taht nobody cares about Israel being that dangerous.. because they rule the world media

    • @mexicanopdb
      @mexicanopdb 10 месяцев назад +74

      Just Israeli things to do...
      But I still wonder if we'll ever learn if South Africa had a nuke

    • @duncanmcgee13
      @duncanmcgee13 10 месяцев назад +68

      Its pretty known that Israel has them and are saying they dont just to say they dont

    • @danielstockwell2424
      @danielstockwell2424 10 месяцев назад +65

      ​@mexicanopdb8452 South Africa definitely did, they are also the only nation to ever give up nuclear weapons

    • @Evan_Bell
      @Evan_Bell 10 месяцев назад +56

      ​@@mexicanopdbWe know South Africa produced nuclear weapons. This isn't controversial.

  • @ld_ryan_u
    @ld_ryan_u 10 месяцев назад +45

    Operation Plumbbob was also noteworthy for (in theory) sending a specialized heavy manhole cover into space. Although we don't know for certain, the math suggests the cover more than likely made it off of the planet, making it one of the first man-made objects to escape Earth.

    • @Jaxenmarks
      @Jaxenmarks 2 месяца назад +4

      It also was the fastest man made object in history join 130,000 miles per hour

    • @ranimdude
      @ranimdude 15 дней назад +1

      It reached a speed of about mach jesus

  • @randomrahul5221
    @randomrahul5221 10 месяцев назад +11

    12:38 those people were standing down below the nuke when it exploded mid air.
    God knows how they even thought of volunteering for this..

  • @buckhorncortez
    @buckhorncortez 10 месяцев назад +286

    The blast damage goes up by a factor of 2/3 for doubling the yield. This means a bomb with twice the yield of another bomb only creates 1.6 times more blast damage. It's still a lot of damage, but the point is that the damage doesn't follow a linear increase in the yield.

    • @bruskydu
      @bruskydu 10 месяцев назад +8

      diminishing returns

    • @tiutran2610
      @tiutran2610 10 месяцев назад +11

      So multi warheads range from 10kt-500kt on one ICBM is more efficient.

    • @thekwoka4707
      @thekwoka4707 10 месяцев назад +15

      @@tiutran2610 That's also to ensure some warheads make it past air defenses.

    • @seanguy6351
      @seanguy6351 10 месяцев назад +19

      I'll be sure to mention that to the person next to me before the blast wave hits us. Positivity!

    • @ZyronDel
      @ZyronDel 10 месяцев назад +5

      What do you mean by damage? Are you talking about the blast radius? The energy decreases by 1/distance cubed as it spreads. Where did you get the 2/3 number from? I would like to read about it.

  • @cerviplays6691
    @cerviplays6691 10 месяцев назад +25

    My uncle’s father was one of those soldiers in operation buster jangle, he survived the radiation but died from Covid in 2020

    • @cristinkapteina9485
      @cristinkapteina9485 2 месяца назад +3

      So your grandpa

    • @201LiLE201
      @201LiLE201 Месяц назад +1

      @@cristinkapteina9485his uncle could have a different father. My dad and his brothers have different dads. I’m not going to call my uncles father grandfather when in fact he’s not my grandfather

  • @bigsauce1116
    @bigsauce1116 8 месяцев назад +15

    your channel is gonna blow up no pun intended good stuff man

  • @feeberizer
    @feeberizer 8 месяцев назад +16

    My father was in the Army at Trinity as part of the Photography and Spectography group. Not only did they not know how large the blast would actually be, but they didn't know if they'd even be able to _see_ the blast in the darkness. There are photos of my father working on the flash bomb array to illuminate the test. Some of the flash bombs were duds, but it didn't matter since people in outlying areas thought the sun rose at 5:29 am that morning. Officials put out a story in the papers that a munitions depot had exploded. The project's existence was finally revealed after Hiroshima was bombed.

  • @convivial98
    @convivial98 10 месяцев назад +121

    Great video and very informative! One thing that I think worth mentioning is that while the Trinity site and the marshall islands were less populated, at least by US citizens, indigenous people groups still lived there and were often not given warning that atomic and radiological tests were being done. Many of these communities are still impacted by the residual fallout and radiation produced by these tests, and the government has generally tried to cover up the crimes they did to these people.

    • @convivial98
      @convivial98 8 месяцев назад

      @@OnSquareOnLevel it does suck to have to do your mom every night

    • @sammy9679
      @sammy9679 7 месяцев назад +7

      Yes! And there’s also a giant concrete well filled with radioactive seawater, which is leaking.

    • @Spencer8242
      @Spencer8242 5 месяцев назад

      The US and Russians with the atomic bomb have killed the ozone layer and killed our chances of having a north and south pole in 80 years. Humanity may very well die because of their stupidity and their obsession with blowing things up and not giving a damn about marine or artic life. I am absolutely floored when I look a the data and realize they have utterly left us hopeless.

  • @falkpetersen
    @falkpetersen 10 месяцев назад +214

    The soviets also conducted a live ICBM test in 1962 over Novaya Zemlya (a.k.a. "Test 219") with a yield of around 24 Megatons - actually the second most powerful nuclear explosion in history.

    • @mortem4342
      @mortem4342 10 месяцев назад +9

      Damn, weird that I've never heard of it

    • @andruzznaist.n.g5135
      @andruzznaist.n.g5135 10 месяцев назад +1

      Is there any footage online?

    • @falkpetersen
      @falkpetersen 10 месяцев назад +13

      @@andruzznaist.n.g5135 There is very little information about that particular test in general and no released footage that I know of. I presume live ICBM tests are treated with a little extra dose of secrecy

    • @malcomx1924
      @malcomx1924 10 месяцев назад

      ⁠@@falkpetersencould be that they faked it to spread false info to American spies, so that the US government would panic because they would think that the Russians somehow had better technology… just to find out that it’s junk with a good looking shell. The reason I say that is because they did the same with the MIG-23 (I believe) but when a soviet crash landed on a US base and they studied it, they found out how bad it was. And their “invisible/unstoppable” hypersonic missile (I believe the kinzhal) gets shot down every time by the US Patriot missile… I’m so glad that my country (the Netherlands) has a good relationship with US arms manufacturers, because we also use them for our defense system.

    • @anthonypetrella5516
      @anthonypetrella5516 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@falkpetersenthat wasn’t a real test 😂😂

  • @jacobhorn26
    @jacobhorn26 9 месяцев назад +5

    as someone who moved to yukon a few months back the fact you used OKC to demonstrate the blast radius really helps put it into perspective for me. yukon is about 25 minutes west of the city and it’s very comforting to know if russia ever randomly decided to throw a tsar bomba at OKC i would be immediately vaporized in the fireball

  • @tomo9620
    @tomo9620 10 месяцев назад +41

    I am watching the video from Japan.
    As a Japanese born in a nuclear-bombed country, I was a little curious about nuclear weapons and watched the video to learn how much nuclear testing the U.S. conducted during the Cold War.
    I have personally heard that China has nuclear weapons, but I have never seen any footage of China's nuclear weapons or nuclear tests, so I had my doubts about whether China really has nuclear weapons or not.
    I am very afraid of the threat of nuclear weapons being so close to me as I live in Saitama Prefecture, Japan, thinking about the Taiwan contingency.

    • @ct92404
      @ct92404 10 месяцев назад +9

      I'm in the US, and most people here regret the atomic bombing and wish we hadn't done it. People argue about it on the internet, but in real life people do feel bad about it. I learned about what happened to Hiroshima when I was a kid in school. I am so glad Hiroshima was rebuilt and is doing well today.

    • @nutterbuttergutter
      @nutterbuttergutter 9 месяцев назад +11

      As an American I honestly don’t regret that we dropped the nuclear bombs. Yes killing is bad. But it was either drop the nukes killing a couple hundred thousand OR implement a land invasion killing anywhere from 5 to 10 million Japanese citizens and ravaging a very large percentage of the Japanese countryside and remaining cities (remember dozens of cities had already been firebombed, in fact the fire bombs were far more worse than the nukes). Only those who don’t truly understand the gravity of the situation and events that would have happened(and nearly did) would say the nukes shouldn’t have been dropped.

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy 9 месяцев назад +3

      Politics played a part as well. Stalin had agreed at the Potsdam Conference to bring the Soviet Union into the war against Japan 3 months after VE Day (August 8th) which he did. I think that Truman wanted to get a surrender out of Japan before that date and was hoping that the atomic bomb (Hiroshima) would do it.@@nutterbuttergutter Japan had a non-agression pact with the Soviet Union at the time and was putting out peace feelers through them (or trying to do so). When the Soviets attacked Japanese forces in Manchuria on August 8th they knew that that option was then closed. That's the way I understand it anyway.

    • @CollinBehm-mp4ef
      @CollinBehm-mp4ef 9 месяцев назад

      I do not regret the 2 Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, If Japan would have won, we would have all been prosecuted for war crimes, Never forget what the Japanese do to prisoners ! I've been living under the threat of nuclear war for 63 year's, don't worry about it!☮️🇺🇸

    • @YankeeDoodleDandy
      @YankeeDoodleDandy 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@ct92404
      >I'm in the US, and most people here regret the atomic bombing and wish we hadn't done it.
      Absolute nonsense.

  • @steventarsitano3209
    @steventarsitano3209 10 месяцев назад +74

    it's really kinda crazy how nukes have only seen use in war against one single adversary for one reason and then never used again. i feel like that was such a massive turning point in human history. just the dropping of a couple big bombs. it's really hard to describe the feeling i am feeling while thinking about it.

    • @og-big-shepherd4468
      @og-big-shepherd4468 10 месяцев назад

      And what pisses me off is our government(USA) has wasted BILLIONS of our hard earned tax dollars to essentially light giant fireworks because it looks cool😒

    • @uncensored1948
      @uncensored1948 10 месяцев назад +14

      Yeah. It’s really like the world saw what they could do and said Nope.
      It was an unfortunate time, but what they did to us at PH was unfortunate as well. We had to establish that this needs to end now, and we did and Atomic warfare was never used again.

    • @kitsachie.
      @kitsachie. 10 месяцев назад

      We nuked Japan as a show of force because we thought we'd be the only country to possess the capabilities. Nuclear proliferation has arguably saved the world.
      If everyone is afraid of nuclear annihilation, no one will use the bombs again.
      Until we develop a weapon that's more destructive and world ending, the cold war limbo will last forever.

    • @fork9001
      @fork9001 10 месяцев назад +7

      It was used once by Soviet scientists to stop a gas blowout in Uzbekistan, possibly the only good use of a nuclear warhead in history as of yet.

    • @nutterbuttergutter
      @nutterbuttergutter 9 месяцев назад

      Retaliation is the word your thinking of. Specifically NUCLEAR retaliation.

  • @leiruotcideneb1279
    @leiruotcideneb1279 10 месяцев назад +96

    Thermonuclear doesn’t just utilise fusion, it utilises fusion to boost a fission reaction and create a loop because the fission reaction increases the fusion reaction and vice versa, hence higher blast yields.

    • @ampuzzler2317
      @ampuzzler2317 10 месяцев назад

      Hydrogen Bomb? Red Mercury??😢

    • @MrHerrS
      @MrHerrS 10 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, with the "invention" of a neutron generator to increase the fission -> fusion -> fission -> fusion -> fisson reaction even more, you have hell on earth.
      Just as a side note: Having fast supercomputers and simulate the stuff also helped to not test every concept live anymore.

  • @glorioustigereye
    @glorioustigereye 8 месяцев назад +4

    3:50 Despite how dramatic the film was. The blast didn't do as much damage as one would suspect. The flat top next to the explosion was USS Saratoga. She was towed away and couldn't be decontaminated so she was sank. Behind her is the small ship the bomb was attached too. Behind her is Arkansas, she sank. The closer one behind her is the Japanese Nagato, After the explosion she would begin to tilt an sink. The german prinz Eugen is just out of shot, a leak formed and she sank as it was to dangerous to repair her.
    I think you can also see Pennsylvania the sister ship of the Arizona.
    USS Nevada was one of the oldest there and took multiple shots and she survived. She was later used as practice for the Iowa and survived. She was then torpedoes on target.
    USS Laffey has a storied history, survived the blasts and continued to serve the us. You can visit her today in South Carolina.

  • @gitbint
    @gitbint 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the video! Great editing, incredible work man

  • @kjorlaug1
    @kjorlaug1 10 месяцев назад +204

    Couple things:
    1. It is generally agreed upon that South Africa did an atmospheric test with the "Vela Incident" in 1979.
    2. I'm surprised you didn't mention the tests performed in Mississippi at the Salmon Site
    3. Contiguous

    • @danielgrunmann
      @danielgrunmann 10 месяцев назад +27

      Continental? Definitely not continual 😂

    • @godzilla6911
      @godzilla6911 10 месяцев назад +3

      What's contiguous?

    • @godzilla6911
      @godzilla6911 10 месяцев назад

      What's contiguous?

    • @steverandle4700
      @steverandle4700 10 месяцев назад +18

      Also, Nu-CLEAR. Not Nu-cu-lar.

    • @kjorlaug1
      @kjorlaug1 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@steverandle4700 "then there nu-cu-clur weapons..." 😂

  • @DraterTTV
    @DraterTTV 10 месяцев назад +16

    My grandad was a Royal Engineer working on christmas island when the bombs were dropped. He told me stories on how they used to watch the bombs detonate in shorts sandles and sunglasses. He is still alive today and is finally getting a medal for his work at the time!

  • @ashleya1609
    @ashleya1609 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your videos are the absolute best. Thank you so much for making them, they have helped me through some pretty bad anxiety attacks, including tonight. So thank you, you are appreciated. ❤.

    • @kennethbransford820
      @kennethbransford820 10 месяцев назад

      ===== Daniel 2 :44 “In the days of those kings the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that will never be destroyed. And this kingdom will not be passed on to any other people. It will crush and put an end to all these kingdoms, and it alone will stand forever, =====

  • @masonbloss2037
    @masonbloss2037 9 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome video man it was very interesting and the way you presented things was great 👍🏻

  • @MattH-wg7ou
    @MattH-wg7ou 10 месяцев назад +25

    "Contiguous US" not "continual US" lol
    Cool video. Man, that Castle Bravo footage will never fail to impress me. Truly an atmospheric scale event.

    • @tropikietis
      @tropikietis 10 месяцев назад +4

      Actually, he meant to say “continental US”.

    • @MattH-wg7ou
      @MattH-wg7ou 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@tropikietis continental or contiguous or even conterminous are correct. But not continual. 🙂

  • @hongo3870
    @hongo3870 10 месяцев назад +34

    An interesting thing about operation fishbowl, shot Prime, is that it created temporary radiation rings around Earth and knocked out a few satellites!
    It also knocked out electrical grids and phone lines in Hawaii, hundreds of miles away but in direct line of sight to the EMP.
    Also, on the opposite side of the earth, the radiation rings raced across the magnetic field and a brief red aurora showed as the fallout ionized the upper atmosphere.
    Definitely one of the most interesting tests.

    • @racer927
      @racer927 10 месяцев назад +5

      The Johnston Island tests caused a lot of freaked-out 911 calls in Hawaii from what I know.

    • @kinzieconrad105
      @kinzieconrad105 10 месяцев назад

      Starfish Prime

  • @mindulle21
    @mindulle21 10 месяцев назад +2

    Really great video, im someone who has been pretty interested in Nuclear weapons and/or radioactive chemistry overall and while i did knew about most of the cases here, i have to appreciate that this video contains the exact amount of information about the nuclear testing itself while not being too long, perfect for the casual and specialized viewer, even going a little bit deeper than Peter Kuran documentaries (and keep in mind that Kuran documentaries such as Trinity and Beyond or Atomic Journeys are well known pieces about nuclear testing)

  • @curious1300
    @curious1300 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the amazing video! A lot of great information here... Your videos are the absolute best.

  • @daUbaby51
    @daUbaby51 10 месяцев назад +17

    Since I was born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, it brings a smile to my face every time you show the size of the blast radius over OKC :)

    • @robertbouley7697
      @robertbouley7697 10 месяцев назад +1

      A smile, huh?

    • @samkwant4050
      @samkwant4050 10 месяцев назад

      @@robertbouley7697 my guy must really hate life

  • @Linus-nq2op
    @Linus-nq2op 10 месяцев назад +35

    The yield of the first soviet fusion bomb wasn’t big, but they improved on the transportability. The first fusion bomb they tested in US was basically a large plant with all kinds of devices to make it work.

    • @dmillhoff
      @dmillhoff 10 месяцев назад +5

      proof-of-concept did not require portability.

    • @bilbonob548
      @bilbonob548 5 месяцев назад

      Well yeah, the soviets just copied the americans each time - so they didn't need to do any of the actual breakthrough work.

  • @mcsaatana1614
    @mcsaatana1614 4 месяца назад

    2nd video i wathed from you and i dont regret that i subbed you on the 1st vid i saw and commented! Keep this great content coming! Cheers from Finland!

  • @Jakezilla819
    @Jakezilla819 Месяц назад +2

    “Now I’ve become death, the destroyer of worlds” Oppenheimer.

  • @Jesus_Router
    @Jesus_Router 10 месяцев назад +6

    12:07 I have had too many dreams just like this

  • @konkyunk
    @konkyunk 10 месяцев назад +5

    15:07 You know you're an extreme weather nerd when you use Oklahoma City as a damage reference.

  • @xs2611
    @xs2611 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much, very informative. And thank you for your calm voice, too!

  • @benward87
    @benward87 9 месяцев назад

    Dude. Great audio, great scene and broll. Awesome breakdown and palatable history.

  • @joELL11
    @joELL11 10 месяцев назад +6

    3:29
    You can see the ships just turn into dust

  • @henryscott9326
    @henryscott9326 10 месяцев назад +22

    Great video man, I live in Philly and I was looking at the tornado path and saw that a tornado spawned literally 20 feet away from the liberty bell

  • @kerzwhile
    @kerzwhile 10 месяцев назад +2

    Very cool channel! New sub. Love the slowed down version of "Open your heart" as your theme.😉 nice programming!

  • @danhughes3556
    @danhughes3556 9 месяцев назад

    Unreal. Thank you for this video. Great job 👍

  • @thehabeeeeeb
    @thehabeeeeeb 10 месяцев назад +9

    15:38 handheld atomic rocket launcher?!?!😳

    • @RoyalRay7hwi01amqwro
      @RoyalRay7hwi01amqwro 10 месяцев назад +3

      they needa give me that shit

    • @NoAlarms2
      @NoAlarms2 7 месяцев назад

      What the hell man
      Leave it to America

  • @finn464
    @finn464 10 месяцев назад +58

    Great video! What I miss are the 1962 soviet nuclear tests which included four blasts exceeding the Castle Bravo. These were, in chronogical order:
    Test 147 on August 5th 1962 at 21.1 Mt
    Test 173 on September 25th 1962 at 19.1 Mt
    Test 174 on September 27th 1962 at 20.0 Mt
    Test 219 on December 24th 1962 at 24.4 Mt
    Also they were, after the Tsar Bomba the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th largest nuclear tests by yield ever conducted!

  • @johnjones4096
    @johnjones4096 9 месяцев назад +2

    I was a kid in the 80s and 90s. The 80s were pretty scary bro. Alot like today, you just had no idea what tomorrow would bring

  • @iamwakeen
    @iamwakeen 8 месяцев назад

    Learned a lot of things from this video! You just earned yourself a sub :]

  • @sleepyrasta14820
    @sleepyrasta14820 10 месяцев назад +4

    5:17 golden eye music in the back ground. the nostalgia it brings loved that game on the N64

  • @anthonyspinozzi1312
    @anthonyspinozzi1312 10 месяцев назад +12

    11:00 This footage has to show the true power of one of these detonations better than any other footage i have seen

    • @jtgd
      @jtgd 10 месяцев назад +1

      Tsar bomba nearly takes up the horizon

  • @subsetgamingyt9524
    @subsetgamingyt9524 8 месяцев назад +1

    11:35
    Love the placement of “Hazardous Environments”

  • @34hellrazor62
    @34hellrazor62 10 месяцев назад +8

    4:31 the front of the bomb reminds something..

  • @jtgd
    @jtgd 10 месяцев назад +9

    13:33 “1958 let’s blow shit up together”

  • @Johnhumphriesstormchaser
    @Johnhumphriesstormchaser 10 месяцев назад +53

    very nice pivot from the meteorological type videos. I'd be very interested on what other types of science videos you can come up with relating to quantum mechanics and maybe even physics in the future

  • @benyaeast4741
    @benyaeast4741 10 месяцев назад

    Really well put together video 🙏

  • @sunbroninja2868
    @sunbroninja2868 4 месяца назад

    New subscriber! Love these videos and I love the Metal Gear music in the background

  • @reed3
    @reed3 10 месяцев назад +7

    Just the steam intro sound effect at 11:36 lol

  • @JediRastafari
    @JediRastafari 10 месяцев назад +3

    Thx for the video. Very well put-together. I got into nuclear bombs a couple of years back but then this year, because of the movie, I've been revisiting the topic.
    You covered quite a lot in this video and presented it in a very digestible manner.
    Thx again!

  • @JonathanParsons.
    @JonathanParsons. 10 месяцев назад

    Great research man! Great video!

  • @jdmmike7225
    @jdmmike7225 9 месяцев назад

    14:29 Operation "Your my boy, Blue!!!" LMAO. Great video dude.

  • @r4ych836
    @r4ych836 10 месяцев назад +5

    Your tornado docs are great, and now this masterpiece? You're such a talented documentarian.

  • @spamimatic2817
    @spamimatic2817 10 месяцев назад +3

    Keep up the good work! Your videos are extremely entertaining and informative! Hope you get a million subscribers sometime soon.

  • @hadleyeby6065
    @hadleyeby6065 7 месяцев назад

    That was useful and keep up the good work

  • @DannyGruesome
    @DannyGruesome 8 месяцев назад +3

    A plumbbob is a tool you use to measure if something is "plumb" or not. Its kinda like leveling but for verticality.

  • @timber740
    @timber740 10 месяцев назад +6

    Just noticed the Half-Life music in the background 12:16. Good choice especially with the context lol

  • @A_river_dirt_cheese
    @A_river_dirt_cheese 10 месяцев назад +7

    Just a little baby NUCLEAR BOMB 15:48

  • @SW-bb8lu
    @SW-bb8lu 10 месяцев назад

    THANK... YOU! Im tired of random pictures of random bombs of random clips placed randomly in a random youtube clip... This made my day ❤️ perfect ❤️

  • @flamingoman992
    @flamingoman992 9 месяцев назад

    I just found this channel and i have to say i am immediately hooked, i was wondering if you could do a video on tornadoes around the world or maybe a video about the London tornado of 1091 if there's anything interesting to talk about.

  • @MazzieMay
    @MazzieMay 10 месяцев назад +101

    This was just as well done as your meteorological videos! If you wanted to keep branching out, I think you’d be a great edition to Science YT ☺️

  • @ladycatsinger
    @ladycatsinger 10 месяцев назад +23

    Very well done video. The 1954 Nevada test site tests are notable because the John Wayne film The Conqueror (about Ghegis Khan) was filmed not far from the testing area. Officials told the movie people that it was safe to film there. However there was a great deal of contaminated soil from the fallout, which was stirred up by the horses, wind and vehicles. This would prove to be tragic. Of the 220 cast and crew 91 would develop some form of cancer and of those 45 succumbed.
    BTW, Grable is pronounced Gray bul, named after the actress/dancer/singer Betty Grable who was a popular Pin up girl during WW2.
    Also you referred to the continuous United States, I think the word you were looking for is contiguous

    • @racer927
      @racer927 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wikipedia says that the "Dirty Harry" shot of Upshot-Knothole may have been the biggest contributer due to the test's extremely high fallout deposition

    • @izzyarland5304
      @izzyarland5304 10 месяцев назад

      Guy doesn't know how to say "grey-bell" and "contiguous US". Has no business making videos.

    • @izzyarland5304
      @izzyarland5304 10 месяцев назад

      Or "nougat" for that matter. Noo-gat. Not hard.

    • @racer927
      @racer927 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@izzyarland5304 Oh really, I'd like to see your perfectly pronounced videos on the subjects Swegle has covered.

    • @JB-or9yw
      @JB-or9yw 10 месяцев назад

      It's continental US

  • @AllGreenize
    @AllGreenize 5 месяцев назад

    Great video, very informative and detailed.

  • @smoothestedge
    @smoothestedge 10 месяцев назад

    Ty for your work 🙏

  • @racer927
    @racer927 10 месяцев назад +75

    9:47 Upshot-Knothole would be of particular note for testing the precursor wave phenomenon that I talked about in your strongest winds video. Grable shot was a much lower yield than Encore but the precursor caused much more damage to drag-sensitive targets due to the sustained winds not unlike that of a tornado.

    • @racer927
      @racer927 10 месяцев назад

      @@superskullmaster Yup, watched stuff like Scott Manley's "Going Nuclear", read up on the test operations on Wikipedia and even found some films of test operations.

    • @woofbark6575
      @woofbark6575 10 месяцев назад

      Upshot Knothole -> Upshot Nuthole.
      Yes I am childish.

  • @beeallen2743
    @beeallen2743 10 месяцев назад +12

    I'm glad you chose OKC for showing nuke sizes. Really lets me get an idea of how big these things are as an Oklahoman. Seems I'd be relatively safe if the city got hit, and same with Dallas, but if they go for the ammunition plant up around McAlester I'd need to take shelter.

    • @Utonian21
      @Utonian21 10 месяцев назад +1

      If you anywhere near a nuclear explosion, you're in trouble. It doesn't matter if you're affected by the blast damage or not, the radiation still can, and will kill you if you're exposed

    • @kennypowers1945
      @kennypowers1945 9 месяцев назад

      @@Utonian21yea but no bomb in existence at the moment can reach all of Oklahoma. So he is safe

  • @georgedavey1339
    @georgedavey1339 10 месяцев назад +1

    I honestly believe the Ivy Mike Shot you labelled as first British in the thumbnail is one of the coolest photos of a mushroom cloud ever taken 👌

  • @lambodingus6986
    @lambodingus6986 10 месяцев назад

    Great vid , appreciate research 👍

  • @RojoFern
    @RojoFern 10 месяцев назад +95

    Really happy to see someone else highlight the British nuclear program during the 50s. The nuclear testing history conversation is absolutely dominated by the American and Soviet operations. Rarely is the spotlight on Hurricane, Totem, or even Grapple, despite these test series being equally as fascinating as the heavyweights like Castle or Joe-111. The same goes for the French and Chinese.

    • @shugo541
      @shugo541 10 месяцев назад +5

      For sure. My great uncle was fleet air arm. He was present at one of the British nuclear tests. Died a couple of years ago, never got to ask him more sadly

    • @poopy-333
      @poopy-333 10 месяцев назад +2

      Silly ah names

    • @Cymanytb
      @Cymanytb 10 месяцев назад +6

      yes so cool, nukes baby, let's blast that shit until we all die. Why is everyone in this comment section so thrilled and chill about this subject.. This shit is horrible

    • @RojoFern
      @RojoFern 10 месяцев назад +5

      Perhaps it's the same reason people are fascinated by venomous snakes or big cats? Perhaps it's the same reason people are fascinated by tornadoes or volcanic eruptions? Perhaps it's the same reason people are fascinated by black holes or supernovae? No one is denying that nuclear and thermonuclear weapons are dangerous, and you'd be hard-pressed to find anyone here that would support their use in war, or hell even in another test. However, just as with all dangerous phenomena, a nuclear detonation is an incredibly sobering sight and carries with it an intrinsic beauty in its visual appearance, scale, and raw energy release.
      Even without that, merely from a physical engineering perspective, the individual devices are feats of their own and have a history ripe for studying. Reading through the methods in which engineers and physicists overcame hurdles, like going from the liquid deuterium TX-16 for Ivy Mike to combining deuterium and lithium for the solid TX-21 for Castle bravo to reduce weight, is just a fascinating experience. Is it so hard to understand, then, why people may find nuclear weapons history just a little interesting? I mean shit, some people even have PhDs in it.

    • @Cymanytb
      @Cymanytb 10 месяцев назад

      @@RojoFern And do you think testing nukes here on earth for 70 years like pathetic little kids blowing up shit hasn't affected the conditions at all and won't affect us in the future? Even in this video the guy says "oh, and this test killed 3 people". Nearly every test was controversial and not only for science's sake. Fuck that science and engineering if it means our end. Putin is close to losing his war in Ukraine, what do you think happens next? We should've never got this power.. we don't deserve it.

  • @3dpyromaniac560
    @3dpyromaniac560 10 месяцев назад +8

    An honorable mention would have to be Project A119.
    Even though it was never carried out, it was so insane it would still deserve to be mentioned, as it was when the US government went to the Air Force to ask how they should respond to the fact that the Soviets were far ahead of us at that point in the space race and it was looking like the USSR would beat the US to the moon, and the USAF's response was "let's nuke the moon and make a mushroom cloud and crater big enough to be seen on earth."

    • @prophecyrat2965
      @prophecyrat2965 7 месяцев назад

      Truly the Most Civilized Solution.

  • @floyvlogs1754
    @floyvlogs1754 Месяц назад

    Fun fact about Crossroads- here, at 3:43, you can see a battleship here, named the USS Nevada. Despite being close to both blasts, Able and Baker, she survived both of them, and if memory serves correct, she was the closest to Baker to actually survive. Two years later, she was towed out for target practice for the USS Iowa, one of the most advanced and well armed battleships of the time and 4 other unnamed ships, where for 5 days she was shelled and survived, before a torpedo finally finished the job. What is semi-ironic about this event is Nevada already earned the nickname of the "Unsinkable Battleship" because she was the first US warship to take a hit and survived Pearl Harbor. I'd highly recommend for anyone to check out the history of this ship, as it's very cool.

  • @b-1sauce525
    @b-1sauce525 10 месяцев назад

    Make more videos please! I love your content and your personality is just great. You should live stream

  • @green29373
    @green29373 10 месяцев назад +6

    Top 3 Nuclear Bunkers:
    #3: Nuclear Bunker
    #2: Space Station
    #1: 15 Year Old Table

  • @jamesdowell5268
    @jamesdowell5268 10 месяцев назад +18

    Ahh, I see that the interest overlap between tornadoes and nukes isn't only in my brain 😆 big, superlatively powerful, scary things. Thanks for another great video!

  • @supermanindahood
    @supermanindahood 10 месяцев назад

    you got me watching great job

  • @Legendaryhunter7
    @Legendaryhunter7 10 месяцев назад

    11:36 That soundtrack gave me Chills 😬
    Amazing

  • @SuperpowerBroadcasting
    @SuperpowerBroadcasting 10 месяцев назад +3

    9:00 What's amazing about Ivy King is you can actually notice the double flash. Normally you can only tell with high yield thermonuclear devices, but King was so high yield that you can see the double flash

  • @BobbyT.
    @BobbyT. 10 месяцев назад +6

    Yesss. I’ve been obsessed with videos on nuclear bombs and the Manhattan project since watching Oppenheimer last week. Great movie by the way.

  • @simonmaverick9201
    @simonmaverick9201 Месяц назад

    This is a really good, accurate documentary.

  • @FunnyTavia101
    @FunnyTavia101 9 месяцев назад

    you ain't slick i heard the valve intro in this vid also good vid i like it def earned my sub

  • @dieterdelange9488
    @dieterdelange9488 10 месяцев назад +8

    Watched the film today. Long and complex narrative, but incredible acting and camera work!

  • @Nturner822
    @Nturner822 10 месяцев назад +3

    Of all the videos on this topic, this one really stands out as one of the best! Great work putting together such concise and detailed information!

  • @ultraairsoftbrandt
    @ultraairsoftbrandt 2 месяца назад

    love the video! contiguous...

  • @ShreyashSelukar
    @ShreyashSelukar 10 месяцев назад +6

    Who is watching this after Oppenheimer?

  • @DMParody
    @DMParody 10 месяцев назад +5

    I can't believe you forgot the worst bomb. The pies. They aren't pies. They were made in a factory. A bomb factory. They're bombs.

  • @Mythix.1.
    @Mythix.1. 9 месяцев назад +2

    Fun fact (or not so fun): the fireball that an atomic bomb creates is hotter than the sun and vaporizes ANYTHING inside, diamonds, titanium, steel, whatever.

  • @BJ-bd5fc
    @BJ-bd5fc 10 месяцев назад +3

    I hadn't seen the mid-50's Soviet test with the homes in the foreground (and the blast wave hitting six minutes later) before, and the inclusion of the first British and French test locations (western Austrailia, Sahara desert) was new info to me. Thanks!
    (Small correction: The Castle Bravo test detonation was only expected to be only 6M (not "7 or 8"). They used 60% Lithium-7 and 40% Lithium-6, expecting only the latter to power the detonation. An unexpected chemical/physics reaction during the blast made ALL of the Lithium go off, which supercharged the blast up to 2.5x its expected yield (thus the 15MT). The Atomic Bomb Movie (currently on RUclips) explains it really well, and is must see viewing for everyone.

    • @jancurtis7827
      @jancurtis7827 10 месяцев назад

      A recent total solar eclipse passed over the Western Australia test site. A friend took radiation readings and the activity was still significant!

  • @TheGaryHogue
    @TheGaryHogue 10 месяцев назад +3

    18:10 fun fact….. This was possible because of the progress made in Soviet & US relations during the Rocky vs Ivan Drago tension and subsequent fight in 1985. Much progress was made during this period, paving the way for a joint venture of this magnitude. Athletics once again bringing nations together.

  • @scottdakadescot4127
    @scottdakadescot4127 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hey Jake, I love how you did Mars - The Bringer of War from Gustav Holst the Planets for the UK's 1st hydrogen bomb.

  • @electrominded8372
    @electrominded8372 7 месяцев назад

    Great video!

  • @stavali1567
    @stavali1567 6 месяцев назад

    Luv the perfect dark music in the background 👍

  • @kitdoesstufflmao
    @kitdoesstufflmao 10 месяцев назад +22

    If I saw this during my atomic bomb phase I think I would be kicking and squealing right now lol. I was super fascinated by them in 2019

    • @SDSypher
      @SDSypher 10 месяцев назад +5

      “atomic bomb phase”

    • @godzilla6911
      @godzilla6911 10 месяцев назад

      We all have one of those phases. or is that just my cold blooded American blood?

    • @HardRockMaster7577
      @HardRockMaster7577 10 месяцев назад +1

      I keep thinking that I am done with Nuclear videos.... But presentation s like this just keep pulling me back in. 😄