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Jumat, 09 Mei 2014

nuclear

If this impact Bomb Explodes in Your City You can see the impact and the radiation with this simulation . IMI - Hearing nuclear bomb , that comes to mind might be a terrible terrible explosion . Well , to illustrate how powerful the bomb was , you can play around with a nuclear bomb . Not to scare , just playing . You can make a simple simulation to determine the extent of the impact of a bomb with a 3D Nukemap maps , three nuclear simulation map artificial Alex Wellerstein , historian of the American Institute of Physics , Mayland , USA , reported by Dailymail , Tuesday, July 23, 2013 . Simulations that you can play on Google Earth . Thus , users have to install the Google Earth plug -in on your browser . Go to this link . Interestingly , the nuclear bomb on the map , the user can control a nuclear bomb . Users can choose how much strength , the location of the bomb detonated . For example , users want to know how the impact of a nuclear bomb explosion Hiroshima , Japan , which has the power of 15 kilotons . You simply enter the power '15 ' on the' Explosive Yield ' . Then , select Detonate . Furthermore , users can see the impact of how the bombs began to cloud the results of the bomb , the extent to which the radius of the bomb radiation , until the height of what caused clouds impact . According Wellerstein , the map was designed to visualize accurately and provide an understanding of what would happen if a nuclear bomb was dropped on a city . " We live in a world where nuclear issue become a major concern , but most people still have a very bad thoughts about what to do if a nuclear burst , " said Wellerstein in the blog . The homemade map also displays the approximate number of victims will fall if a nuclear bomb exploded in a spot . The toll is calculated based on the population of a city as well as the distance to the point of explosion . Well , information about the population in a city , taken from the Center for History of Physics at the American Institute of Physics . Maps can show the behavior of clouds , which are taken out of the equation some experts , the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Civil Effects Test Operations , written in February 1953 and the writing of The Effects of Nuclear Weapons published in 1964 by Samuel Glasstone and Philip J. Dolan . Wellerstein added , all the information used to create 3D Nukemap available to the public and does not provide confidential data . Wellerstein rejected if this map could benefit terrorists in the future . " If there are terrorists who ask this question , we are at a point that is too late . There is no way to prevent a disaster at the time, " said Wellerstein defensively .

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