Can you nuke a volcano?

If you dropped a nuclear bomb into the crater of an extinct volcano, you would flatten the mountain out a bit but you wouldn't set the volcano off because there wouldn't be any pre-existing upwelling of magma.
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What will happen if you nuke a volcano?

The explosion of the bomb mixed with the build-up of pressure inside a volcano could amplify the eruption. The force would release even more ash and lava, spreading it even further than it would've gone with the volcano's own power.
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Can a volcano be radioactive?

Scientists have long known that radon, a radioactive gas, is a part of the plumes that spew from active volcanoes. When those radioactive atoms decay, they emit charged particles and create "daughter" elements that also decay and emit charged particles of their own.
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Why don't we just dump nuclear waste into space?

The cost is too high

The cost of such a large-scale space mission is bound to be very expensive. In fact, the cost is so high that no space agency will waste time at all considering whether to send nuclear waste on Earth to the sun or the moon.
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Can we send nuclear waste to the sun?

In order to actually get it to drop into the Sun, you need to cancel out the orbital velocity. In other words, you need to give your rocket about 31.7 m/s in velocity, to account for the atmosphere drag of Earth, and then cancel out the orbital velocity.
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What If We Nuked an Active Volcano?



What would happen if you launched a nuke into the sun?

It's safe to say the nuclear bomb will have no effect at all. But actually it's even harder than that to perturb the sun. The nuclear bomb would be vaporised long before it reached the surface. It could be detonated in space somewhere near the sun.
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Would Yellowstone end the world?

YVO gets a lot of questions about whether Yellowstone, or another caldera system, will end all life on Earth. The answer is—NO, a large explosive eruption at Yellowstone will not lead to the end of the human race. The aftermath of such an explosion certainly wouldn't be pleasant, but we won't go extinct.
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Can Yellowstone destroy all life?

So, we'll answer that question right off the bat—no, a large explosive eruption at Yellowstone will not lead to the end of the human race (most Yellowstone eruptions do not fit this worst-case scenario anyhow, but rather are lava flows).
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Can Yellowstone destroy America?

That's what scientists can offer when talking about the giant super volcano under Yellowstone National Park. The bad news is that the super volcano will erupt and will likely destroy much of the United States.
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Would a supervolcano end the world?

Ultimately, global temperatures would drop, plants would die, and agriculture would fail. In fact, the UN estimates that the entire world would run out of food in just over two months. Now, Yellowstone has a history of eruptions like this. It's erupted three times in the past 2.1 million years.
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What would happen if you dropped a nuke in the Mariana Trench?

The report outlines how when a nuclear weapon goes off underwater, it produces a cavity of hot gasses, which then collapses. If the explosion happens near the surface, it can create some pretty big waves—under some circumstances, they can be hundreds of feet high near ground zero.
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What happens if you nuke a mountain?

Bombs do have geological impact, but never has a mountain been leveled by one. In 2017 the most powerful conventional bomb ever used was dropped on the lower edge of a mountain in Afghanistan. It destroyed some caves but the mountains themselves were hardly impacted. Trees just 100 meters away remained standing.
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How long until the Yellowstone volcano erupts?

Will the Yellowstone volcano erupt soon? Another caldera-forming eruption is theoretically possible, but it is very unlikely in the next thousand or even 10,000 years. Scientists have also found no indication of an imminent smaller eruption of lava in more than 30 years of monitoring.
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How many nukes would it take to destroy the moon?

Plenty of folks have done some thinking about how to explode the moon. Here's a piece from Gizmodo figuring that you'd need 9,000 bombs of the 15,000 kiloton "Castle Bravo" class to obliterate the entire surface of the moon.
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Can humans vaporize?

While radiation could severely inflame and ulcerate the skin, complete vaporization of the body is impossible.
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Why did the US want to nuke the moon?

Project A119, also known as A Study of Lunar Research Flights, was a top-secret plan developed in 1958 by the United States Air Force. The aim of the project was to detonate a nuclear bomb on the Moon, which would help in answering some of the mysteries in planetary astronomy and astrogeology.
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Can a wormhole exist?

Einstein's theory of general relativity mathematically predicts the existence of wormholes, but none have been discovered to date. A negative mass wormhole might be spotted by the way its gravity affects light that passes by.
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Is a white hole real?

The short answer, unfortunately, is no. White holes are really just something scientists have imagined — they could exist, but we've never seen one, or even seen clues that one may exist. For now, they are an idea. To put it simply, you can imagine a white hole as being a black hole in reverse.
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Is Earth in danger of a black hole?

Since this black hole already weighs a few million times the mass of the Sun, there will only be small increases in its mass if it swallows a few more Sun-like stars. “There is no danger of the Earth (located 26,000 light years away from the Milky Way's black hole) being pulled in.
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Why don't we just throw all our garbage into volcanoes?

Sulfur gases can create acidic fog, which we call “vog,” for “volcanic fog.” It can kill plants and cause breathing problems for people nearby. Mixing these already-dangerous volcanic gases with other gases from burning our trash would make the resulting fumes even more harmful for people and plants near the volcano.
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Can you hit the sun?

The answer lies in the same fact that keeps Earth from plunging into the Sun: Our planet is traveling very fast — about 67,000 miles per hour — almost entirely sideways relative to the Sun. The only way to get to the Sun is to cancel that sideways motion.
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Can we put nuclear waste on the moon?

No. Not really. According to Jim Clark, a graduate student in aeronautics and astronautics and an avid model rocketeer: “There are more cost-effective ways to deal with nuclear waste.” Indeed, by Clark's calculations, the cost of transporting nuclear waste to the Moon would be high: about $8.5 million per ton.
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