Do nukes break the sound barrier?

Peter - Most of the missiles shown in documentaries and films refer to the Second World War and for the typical height of those bombers, the falling missiles are accelerating, but not sufficiently to break the sound barrier. That means that apart from a relatively gentle whoosh, they would not naturally make any sound.
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What does a nuke dropping sound like?

There is at least some testing footage from the era that features sound. It is jarring to hear. The boom is more like a shotgun than a thunderclap, and it's followed by a sustained roar. Here's one example, from a March 1953 test at Yucca Flat, the nuclear test site in the Nevada desert.
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Can anything withstand a nuke?

Technically, humans can withstand that much pressure, but most people would be killed by falling buildings. If you somehow survive all of that, there's still the radiation poisoning to deal with – and the nuclear fallout.
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How many nukes would it take to destroy the world?

This is why another study had been conducted in 2018 testing a similar scenario that also concluded that it would take 100 nuclear bombs to end this world. What is scarier is that within this world there are 13,080 ready-to-use nuclear warheads and yet it takes such a small amount.
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Does a nuke make a sound?

Hearing it would have been coincident with having the blast wave hit. The bombs don't make the noise you think they do, though. All of the "booms" you hear on most nuclear test footages are just spliced in generic explosion noises. The actual noises are more like a single loud clap followed by echoes.
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The sonic boom problem - Katerina Kaouri



Why do nukes whistle?

The change in the pitch of sound was due to the Doppler effect. When the bomb is dropped from the airplane, the velocity of the bomb goes on increasing due to gravity until it reaches its terminal velocity. As the bomb approaches towards the ground, the pitch increases and thus the “kooouuuueeee” sound.
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Which US cities would be nuked?

The cities that would most likely be attacked are Washington, New York City and Los Angeles. Using a van or SUV, the device could easily be delivered to the heart of a city and detonated. The effects and response planning from a nuclear blast are determined using statics from Washington, the most likely target.
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Could the US shoot down a nuke?

The US only has a limited ability to destroy an incoming nuclear intercontinental ballistic missile, a study released last month by the American Physical Society concluded.
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Can you shoot down a nuke?

The Aegis ballistic missile defense-equipped SM-3 Block II-A missile demonstrated it can shoot down an ICBM target on 16 Nov 2020.
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Can you survive a nuke in a fridge?

A lot of people would die, of course: It's an A-bomb. But there are some easy steps that can feasibly save your life from the most fearsome weapon ever created. Oh, and spoiler alert, the answer isn't: crawl inside a fridge. RULE NUMBER ONE: Nuclear bombs aren't as deadly as you think.
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Can you survive a nuclear bomb in a pool?

While the radiation from the initial detonation is setting everything nearby on fire, the surface of the water will harmlessly evaporate. Since the boiling point of water isn't very high and the flash doesn't last very long, the whole body of water will stay cool, even if it's only a swimming pool.
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What to do if a nuke is coming?

STAY INSIDE. Stay inside for 24 hours unless local authorities provide other instructions. Continue to practice social distancing by wearing a mask and by keeping a distance of at least six feet between yourself and people who not part of your household. Family should stay where they are inside.
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Do bombs still whistle?

Not all bombs were equipped with whistles, but they still all made noise as they fell due to air displacement (just not the famous whistling sound).
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Who witnessed the first atomic bomb?

What Madrid and the others witnessed was the world's first explosion of an atomic bomb, detonated at the Manhattan Project's Trinity Test Site, about 35 miles southeast of Socorro, New Mexico, at what is now the White Sands Missile Range. Madrid figures he was about 30 miles from the blast.
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How far away could a nuke be heard?

The flash was accompanied by a rush of heat and was followed by a huge pressure wave and the rumbling sound of the explosion. Curiously enough, this sound was not distinctly noted by those who survived near the center of the explosion, although it was heard as far as 15 miles away.
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Can a Russian nuclear bomb reach the US?

New START limits all Russian deployed intercontinental-range nuclear weapons, including every Russian nuclear warhead that is loaded onto an intercontinental-range ballistic missile that can reach the United States in approximately 30 minutes.
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How many nukes would it take to destroy the US?

The absolute doomsday scenario is a “nuclear winter.” For that to happen, the US and Russia would have to use about 2,000 nukes each and destroy major cities and targets, Toon told me.
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Is Hiroshima still radioactive?

Is there still radiation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki? The radiation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki today is on a par with the extremely low levels of background radiation (natural radioactivity) present anywhere on Earth. It has no effect on human bodies.
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Where is the US most likely to get nuked?

Dr. Redlener identified six cities that have the greatest likelihood of being attacked: New York, Chicago, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Houston.
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Where is the safest place to survive nuclear war?

Iceland is a small island country located in the North Atlantic Ocean. It has a population of just over 300,000 people and an area of 103,000 square kilometers. Iceland is one of the safest countries in case of nuclear war due to its isolation, lack of military, and geothermal energy.
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Can you outrun a nuclear blast?

However, fallout is carried by high-altitude winds that are "often booking along at 100 miles per hour," he says, and "often not going in the same direction as the ground-level winds. So your ability to know where the fallout's gonna go, and outrun it, are… Well, it's very unlikely."
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Can we survive a nuclear war?

But the vast majority of the human population would suffer extremely unpleasant deaths from burns, radiation and starvation, and human civilization would likely collapse entirely. Survivors would eke out a living on a devastated, barren planet.
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Do nukes explode in the air?

A nuclear weapon exploded at very high altitude produces none of the blast or local fallout effects we've just described. But intense gamma rays knock electrons out of atoms in the surrounding air, and when the explosion takes place in the rarefied air at high altitude this effect may extend hundreds of miles.
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