What happens when a human is vaporized?

Exposing a body to this level of radiant heat would leave bones and carbonized organs behind. While radiation could severely inflame and ulcerate the skin, complete vaporization of the body is impossible.
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Can the human body be vaporized?

According to the captured study, it takes around three gigajoules of death-ray to entirely vaporize a person—enough to completely melt 5,000 pounds of steel or simulate a lightning bolt.
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What does it mean if someone is vaporized?

transitive verb. 1 : to convert (as by the application of heat or by spraying) into vapor. 2 : to cause to become dissipated. 3 : to destroy by or as if by converting into vapor a tank vaporized by a shell.
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What does an atomic bomb do to the human body?

Whole body doses cause damage to epithelial cells lining the gastrointestinal tract and this combined with the bone marrow damage is fatal. All symptoms become increasingly severe, causing exhaustion and emaciation in a few days and death within 7–14 days from loss of water and electrolytes.
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Can a person survive an atomic bomb?

You'll need to shield yourself from the thermal and nuclear radiation, as you could die if exposed. However, you must find somewhere safe – you don't want to be crushed in a building destroyed by the blast wave. Get indoors, and preferably into a reinforced bunker or basement.
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What Will A Nuclear Blast Do To Your Body?



Did people's eyes fall out in Hiroshima?

Charred remains of the deceased with eyes protruding

With the fierce pressure of the blast the air pressure in the area dropped instantaneously, resulting in eyeballs and internal organs popping out from bodies.
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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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Is Hiroshima still radioactive today?

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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How many Hiroshima survivors are still alive?

Some 127,000 survivors of the nuclear bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki are still alive.
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Why is there no radiation in Hiroshima?

The atomic bomb in Hiroshima was detonated hundreds of meters above ground to maximize its yield. Upon detonated the bomb is completely vaporized and therefore the radiation is distributed in a huge area by the blast.
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What happens when someone is vaporized 1984?

In the George Orwell book Nineteen Eighty-Four, an Unperson is someone who has been vaporized. Vaporization is when a person is secretly murdered and erased from society, the present, the universe, and existence.
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Will a nuclear bomb vaporize you?

The bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, at the end of World War II produced nuclear blasts. When a nuclear device is exploded, a large fireball is created. Everything inside of this fireball vaporizes, including soil and water, and is carried upwards.
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Does nuclear explosion hurt?

BLAST WAVE can cause death, injury, and damage to structures several miles out from the blast. RADIATION can damage cells of the body. FIRE AND HEAT can cause death, burn injuries, and damage to structures several miles out.
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How many miles would a nuclear bomb destroy?

The volume the weapon's energy spreads into varies as the cube of the distance, but the destroyed area varies at the square of the distance. Thus 1 bomb with a yield of 1 megaton would destroy 80 square miles. While 8 bombs, each with a yield of 125 kilotons, would destroy 160 square miles.
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What is radioactive rain?

Rain on an area contaminated by a surface burst changes the pattern of radioactive intensities by washing off higher elevations, buildings, equipment, and vegetation. This reduces intensities in some areas and possibly increases intensities in drainage systems; on low ground; and in flat, poorly drained areas.
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How hot is a nuclear bomb?

A primary form of energy from a nuclear explosion is thermal radiation. Initially, most of this energy goes into heating the bomb materials and the air in the vicinity of the blast. Temperatures of a nuclear explosion reach those in the interior of the sun, about 100,000,000° Celsius, and produce a brilliant fireball.
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Are there still birth defects in Hiroshima?

No statistically significant increase in major birth defects or other untoward pregnancy outcomes was seen among children of survivors. Monitoring of nearly all pregnancies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki began in 1948 and continued for six years.
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How did the Japanese feel after the atomic bomb was dropped on them?

Further, 28 percent of the people of Japan as a whole said they had never reached a point where they felt they could not go on with the war, whereas 39 percent of the people in the Hiroshima-Nagasaki areas said they had never reached such a point.
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Why is Chernobyl worse than Hiroshima?

"Compared with other nuclear events: The Chernobyl explosion put 400 times more radioactive material into the Earth's atmosphere than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima; atomic weapons tests conducted in the 1950s and 1960s all together are estimated to have put some 100 to 1,000 times more radioactive material into ...
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What is the most radioactive place on earth?

Fukushima is the most radioactive place on Earth. A tsunami led to reactors melting at the Fukushima nuclear power plant.
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How long would it take for the Earth to recover from nuclear war?

Recovery would probably take about 3-10 years, but the Academy's study notes that long term global changes cannot be completely ruled out. The reduced ozone concentrations would have a number of consequences outside the areas in which the detonations occurred.
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Do people still live in Chernobyl?

Today, just over 100 people remain. Once these remaining returnees pass away, no one else will be allowed to move into the exclusion zone due to the dangerous levels of radiation that still exist. Although the areas in the exclusion zone are still deemed inhabitable, many areas bordering the zone are safe to live in.
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What cities are most likely to be nuked?

Redlener identified six cities that have the greatest likelihood of being attacked: New York, Chicago, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Houston. Only New York, Washington D.C., and Los Angeles' emergency management websites give ways to respond to a radioactive disaster.
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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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Can a submarine survive a nuclear bomb?

Submarines are also designed to withstand short pressure spikes from close explosions of deep charges and even nuclear explosions.
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