Vladimir Putin has not been shy about suggesting that Russia’s nuclear arsenal could come into play as his invasion of the Ukraine flounders, and with Sweden and Finland looking to join NATO.
Russian scientists built a new simulator to train soldiers for nuclear explosions, state media says. The simulator is set to be used in military exercises to prepare troops for post-blast missions.
Discussions around the threat of nuclear war have escalated in recent weeks, as Sweden and Finland look set to join NATO—and Russia saying it would not accept their membership. But what would happen ...
A nuclear bomb simulator website has experienced a huge increase in visits since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine earlier this year, the creator told Newsweek. The simulator—called ...
Hosted on MSN
What happens if a nuclear bomb drops on Knoxville? Simulator shows deaths and blast range
Federal officials and agencies that work closely on the nuclear weapons arsenal agree: The threat of nuclear conflict is rising and, with it, the risk of an attack on the U.S. In a sense, U.S. nuclear ...
A new nuclear bomb simulator created by Russian scientists, complete with mushroom cloud effects, will enable the Kremlin’s troops to train for combat operations after a radioactive blast, a ...
The world of nuclear weapons is a very diverse one in terms of power and range. Like everything else we humans do, one of them does however sit at the top of the food chain: the Tsar Bomba. By far the ...
On October 30, 1961, the Soviet Union tested the largest nuclear device ever created. The "Tsar Bomba," as it became known, was 10 times more powerful than all the munitions used during World War II.
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