Saturday, September 5, 2015

Replica of most powerful nuclear bomb ever on display in Moscow

Replica of most powerful nuclear bomb ever on display in Moscow

Eight metres long and weighing 25 tonnes, a replica of the so-called Tsar Bomb, the most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated, has gone on display for the first time in Russia, in the midst of an ongoing standoff with the West over Ukraine. Tested in 1961 by the Soviet Union, the hydrogen 

bomb --…
AFP




Replica of most powerful nuclear bomb ever on display in Moscow


AFP


A mockup of a Soviet AN-602 hydrogen bomb (Tsar Bomb) displayed at the exhibition devoted to the 70th anniversary of Russia’s nuclear industry in Moscow on September 1, 2015
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A mockup of a Soviet AN-602 hydrogen bomb (Tsar Bomb) displayed at the exhibition devoted to the 70th anniversary of Russia’s nuclear industry in Moscow on September 1, 2015 (AFP Photo/Alexander Nemenov)
Moscow (AFP) - Eight metres long and weighing 25 tonnes, a replica of the so-called Tsar Bomb, the most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated, has gone on display for the first time in Russia, in the midst of an ongoing standoff with the West over Ukraine.
Tested in 1961 by the Soviet Union, the hydrogen bomb -- also known as the AN602 -- instilled a mix of pride and fear in retired military pilot Nikolay Krylov as he looked at the replica housed at an exhibition centre near the Kremlin.
"When I come near it, I'm uncomfortable because I think of all the destruction it could have done," the 62-year-old said.
This symbol of the Cold War nuclear arms race is being showcased to mark 70 years of Russian nuclear history, as the nation's ties with the West remain strained by its 2014 annexation of the Crimea peninsula from Ukraine and its alleged support for separatist rebels.
In May, NATO condemned Russia's "nuclear sabre-rattling" after Moscow announced plans to deploy nuclear-capable missiles in Kaliningrad -- its European exclave tucked between Poland and Lithuania -- and Russian President Vladimir Putin said he had been ready to put nuclear forces on alert as the West denounced the seizure of Crimea.
Opened on the first day of the new school year on September 1, the exhibit drew crowds of uniformed students, who clustered around the replica weapon, an uncanny sight for some visitors.
"It would have been better if the bomb had never existed," 72-year-old Galina Ivanova, who worked on Russia's civilian nuclear energy programme for more than three decades, told AFP at the exhibition.
"But at the time, the bomb played an important role. It might be the reason why we are still here today," she said.
-Guarantor of peace-
On October 30, 1961, the nuclear bomb developed by Russian scientists -- including future Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei Sakharov -- was detonated in the Soviet Union's Novaya Zemlya archipelago above the Arctic circle.
The detonation, which yielded an explosive force of 50 megatons, produced a gigantic fireball visible from hundreds of kilometres away and sent seismic shockwaves through the surrounding area.
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev had warned the United States a year earlier, during the 1960 United Nations General Assembly, that the Soviet Union would show them "Kuzkina mat" (Kuzka's mother), a term he used to designate the Tsar Bomb.
The detonation was the result of a wide-ranging atomic research programme ordered by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin just before the end of World War II. Its goal: develop the atomic bomb as the United States had.
The Soviet Union and the US, who joined together to fight Nazi Germany, became locked in a global struggle for international influence, racing to acquire nuclear warheads despite knowing that any attack would have disastrous consequences for both sides.
"This bomb, the most powerful of its kind, helped countries strive for peace," said Mikhail Bayaskhalanov, a tour guide at the exhibition.
Bayaskhalanov insisted that putting the bomb on display was not "meant to scare anyone."
"Nuclear energy is not only atomic bombs and missiles but also civilian nuclear programmes, icebreakers, electricity production, sectors in which Russia has very high performing technologies," he said.

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Replica of most powerful nuclear bomb ever on display in Moscow

There is another powerful bomb that Russia has built called "Satan" that caused me to write the following starting in the middle of the night Christmas Even 2011. I was wondering why God woke me up and had me write this but usually there is a good reason whenever I'm inspired to write something. I envisioned what would happen if a 100 megaton or larger hydrogen bomb went off above the U.S. at 100 miles up in elevation 528,000 feet in the exact middle of the lower 48 states. And this is what I came up with after studying about all this since the 1950s when I was a boy and had to hide under my desk at school during Civil Defense drills throughout the 1950s. I'm not sure what good it would do to be under your desk during a nuclear blast other than maybe protect you from flying glass and falling ceiling a little. However, during the 1950s for us then it was not if we were all going to die from a nuclear war it was only when. People think differently now mostly.

This is what I was guided to write then from everything I had studied since the 1950s regarding EMPs and hydrogen bombs going off at this altitude in order to end a civilization without radiating the ground to much. By the way this could happen anywhere if a terrorist got a missile this big and launched it. So, this is still a problem to be concerned about worldwide.

 

Note: After I wrote this I also realized that if someone did this it might shoot a part of the atmosphere off of earth and into space. It also likely would cause weird weather events worldwide and other problems beyond what I recount in this writing below including weird wind and weather events worldwide as the normal weather patterns might be disrupted in various ways. end note. 

2nd note: Also, I found some of the pieces that had been hacked when I first wrote this towards the end of what I wrote. So, when you find something that should be the beginning towards the end don't be surprised. If I have time I will try to edit it at some point in the future.

Here is the word button but I will also make a copy here:

 

 

 

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