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  1. Export to Google Earth (KMZ) Collapse options on "detonate". 4. Clickthe "Detonate" button below. Detonate. Clear all effectsAdd new detonation. Center ground zeroInspect location. Notethat you can drag the target marker after you have detonated the nuke. Created by Alex Wellerstein, 2012-2024.

    • Missilemap

      MISSILEMAP is an interactive data visualization by Alex...

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      Reflections on the end of 2017, and the start of a new...

  2. Export to Google Earth (KMZ) Collapse options on "detonate". 4. Clickthe "Detonate" button below. Detonate. Clear all effectsLaunch multiple. Center ground zeroProbe location. Notethat you can drag the target marker after you have detonated the nuke. Created by Alex Wellerstein, 2012-2020.

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  4. Mar 15, 2017 · CNN. 16.3M subscribers. Subscribed. 14K. 2M views 7 years ago. The US government recently declassified films showing some of the 210 atmospheric nuclear tests it conducted between 1945 and...

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  5. We built our bomb blast in close collaboration with Alex and modeled its functionality on his online nuclear weapon effects simulator, the NUKEMAP. In its first month, more than 1.4 million people viewed the bomb blast, and it was featured in major media outlets worldwide, including coverage by The Verge, Fast Company, Motherboard, and IFL Science.

  6. Jul 12, 2019 · 6.2K. 925K views 4 years ago. These Are The 5 Largest Nuclear Detonations in History. Since the first nuclear test on 15 July 1945, there have been over 2,051 other nuclear weapons tests...

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  7. Dec 15, 2017 · The official count of 1,054 tests includes 210 atmospheric nuclear tests between 1945 and 1962 - with cameras capturing every one. This week, a team at the federal Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has released 62 of these atmospheric nuclear test videos on YouTube.

  8. NUKEMAP is essentially a “mash-up” of Samuel Glasstone and Philip J. Dolan’s The Effects of Nuclear Weapons (1977) and online map programs (initially Google Maps, but now MapBox). It allows a user to simulate a nuclear detonation (with several possible parameters, including explosive yield and height of burst) anywhere on the world.

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