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  1. Jun 29, 2023 · W e know that an all-out U.S.-Russia nuclear war would be bad. But how bad, exactly? How do your chances of surviving the explosions, radiation, and nuclear winter depend on where you live?

    • Max Tegmark
  2. 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.

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  4. Using unclassified documents on nuclear targeting and open data on the physics of modern weapons and fallout patterns, this simulation models what would happen if approximately 1,100 warheads (~7% of the world's arsenal) hit the United States.

  5. Oct 20, 2022 · The overall global consequences of nuclear war—including both short-term and long-term impacts—would be even more horrific causing hundreds of millions—even billions—of people to starve to death.

  6. May 16, 2022 · Alex Wellerstein, a historian of nuclear weapons, who is an associate professor at the Stevens Institute of Technology, in Hoboken, New Jersey, created a nuclear bomb simulator to show just that....

    • 15 sec
  7. Mar 2, 2022 · Destructive radii of 100-kiloton, 1-megaton, and 10-megaton weapons superimposed on a map of the New York City area. The destructive radius is defined as the distance within which blast overpressure exceeds 5 pounds per square inch, and it measures 2 miles, 4.4 miles, and 9.4 miles for the weapon yields shown.

  8. It gives information about the ranges of prompt effects (blast, heat, acute ionizing radiation), delayed effects (fallout contamination), and calculates estimates as to the numbers of possible casualties based on an underlying database of global ambient population density. NUKEMAP made an appearance on the Daily Show with John Stewart in 2013.

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