It would do nothing. In 1994, a comet (Shoemaker-Levy) crashed into Jupiter. I don't have the exact numbers on the equivalent to a nuclear bomb, but it was much more powerful than any bomb. Jupiter kind of sat there and shrugged it off without much effect.
Edit: Found a site that says *one* fragment of the comet was the same as 225,000 megatons. The biggest fragment was the same as 6 million megatons.
http://www.isc.tamu.edu/~astro/sl9/cometfaq2.html
2006-06-20 09:22:26
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answer #1
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answered by Arbitrage 7
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You could probably deliver a 5 million megaton nuclear warhead to Jupiters core and never see a difference
2006-06-20 09:25:26
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answer #2
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answered by Paul G 5
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Most likely there would be no observable difference in the planet as viewed from the earth. 50 megatons isn't a lot different than a firecracker when weighed against the mass of Jupiter...there's virtually no chance of the planet mutating magically into a dwarf star, since it's not a star now.....
2006-06-20 09:31:59
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answer #3
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answered by Paul B 1
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you're proper, the Shoemaker Levy impacts did not reason the nice and comfortable temperature and stress of a nuclear detojnation. They *handed* it by ability of numerous orders of value! The scars left by ability of the comet impacts were wider than the full planet Earth, and were obviously seen in telescopes even from right here, just about 0.5 a thousand million miles away! Nuclear explosions often is the most well known and unfavourable element we've ever made right here on earth, yet they quite do light in evaluation to the energies released by ability of intense % impacts of gadgets massing numerous lots. memories of nuclear blasts pushing the Moon out of orbit or cracking open the planet are organic fable. they do exactly no longer launch sufficient power to have that result on a planet-sized merchandise. take a seem at aerial images of the Nevada try web site. it really is complete of holes made by ability of nuclear explosions, yet they are all extremely small at the same time as positioned next to, say, craters on the Moon that you will see that in binoculars from 250,000 miles away. If an explosion effective sufficient to tear out, say, the South Pole-Aitken basin on the Moon did not tear it aside, what's a nuclear bomb, many orders of value a lot less effective than that, going to do to a planet the scale of Jupiter? no longer a heck of a lot, quite. 'Ah, yet Jupiter is made up of hydrogen, a flammable gasoline', I listen you're saying. properly, real, yet with out oxygen hydrogen can not ignite. Jupiter has no ability to help combustion of its hydrogen. How about nuclear fusion, as powers the solar, also utilising hydrogen as gasoline? If Jupiter replaced into able to protecting nuclear fusion it would already be doing so. The stress and temperature on the middle isn't intense sufficient to get nuclear fusion began. Detonating a bomb in there does no longer help both. no matter if you may make a bomb that ought to attain the middle with out having beaten by ability of the titanic stress, that similar titanic stress would come with the explosion. The really tiny addition of warm temperature and stress from the bomb will be insignificant compared to the stress of trillions upon trillions of numerous remember urgent down on it. So, Jupiter is tremendous, nuclear bombs are tiny in evaluation. no longer some thing we human beings ought to do to any planet compares to the forces in contact in the organic collisions they have all withstood for billions of years.
2016-10-14 08:31:28
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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That depends on where you hit it, and it may be possible to become a dwarf star with all the radiation. But I would rather learn to control the hurricane on the surface of it. If we could harness the power it would be unthinkable. The Hurricane I'm talking about is that red dot on it.
2006-06-20 09:25:11
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Nothing would happen. The temperature and density of Jupiter is nowhere near high enough to cause spontaenous fusion.
2006-06-20 09:38:23
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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R U THICK y u want to send war head to jupiter and is ur mom paying for that to send that stuff up there u indians r thick man
2006-06-20 09:25:21
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Since we are uncertain as to what Jupiter is fully like, perhaps nothing
2006-06-20 09:26:42
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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the warhead would be burned to smitherines by the toxic air that can get to be over a thousand degrees on a cold day. it is too acidic to get through.
2006-06-20 11:19:39
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answer #9
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answered by taiya002 1
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blip,
That was it. Did you miss it?
I`ll deliver the 50 megaton bomb again, pay attention this time.
blip.
2006-06-20 09:49:37
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answer #10
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answered by Gone Rogue 7
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