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will it affect the earth? will the bomb explode at all?

2007-02-28 13:48:44 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

10 answers

I would not want to test that idea. The thought of turning the moon into large meteors that close to earth makes me extremely nervous.

You said an explosion (in) not on the moon, am I not right?

2007-02-28 13:54:47 · answer #1 · answered by JAN 7 · 0 2

An explosion from the middle does no longer look to greater healthful with the Moon having a lots decrease density than the Earth and a composition of lighter factors. additionally, the object you cite lies whilst it claims that the great result hypothesis grow to be often thrown out whilst the Apollo samples have been retrieved, showing that the two the Earth and the Moon incorporate the comparable isotopes of oxygen, potassium, etc. this may well be a lie of oversimplification of the assessment of composition, and a lie that those 2 factors in abundance contradict the GIH (if something, they strongly consider it because of fact the debris kicked up by the GIH may well be a mix of the impactor and the primordial Earth's crust/larger mantle, collectively as the hot crust of the Earth might type from the lighter minerals which composed the two). for this reason the daily Mail is the place the main diseased examples of technological information information bypass to die.

2016-11-26 21:17:21 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It is possible. Fusion reactions do not depend on oxygen and can take place in the vacuum of space. If this were not true, the sun would not exist!

A nuclear detonation on the moon would look different than on on the surface of the Earth. There would still be an intense flash of light, possibly faintly visible from earth, but there would be no fireball or mushroom cloud because the moon has no atmosphere.

A crater would be formed by the blast and radioactive dust and debris would ejected, most of which would quickly fall back to the surface close to the blast site.

The effects would be localized. The moon would not be split in two, nor would the moon be thrown from it's orbit.

2007-02-28 14:15:13 · answer #3 · answered by greymatter 6 · 3 1

Well for starters the UN would go ballistic! A nuclear explosion could certainly take place on the moon as it isn't reliant on atmosphere. Unless there's a lot of nukes all acting to change the moon's trajectory it wouldn't affect the moon's orbit and therefore wouldn't affect earth (tides or impact).

2007-02-28 13:54:14 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

1) Only if it were a surface blast and the escape velocity were high enough for the debris to escape the moons gravity and it was on the proper heading to intersect with the Earths orbit at the proper time.
2) Yes, it would explode.

2007-02-28 13:59:04 · answer #5 · answered by S.A.M. Gunner 7212 6 · 2 0

No it will not affect the earth. It will explode but it will look different because of the lower gravity and the fact that the moon has no atmosphere.

2007-02-28 16:24:00 · answer #6 · answered by Kenneth H 3 · 1 1

the moon is connected to all the other bodies in our galaxy and in connection to the universe who knows. but if a bomb was set off on the moon depending on the strength of the missle it could totally destroy the moon, set it off balance, out of orbit and the delicate balance of pull and push would be out of kilter and cause all the planets to wobble lose their course etc. and mayhem would result. i think it would be a big mistake to let
off a nuclear bomb on the moon. as far as the bomb going off
that would be up to the ignition system it could fail but believe me eventually they would set it off if so determined.

2007-02-28 14:09:57 · answer #7 · answered by perfecta 1 · 0 2

You could get it to work. You would just have to provide it with oxygen.

And if it did, the radiation would trickle down in our atmostphere.

I would also guess that the light from the moon and sun would be blocked, partially if not totally.

2007-02-28 13:57:34 · answer #8 · answered by the nothing 4 · 0 5

It will not explode because bombs must have oxygen and there is no oxygen on the moon.

2007-02-28 13:52:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 7

it will rain marshmellows

2007-02-28 13:56:09 · answer #10 · answered by rihannsu 2 · 0 3

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