#1
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Nuclear Blasts
I was just reading though "Armies of the Night" and realized something.
The strike hitting Linden was listed at 1.25MT. So damage radius should be MUCH smaller then what the maps included show. I am using this as a guide... http://sc-ems.com/ems/blastICT/blastICT.htm Is this example accurate? Obviously radiation and subsequent fires and such would cause more damage. But the maps in the module show complete destruction for 10-12miles out. |
#2
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I am actually working on what I hope will be the definitive blast mapping system as part of my gaming site. I am hoping it will be ready shortly.
This is the best currently available IMO. http://www.carloslabs.com/node/16 They have a 1.4 MT option (eventually mine will be totally selectable ) |
#3
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From Wiki... 1MT at 2km burst height BLAST urban leveled (20psi) 2.4km most destroyed (5psi) 6.2km moderate damage 17 km ry car thrown and crushed ~4 km THERMAL conflaration 10 km 3deg burns 12 km 2deg burns 15 km 1deg burns 19 km RADIATION (slant range) Lethal 2.3 km ARS (absorbed) 2.9 km As you can tell, radiation is the LEAST of the worries near ground zero. Your either crushed by the blast or crisped by the thermal well away from the inital radiation hazard zone. Now I don't have my other books to look in, but this figure is about right for ~1 MT yield. Do a little googling and ............. |
#4
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From the map in the module, radiation goes out over 10KM...and complete
destruction about 15km. I think the module ranges are bout double reasonable effects...2PSI is light to moderate damage on concrete/commercial buildings. Leaving alot of the area with good potential for salvage. |
#5
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So unless the Armies of the Night is suggesting that the explosion of the bomb was 100 miles or something of the sort, I don't think they were likely too far off the mark. |
#6
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If you have the module look at the map on page 6.
The description says other then a few broken windows neither Manhattan or Brooklyn got ANY blast damage. But Brooklyn got some minor radiation fallout due to prevailing winds that day. But the map shows the general condition over everything from Linden out to Jersey City as "rubble". Thats roughly 15KM out from Linden, and farther if you think perhaps the attack would have centered around the refinery section of Linden versus the population center. Perhaps I am wrong, just seem like its a few "clicks" off from what would really happen... |
#7
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Rubble could be from the fire storms after the nukes went off and not necessarily from the blast itself.
__________________
"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#8
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The most damage by far would be from fires after the initial blast.
You can count on almost no efforts being made to fight the fires, firstly because there wouldn't be anyone in physical shape to do so close in, secondly rubble would close roads, thirdly, fires in multistory buildings are DAMN HARD to fight (look at the world trade centre for a prime example), and fourthly, who'd be stupid enough to move towards a rapidly expanding mushroom cloud from the relatively lightly damaged surrounding areas? 9/11 generated a hell of a lot of heroism, but that was really just one small area and it didn't glow in the dark. I can't see more than a handful of EXTREMELY dedicated or just plain foolhardy emergency workers doing anything beyond getting the hell out of the area as best they could. Something else that might have had a major impact is the pretty much standard tactic of dispersing emergency vehicles at the first threat of nuclear attack. If that occurred, any response would only really entail picking at the fringes of the devastation with the aim to restrict the spread of fires rather than attack them directly. |
#9
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#10
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I forgot to add in EMP effects on the electrical systems of emergency vehicles and communications which would effectively shut down any attempts to react to the blast and after effects even before they started!
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#11
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What were your calculations on range from Ground zero? I was under the impression that for every factor of ten increase in tonnage the radius only increased by two in which case the difference in radius between a 1 kt vs a 1mt weapon is from 3.8 to 30.4(origianally posted as 15.2) miles NOT 3.8 to 38 miles(I read this a long time ago and suffer from CRS(can't remember Sh....what was I saying?)) ooops missed a doubleing...... carry on. nothing to see here..... the result is close to yours. did good....... sorry bowing out ....of course the difference between a 100mt weapon, my way versus your way gives a 20 mile closer safe area.
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"It's in russian it say's "front towards enem......." Last edited by Earthpig; 02-24-2009 at 09:06 AM. |
#12
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From a math perspective since since a explosion is in three dimensions you would need an 8 fold increase in power to double the radius. This might be adjusted a little downward as the ground might redirect some of the blast. As I am researching this I'll post some formulas as I find them.
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#13
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Did anyone consult the 1977 Effects of Nuclear Weapons study at http://www.princeton.edu/~globsec/pu.../effects.shtml ?
And this site has a calculator, based off the 1962 version of that same study.
__________________
I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end... |
#14
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Well if I am reading that chart correctly Chico, then ordinary houses 10 miles away from that blast would only receive slight damage and concrete building wouldn't even receive light.
For me, that seem to say the range in the first versions are way off. And remember guys... a fire doesn't turn a concrete building to rubble. |
#15
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I'm not a specialist but that's how my stepfather would explain it (more or less) and he is one, and one I trust. |
#16
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#17
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I stand corrected, it can cause rubble. Just not from a 1.25 mt blast at 15miles away.
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#18
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Okay, I dug up information that T.R. and I had collected regarding nuke blasts. Here's a basis for a rough breakdown.
Vaporization Point ------------------ Everything is vaporized by the atomic blast. 98% fatalities. Overpress=25 psi. Wind velocity=320 mph. Total Destruction ----------------- All structures above ground are destroyed. 90% fatalities. Overpress=17 psi. Wind velocity=290 mph. Severe Blast Damage ------------------- Factories and other large-scale building collapse. Severe damage to highway bridges. Rivers sometimes flow countercurrent. 65% fatalities, 30% injured. Overpress=9 psi. Wind velocity=260 mph. Severe Heat Damage ------------------ Everything flammable burns. People in the area suffocate due to the fact that most available oxygen is consumed by the fires. 50% fatalities, 45% injured. Overpress=6 psi. Wind velocity=140 mph. Severe Fire & Wind Damage ------------------------- Residency structures are severely damaged. People are blown around. 2nd and 3rd-degree burns suffered by most survivors. 15% dead. 50% injured. Overpress=3 psi. Wind velocity=98 mph. For a 1 MT airburst of 8,000 feet, we have the following ranges for those 5 zones. Zone 1: 2.5 mile radius zone 2: 3.75 mile radius Zone 3: 6.5 mile radius Zone 4: 7.75 mile radius Zone 5: 10 mile radius Now considering that things are undergoing 98 mile per hour winds at 10 miles from the blast, it's not too hard of a stretch to say that things 15 miles away would be subjected to high winds. You're probably looking at 30-50 mile per hour winds at that distance. Likewise, since 2nd and 3rd degree burns will be occuring at 10 miles, it's safe to assume you'll have enough heat to ignite some things at 15 miles as well. Sure it won't be conflagrations, but a fire here and there that isn't dealt with by emergency responders soon develop into bigger and nastier fires. One house that catches fire catches another house, and another house, and an office building and so on. Throw wind into the mix, and those fires get pushed for miles more. So looking at damage 15 miles from the point of detonation isn't that much of a stretch. There will still be some structures standing at that range, but there's also going to be burnt out buildings, collapsed buildings from fire, scorched vehicles that go caught in the path of a fire, and so on. Hopefully this helps some. |
#19
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__________________
"It's in russian it say's "front towards enem......." |
#20
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#21
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Well I guess another question I havent really found an answer too...
How long does radiation contamination last in an urban area? Say like the south western 1/3rd of Staten Island? |
#22
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Way, way longer than it's implied in T2K.
Half-life, contamination, etc was scaled way back so as to make the world even remotely livable for PCs. |
#23
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Depends on where the radiation is/was. Fallout in exposed areas that are well drained would be washed away by the rain over time (of course the fallout would just be deposited somewhere else). Metal objects that were exposed to hard radiation during the blasts would themselves stay radioactive for decades or even centuries. Off the coast of my state, Western Australia, there were nuclear tests at the Monte Bello Islands and it is forbidden for visitors there to pick up any bits of metal they find because they are radioactive.
__________________
"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#24
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In a world such as T2K you don't really care about dying at 50 or 80, your only concern is about tomorrow and may be the day after tomorrow (if you are lucky). Dying at old age is a luxury and nothing more. |
#25
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This might be of interest if you've got a week to read it....
http://www.princeton.edu/~globsec/pu.../effects.shtml |
#26
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Glassstone
Just a note the '77 edition was redacted from early versions some of the data was removed and or changed the better ver is the mid 60's it's on the web some where i just cant seem to find it try surfing this site heavy duty data
http://glasstone.blogspot.com/2006/0...ear-space.html Last edited by ex3313; 03-11-2009 at 07:36 PM. |
#27
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This page has three sections from the 1964 edition that were not included in the 1977 version linked to above. I found the full 1964 version online somewhere, I just can't remember where now. There is a .pdf on my hard drive somewhere now.
__________________
I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end... |
#28
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__________________
The Big Book of War - Twilight 2000 Filedump Site Guns don't kill people,apes with guns do. |
#29
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__________________
"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
#30
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I think the only difference between fission and fusion would be the amount of fallout. A pure fission bomb would have proportionally more radioactivity as the unfissled Uranium and Plutonium would be more dangerous than the deuterium.
I don't think there would be much overlap in fission and fusion bombs being the same size though. But you might be able to make a 100kt version of both. Of course all fusion bombs will have a fission core. |
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