Top university scientists created a map simulation of who across North America would be impacted by nuclear fallout in the event of a nuclear explosion ...
A new analysis based on an online simulation tool is raising fresh questions about where Americans might be safest if a nuclear war ever happened. The study points to a handful of U.S. states that ...
A nuclear blast is often imagined as a single instant of destruction. In reality, for many farther from the explosion, danger would unfold over hours and days as fallout traveled with wind and weather ...
As the video illustrates, it doesn’t matter much who starts the war: when one side launches nuclear missiles, the other side detects them and fires back before impact. Ballistic missiles from U.S.
If the bomb detonated at or near ground level, a towering mushroom cloud would form, sucking up soil, steel, concrete, and whatever remains of the people and buildings below. That cloud wouldn’t just ...
The modelling, based on a potential Russian strike on U.S. missile facilities, suggests some regions could be less affected ...
Social media-fueled theories of World War 3 have raised questions over what US states are safe should nuclear war happen.
Next month it will have been 80 years since the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were devastated by nuclear attacks. More than 200,000 people – mostly citizens – would die by the year's end ...
With a new war comes new fears of World War III or possibly even a nuclear war. Here are 11 disaster supply items to have and ...
Energy Northwest, in collaboration with Columbia Basin College (CBC) and Washington State University Tri-Cities, has introduced an educational small modular reactor (SMR) simulator to train future cle ...