Yahoo Answers is shutting down on 4 May 2021 (Eastern Time) and the Yahoo Answers website is now in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.
If a nuclear bomb can eviscerate through building/anything laterally, why does it not penetrate downward into the earth as it expands?
Is the material of the ground that strong? I would think if it explodes and goes through multiple brick buildings for miles it would have no problem building a massive hole in the ground as well? Or is the ground that strong?
6 Answers
- Anonymous1 week ago
The reason is than detonation takes place at least 2,000 feet above the ground and generates a spherical shock wave whose effect on the ground is highly damped the the air cushion .
- ?Lv 52 weeks ago
> Is the material of the ground that strong?
err, no. there just is so much of it. Radiation will penetrate several meters of ground, but every meter will reduce the amount that gets through, by a fixed factor. After a mile of ground, nothing remains
- PhilomelLv 72 weeks ago
The destruction of a nuclear blast is maximized by detonating at altitudes of 2000 feet or more.
The earth is saved by this altitude. It does leave a crater but it is not extremely deep. the ones in japan were only about 10 feet deep. The buildings were not eviscerated(disemboweled) they were devastated(flattened) within the first mile of the blast. concrete melted but in WWII japan there wasn't much concrete, it was mostly paper and Bamboo which evaporated.
- Nemo SLv 52 weeks ago
It does depending on how high it detonates and the magnitude of the blast...
N.Shadows
- MorningfoxLv 72 weeks ago
Underground nuclear explosions typically push the dirt and rock outwards, to make a cavity as much as 100 meters across. On the surface, the blast bounces off the ground, so I would not expect the hole to be more than 10 or 30 meters deep.
If you go laterally, very few buildings have more than 10 meters of solid steel/concrete/brick.
- ?Lv 62 weeks ago
it does blast away the layer of surface dirt, the layer of surface dirt isn't that deep in most areas, then there is the bedrock, which is really hard and thick,