![North Korea's nuclear tests explosion impact (1 kiloton=1,000 tons of... | Download Scientific Diagram North Korea's nuclear tests explosion impact (1 kiloton=1,000 tons of... | Download Scientific Diagram](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338369377/figure/fig3/AS:843261191147521@1578060543040/North-Koreas-nuclear-tests-explosion-impact-1-kiloton1-000-tons-of-TNT-Reprinted.png)
North Korea's nuclear tests explosion impact (1 kiloton=1,000 tons of... | Download Scientific Diagram
What is the maximum package weight efficiency we can practically achieve with a thermonuclear weapon in terms of megatons/ton? - Quora
![What would happen if an 800-kiloton nuclear warhead detonated above midtown Manhattan? - Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists What would happen if an 800-kiloton nuclear warhead detonated above midtown Manhattan? - Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists](https://thebulletin.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Manhattan1.jpg.webp)
What would happen if an 800-kiloton nuclear warhead detonated above midtown Manhattan? - Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
![Sten Linnarsson on Twitter: "Not sure why this is so hard. Hiroshima was 15 KILOtons. MOAB was 11 tons. So that's 15000 versus 11, nothing else. https://t.co/HVuyusbGIR" / Twitter Sten Linnarsson on Twitter: "Not sure why this is so hard. Hiroshima was 15 KILOtons. MOAB was 11 tons. So that's 15000 versus 11, nothing else. https://t.co/HVuyusbGIR" / Twitter](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C9Ub_hqW0AEGWqq.jpg)
Sten Linnarsson on Twitter: "Not sure why this is so hard. Hiroshima was 15 KILOtons. MOAB was 11 tons. So that's 15000 versus 11, nothing else. https://t.co/HVuyusbGIR" / Twitter
![SOLVED:The kiloton, which is used to measure the energy released in an atomic explosion, is equal to 4.2 \times 10^{12} \mathrm{J} (approximately the energy released in the explosion of 1000 tons of SOLVED:The kiloton, which is used to measure the energy released in an atomic explosion, is equal to 4.2 \times 10^{12} \mathrm{J} (approximately the energy released in the explosion of 1000 tons of](https://cdn.numerade.com/previews/3d283d5a-a2f7-4710-a1ef-ff4e77121878_large.jpg)