Imagine if we detonated a nuclear bomb
in space.
Actually, you don't have to.
You can see it for yourself.
That was Starfish Prime,
the highest altitude
nuclear test in history.
In 1962, the US government
launched a 1.4 megaton bomb
from Johnston Island
and detonated it
400 km above the Pacific,
about as high as where the
International Space Station
orbits today.
The detonation generated a giant fireball
and created a burst of energy called
an electromagnetic pulse, or EMP,
that expanded for over 1,000 km.
EMPs can cause a power surge,
damaging electronic
equipment in the process.
And this one was no different.
Across Hawaii, streetlights went dark,
telephones went down,
and navigation and radar systems went out,
not to mention the six or
so satellites that failed.
And all this came from a 1.4 megaton bomb.
Tsar Bomba,
which was the largest nuclear
bomb that was ever detonated,
was 50 megatons.
So, what would happen if we detonated that
above the United States?
For starters, there's
no atmosphere in space,
so there would be no
mushroom-shaped cloud,
and no subsequent blast
wave, or mass destruction.
Instead, you'd get a blinding fireball
four times the size of Starfish Prime's.
And if you look directly at it
within the first 10 seconds,
you could permanently damage your eyes.
Satellites wouldn't be safe either.
Radiation from the explosion would fry
the circuits of hundreds of instruments
in low-Earth orbit,
including communication satellites,
military spy satellites,
and even science
telescopes like the Hubble.
Plus, astronauts onboard the
International Space Station
might be at risk of radiation poisoning.
On the ground, however,
you'd probably be fine.
The detonation point
would be far enough away
that the high energy
radiation wouldn't reach you.
But don't get too comfortable.
Remember Starfish Prime's EMP?
This time the EMP would cover
one-third of the entire United States,
bringing down regional
power grids and electronics,
like a lightning strike.
Millions of Americans will be out of power
for hours or even days.
But it's not all doom and gloom.
The radiation would also interact with
oxygen and nitrogen in the atmosphere
and create a spectacular
aurora near the detonation site
that would last for days.
Now, let's be clear this
will probably never happen.
Super thermonuclear devices
like Tsar Bomba no longer exist.
And even if they did,
the Tsar Bomba weighed
around 27,000 kg.
There are only a couple
of operational rockets
in the world that can manage to lift
something that heavy into
space in the first place.
So, we're probably safe
from that anyway.
This video was made in large part thanks
to the calculations from physicists
at Los Alamos National Lab.
