Can a nuke even blow up in space?

Dafunkdoc_Unlimited

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Would it ever stop exploding in space :dwillhuh:

There are still particles from the Big Bang, 14 BILLION years ago, accelerating away from the initial explosion. If they don't encounter any other particles/masses, they'll be going after our Sun goes nova.​
 

Orbital-Fetus

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I get what you're saying, but earthly "fire" as we know it, is different than what's happening on the surface of the sun. I guess they both involve heat and light, but it's probably an entirely different phenomenon

they are literally the exact same phenomenon just on different scales.
 

Orbital-Fetus

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I meant to ask, what is the "residue" that remains in the area where a nuke goes off that makes it uninhabitable?

when the nuke goes of, the force of the blast is only one part of it.
the radiation is the other part.

imagine a dust storm comes through your city but it's radioactive.
that's the fallout that settles in the blast area or gets taken away in the wind.
i think scientist in France were the first to detect fallout from Chernobyl.
 
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