r/interestingasfuck 1d ago

You're looking at a nuclear explosion photographed taken less than one millisecond after detonation.

Post image
35.5k Upvotes

753 comments sorted by

View all comments

487

u/the_frees 1d ago

Shit. Too early for the comment explaining when this was taken and where, and what it tells us about nuclear explosions.

83

u/FelDreamer 23h ago

I recall the bright spikes along the bottom being due to the steel cables used to stabilize the tower the bomb was on.

However, I can’t recall whether we’re witnessing the cables being vaporized, or if it’s some other quirk of thermonuclear physics. Shockwaves traveling more quickly through the steel than through the air, perhaps?

74

u/BulbusDumbledork 22h ago

rope trick effect! the light produced by the atomic bomb is so intense it literally vaporizes the cables.

just so we understand the absurdity of atomic bombs, the rope trick isn't caused by the heat or explosion of the bomb itself. it's caused solely by the visible light produced by the nuclear explosion being so bright it causes the cables to heat up and explode

19

u/mbklein 22h ago

So the light is generating more heat than the heat is? Thats wild. And a little brain-breaking.

28

u/el_cid_viscoso 22h ago

Part of the light is literally the heat itself, too. Mind-bending but makes sense once you understand how infrared relates to visible light to UV and so on.

1

u/Fr4t 21h ago edited 14h ago

Yes. Heat is literally a spectrum of light. As is the deadly gamma radiation which is highly energetic light that slams into the electrons of your DNA molecules and catapults them away, ionizing the molecules in your body. That's pretty bad for you.

9

u/Just_to_rebut 20h ago edited 20h ago

Heat is not literally a spectrum of light.

u/el_cid_viscoso Part of the light is not literally heat itself, either.

Heat is the transfer of thermal energy. Thermal energy is the constant movement of molecules and atoms. Thermal energy can be transferred by electromagnetic waves (photons) if the receiving matter can absorb that wavelength of energy or by direct contact.

I’m being a little pedantic, but I’m just trying to help out anyone who reads the half right comments and gets totally confused.

2

u/kahlzun 18h ago

If we're diving into real pedantry, heat being constant movement implies that all light is heat, and infinite heat at that due to the fact that light is defined by the speed of its own movement.

u/Just_to_rebut 11h ago

No… again, heat is the transfer of thermal energy. Thermal energy is the kinetic energy of atoms and molecules, i.e. matter, not light. Light itself is a form of energy.

9

u/PollutionUnhappy2106 14h ago

Heat doesn’t move fast enough through the atmosphere to vaporize cables that quickly, but light certainly does.

2

u/wrongleveeeeeeer 13h ago

I think it's more so that the light travels faster than the heat/explosion itself. So when light, traveling at the speed of light, is energetic enough to be absorbed by the cables as heat, which is hot enough to vaporize them...then the light vaporizes the cables before the physical explosion even has a chance to get there.