When a nuclear accident happens, it’s vital that scientists have accurate fallout models.
Nukemap 2.5's new features let you see where a cloud of radioactive fallout might drift based on local weather conditions. Fallout refers to the dirt and debris that get sucked up by a nuclear blast, ...
Nobody wants a nuclear event to occur, other than those prepper weirdos who secretly need one to happen to justify the small fortune they spent on a fallout shelter. But just in case one does happen, ...
Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory recreated part of the intense chaos inside a nuclear fireball to better understand how radioactive fallout forms. Their experiments revealed that ...
A nuclear war is often imagined as a map of colors: red zones where survival seems impossible, orange zones where danger is extreme, yellow zones where life might continue under pressure, and green ...
"Hearst Magazines and AOL may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." In a nuclear accident, the explosion usually isn't the deadliest side effect—it's the fallout. While two ...