When a hydrogen bomb explodes, the primary element formed is helium. This occurs through the process of nuclear fusion, where hydrogen isotopes combine to form helium atoms, releasing a large amount of energy in the process.
A hydrogen bomb, also known as a thermonuclear bomb, uses isotopes of hydrogen such as deuterium and tritium. These isotopes undergo fusion reactions to release a huge amount of energy, which is the principle behind the explosive power of a hydrogen bomb.
There is no such thing as a "nitrogen bomb." Nitrogen is a common element found in many explosives, but it is not the primary component of any specific type of bomb like a "nitrogen bomb."
Styrofoam is used in a hydrogen bomb as a material to provide the necessary compression needed to trigger the fusion reaction. When the bomb explodes, the styrofoam is compressed rapidly, creating the high temperatures and pressures required for fusion to occur.
The hydrogen bomb was first successfully tested in 1952 by the United States.
When a hydrogen bomb explodes, the primary element formed is helium. This occurs through the process of nuclear fusion, where hydrogen isotopes combine to form helium atoms, releasing a large amount of energy in the process.
A bomb that splits a hydrogen atom, which literally explodes the air.
The Hydrogen Bomb or H-bomb was not developed until the 1950's. It was only exploded during tests on land and in the ocean.
if the bomb is a fission bomb it will use uranium 235 for fuel. if the bomb is a thermonuclear bomb (fusion) it will use the element hydrogen and an isotope of hydrogen for fuel.
A nuclear bomb contains two parts. The Uranium and Hydrogen. When on first impact the hydrogen canister explodes trigering a reaction happening in the uranium which explodes at heats of over 3000 Degree Celcius.
Element number 99, later named Einsteinium, was discovered in the debris from the first hydrogen bomb explosion in 1952. Only a tiny number of atoms were detected, formed from the decay of neutron-bombarded californium nuclei.
The H-Bomb, or Hydrogen Bomb, has never been used in warfare- the bombs dropped on japan at the end of WW2 were ATOMIC bombs, which are not as destructive. The Hydrogen Bomb is very much more powerful than the atom bomb, and has only ever been exploded in tests. For full information, Google 'US Hydrogen Bomb' and see what comes up.
A hydrogen bomb, also known as a thermonuclear bomb, uses isotopes of hydrogen such as deuterium and tritium. These isotopes undergo fusion reactions to release a huge amount of energy, which is the principle behind the explosive power of a hydrogen bomb.
Transmutation can help in making a hydrogen bomb by converting lithium-6 to tritium through a nuclear reaction. Tritium is an important component in a hydrogen bomb. Additionally, transmutation can also be used to produce fissile material such as plutonium-239 needed for triggering the fusion reaction in a hydrogen bomb.
Plutonium
It explodes.
There is no such thing as a "nitrogen bomb." Nitrogen is a common element found in many explosives, but it is not the primary component of any specific type of bomb like a "nitrogen bomb."