If you lived in California, which is approximately 2,800 miles away from Florida, and a nuclear explosion occurred in Florida, it is highly unlikely that you would hear or feel anything directly related to the explosion. However, it is important to understand the implications and potential consequences of such an event.
Nuclear explosions are extremely devastating and generate an immense amount of energy. The effects of a nuclear explosion can be categorized into two main types: primary and secondary. Primary effects occur immediately at the location of the explosion, including the intense blast wave, thermal radiation, and electromagnetic pulse (EMP). Secondary effects refer to the aftermath of the explosion, such as fallout, fires, and potential nuclear winter scenarios.
Let’s delve deeper into each of these aspects to understand why you may not experience any direct effects but could still face indirect consequences:
1. Distance and Blast Effects:
As mentioned earlier, California is situated approximately 2,800 miles away from Florida. The initial blast wave produced by a nuclear explosion is primarily absorbed and dissipated within a relatively short distance, depending on the size of the bomb. In general, the initial blast wave is contained within a few miles of the explosion site. Given the significant distance between California and Florida, you would likely not experience any direct impact from the blast wave.
2. Thermal Radiation:
Thermal radiation is the intense light emitted during a nuclear explosion. This radiation causes severe burns and can start fires in the nearby vicinity of the detonation. However, the distance between California and Florida would act as a significant barrier, making it highly improbable for you to be affected by the thermal radiation directly.
3. Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP):
An EMP is a short burst of electromagnetic radiation emitted during a nuclear explosion. It has the potential to damage or destroy electronic devices and electrical grids. However, for you to be affected by the EMP, it would need to be strong enough to propagate across thousands of miles to reach California. While there could be some residual electromagnetic effects, it is unlikely that you would perceive or experience any major disruptions personally.
While it may seem reassuring that you would not directly hear or feel the effects of a nuclear explosion in Florida, it is crucial to consider the significant indirect consequences that could affect you in California:
1. Fallout:
Fallout refers to the radioactive material released into the atmosphere during a nuclear explosion. Depending on various factors such as wind patterns and weather conditions, this radioactive material may travel long distances. Given the distance between California and Florida, it is plausible that some level of radioactive fallout could reach your location. However, the actual impact would depend on the size of the explosion, prevailing wind patterns, and other factors.
2. Environmental Impact:
A nuclear explosion can cause substantial environmental damage. This includes contamination of water sources, air pollution, and destruction of ecosystems. While the exact extent of the impact would depend on various factors, California may still experience indirect consequences due to the disaster in Florida, which could affect the environment and potentially have long-term effects on human health.
3. Social and Psychological Fallout:
In the aftermath of a nuclear explosion, fear, panic, and uncertainty can spread rapidly among the population. News of such a catastrophic event would undoubtedly cause a significant psychological impact, irrespective of your geographical location. The social fabric and overall well-being of the community may be profoundly affected by the tragic event, leading to long-lasting consequences.
It is important to note that the above scenarios are hypothetical and based on the assumption of a nuclear explosion occurring in Florida. The likelihood of such an event is extremely low, thanks to international treaties, diplomatic efforts, and global security measures in place. The purpose of this discussion is to provide an informative analysis of what may happen if such an unfortunate event were to occur.
In conclusion, if you lived in California and a nuclear explosion happened in Florida, you would not directly hear or feel anything due to the vast distance between the two locations. However, it is crucial to acknowledge the broader implications and potential indirect consequences that may ensue. These include possible exposure to radioactive fallout, environmental damage, and social and psychological fallout. It is vital for humanity to work collectively towards global peace, nuclear disarmament, and the prevention of such catastrophic events.
It would depend on the size and power of the nuke, but you most likely wouldn’t.
They used to set of lots of nukes in Nevada and nobody in California heard them
Yes. Relief.
There’s a lot of weird answers in here.
No, you wouldn’t feel or hear anything. The tzar bomba, largest nuke ever detonated, had the blast wave reach 620 miles. Even if you could double that, someone in California wouldn’t feel or hear anything from Florida.
No not a dam thing.
This is like the 3rd nuke related post I’ve seen in 2 hours, how much seconds to midnight on the doomsday clock?
You’d definitely hear *about* it.
Only if you’re force sensitive
Emotionally?
Not from the bomb itself. Though it’d be entirely possible for your brain to decide it felt something after the fact once you read the news and start to panic. Brains are weird like that.
Though in the coming weeks who knows as the fallout gets blown across the country (if it does, I’m not particularly versed in nuclear weaponry besides big fire mushroom makes things past tense.)
Over 3000 nukes have been detonated on earth. No one these has affected the survivability on Earth and most people are completely unaware when they went off. People think nukes have mythical destructive power and thus is just not true. Very powerful yes but also greatly misunderstood.
You probably feel a sense of relief as Florida sinks back into the ocean
If you had a seismograph, you could see the effects of the explosion on that. With 1 or 2 friends who are far away from you and also have seismographs, you could do some math and detect where the explosion occurred. Thousands of miles away, you would not see, hear, or feel much yourself, but the instruments design to measure vibrations in the earth will.
No
What’s your midichlorian count?
For comparison, the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens in Oregon was the equivalent 500 Hiroshimas. It had no effect outside the region until the cloud of volcanic ash blew across the atmosphere.
You might feel a disturbance in the farce. And there is no misspelling in that sentence.
No.
No
Not a chance
No way.
It’s not the nukes you need to worry about. It’s the radiation zombies.
You would hear about it on the news. If you felt anything would depend upon your empathy
Lots of speculation here, but let’s be real. California is getting nuked wayyy before Florida is. Florida isn’t even in the top 5.
> a nuke
Any old nuke? No. The biggest, baddest nuke humans could manage to make? Sure. Also, the world will have problems.
>would I hear or feel anything?
The thing about sound, and whatever distributes out in all directions, is that every doubling of the distance quadruples the distribution. e.g. if 1 distance is 4 loud, 2 distance is 1 loud.
Disclaimer, I’m rusty and working on mobile. My math might be fucking something up. Pretty sure I’m right, but not certain.
So, Florida is 3,685km from California. Tsar Bomba’s (100Mt, the biggest humans have donated so far) light damage radius (1 psi) is 91.8km. `91.8*2^doubling = distance` -> `log(3685/91.8)/log(2) = doubling ~= 5.327`. `4^doubling = power reduction factor ~= 1,611` i.e. to get the same effect at 91.8k in California would take a 1,611 times more powerful bomb. 161,100Mt. The equivalent of 161,100,000,000 tons of dynamite. Or, 8,055,000 “Fat Man” (20kt, Nagasaki) bombs
Tool for flying distance from California to Florida, https://www.travelmath.com/distance/from/California/to/Florida
Tool for the ‘light damage’ distance, https://nuclearsecrecy.com/nukemap/
no, u will however hear about the country we wiped that droped that bumb
You would feel the sudden increase in the world average IQ like a fuzzy little wave over the hairs on your arm.
Here is a fun site on the topic. [Nuke Map](https://nuclearsecrecy.com/nukemap/)
You might feel a great disturbance, like a million voices cried out and were suddenly silenced.
You realize that a ton of nukes went off in Nevada and New Mexico over the years, and no one in California even realized it, right?
Short answer: no. Although the news out of Florida might get a little weirder than usual for a while.
I think you just got placed on a list somewhere. Haha
Aren’t our enemies WAY more likely to bomb California than Florida?
A disturbance in the force maybe? A million voices crying out at once and then being silenced.
No. I wouldn’t feel bad for anyone in fl either
Not likely, but you will feel the balance tip if Florida man is no more. Let’s face it, we need Florida man’s stories and memes to get through the day sometimes.