castle bravo
->The explosion left a crater of 6,500 feet in diameter and 250 feet (75 m) in depth.
Castle Bravo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ivy mike
->The blast created a crater 6,240 feet in diameter and 164 feet (50 m) deep where Elugelab had once been.
Ivy Mike - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
again, it's about joules of energy which determine it's range.
anyway it's like roshi's kame hame ha which pulverized the moon and any explosions or blasts which has it's own measure of joules of energy.
Quote:
Originally Posted by SS2 Vegeto
How exactly do you know that it's joules of energy exceed it in the first place? Even if it did overall, how would that prove that it was hotter or more intense and energy filled overall, since the energy is constantly leaving Roshi's body, and more is being added, then leaving, it's not like measuring energy after it is produced, it keeps coming, so then how can you gauruntee being hit by it would produce the same immediate power, as in, that level of power all at once? In addition, this isn't like measuring an explosion, the kamehameha is a continuous stream of ki, so it's power is spread out, so it need not be as intense to contain a higher quantity of energy, even - it's not the measurement of one blast, it's the measurement of a continuous release, which complicates it. In addition, the heat of ki may not even work the same way, because it is a spiritual energy, and Freeza can be injured by the heat and intensity produced from within a planet. I know that nukes cannot be controlled like ki blasts, but it's still a fact to deal with that smaller nukes actually have produced much greater power than larger nukes. I gave a specific example of this. Tell me, if the sun spontaneously fired off a beam containing 1% of it's power, would anyone here not expect it to be able to fry the moon? Well, that same power as a pure, unguided release the size of a nuke would not, because it can only destroy what it touches. But it's still that same power.
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any blasts and explosions has it's own measure of joules of energy and it determine it's range, is that hard to understand. joules of energy determine the heat output of any explosion or blasts.
how many nuke it would take for the moon to pulverize or should i say how many joules of energy?
and don't use the argument that sun has no explosions, any star lives because of the explosions or chain reaction inside.
i'll be back.........