A nuclear war simulation shows how an "invisible threat" would spread around the world in the aftermath of an explosion, contaminating land and sea for generations. Nine countries currently have ...
Russian scientists have produced a simulator that mimics a ground-based nuclear explosion to better train Moscow's Ground ...
The "safest" states' exposure ranges from 0.001 Gy to 0.5 Gy, compared with the states in the most danger (Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota), where ...
In a sense, U.S. nuclear weapons exist not to be used. And while nuclear threats seem far away, a tool from one group brings ...
The simulation was made some two-and-a-half years ... potentially catastrophic consequences of current US and Russian nuclear war plans. "The risk of nuclear war has increased dramatically in ...
An unclassified war game conducted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies CSIS and the Massachusetts Institute ...
The simulator has been viewed ... detonated by the Soviet Union in the Cold War. While the tool does not show graphic images of the effects of a nuclear weapon, it does provide hints of devastation.