A nuclear explosion produces an instantaneous fireball hotter than the sun's surface, followed by a blinding flash and massive shockwave that destroys buildings and spreads fire across a city; however, the most dangerous phase occurs afterward when radioactive fallout falls from the sky like toxic dust, exposing anyone without shelter to deadly radiation and transforming the entire city into a radioactive disaster zone within minutes.
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What REALLY Happens During A Nuclear ExplosionAdded:
You know what happens during a nuclear explosion? The fireball instantly becomes hotter than the surface of the sun. A blinding flash burns everything nearby within seconds. Then a massive shockwave smashes through the entire city. Buildings collapse as debris flies through the streets. Fire spread everywhere across the destroyed skyline.
But the most dangerous part comes afterward. Radioactive fallout begins falling from the sky like toxic dust.
Anyone without shelter can suffer deadly radiation exposure. Within minutes, the entire city becomes a radioactive disaster zone.
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