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thermonuclear weapon

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

nuclear weapon

 or atomic weapon or thermonuclear weapon

Bomb or other warhead that derives its force from nuclear fission, nuclear fusion, or both and is delivered by an aircraft, missile, or other system. Fission weapons, commonly known as atomic bombs, release energy by splitting the nuclei of uranium or plutonium atoms; fusion weapons, known as hydrogen bombs or thermonuclear bombs, fuse nuclei of the hydrogen isotopes tritium or deuterium. Most nuclear weapons actually combine both processes. Nuclear weapons are the most potent explosive devices ever invented. Their destructive effects include not only a blast equivalent to thousands of tons of TNT but also blinding light, searing heat, and lethal radioactive fallout. The number of nuclear weapons reached a peak of some 32,000 for the United States in 1966 and some 33,000 for the Soviet Union in 1988. Since the end of the Cold War, both countries have decommissioned or dismantled thousands of warheads. Other declared nuclear powers are the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, and North Korea. Israel is widely assumed to possess nuclear weapons. Some countries, such as South Africa, Brazil, Argentina, and Iraq, have acknowledged pursuing nuclear weapons in the past but have abandoned their programs. See also Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty; Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty.


thermonuclear weapon [¦thər·mō′nü·klē·ər ′wep·ən]
(nucleonics)
A fusion bomb in the form of a packaged unit ready for transportation or use by military forces.


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Two of these nations have ended weapons research, one is a known nuclear power atomic state and the fourth is a thermonuclear weapons state.
Its formulation occurred against a backdrop of cold war threats and posturing, and it became a clarion call to scientists, world leaders, and the public--warning all of unprecedented dangers to humanity with the advent of thermonuclear weapons.
The proliferation of atomic weapons, the advent of thermonuclear weapons and the new means of delivery put renewed emphasis on technology during the 1950s.
 
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