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Tsar Bomba - Live Testing of Soviet Nuclear Bombs, 1949-1962 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R534
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Tsar Bomba - Live Testing of Soviet Nuclear Bombs, 1949-1962 (Paperback)
Series: Europe@War
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List price R605
Loot Price R534
Discovery Miles 5 340
You Save R71 (12%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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On 30 October 1961, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(USSR/Soviet Union) conducted a live test of the most powerful
nuclear weapon ever created. Codenamed 'Ivan', and known in the
West as the 'Tsar Bomba', the RDS-202 hydrogen bomb was detonated
at the Sukhoy Nos cape of Severny Island, Novaya Zemla archipelago,
in the Barents Sea. The Tsar Bomba unleashed about 58 megatons of
TNT, creating a 8-kilometre/5-mile-wide fireball and then a
mushroom that peaked at an altitude of 95 kilometres (59 miles).
The shockwave created by the RDS-202 eradicated a village 55
kilometres (34 miles) from ground zero, caused widespread damage to
nature to a radius of dozens of kilometres further away, and
created a heat wave felt as far as 270 kilometres (170 miles)
distant. And still, this was just one of 45 tests of nuclear
weapons conducted in the USSR in October 1961 alone. Between 1949
and 1962, the Soviets set off 214 nuclear bombs in the open air.
Dozens of these were released from aircraft operated by specialised
test units. Equipped with the full range of bombers - from the
Tupolev Tu-4, Tupolev Tu-16, to the gigantic Tu-95 - the units in
question were staffed by men colloquially known as the
'deaf-and-dumb': people sworn to utmost secrecy, living and serving
in isolation from the rest of the world. Frequently operating at
the edge of the envelope of their specially modified machines while
test-releasing weapons with unimaginable destructive potential,
several of them only narrowly avoided catastrophe. Richly
illustrated with authentic photographs and custom-drawn colour
profiles, Dropping the Big Ones is the story of the aircrews
involved and their aircraft, all of which were carefully hidden not
only by the Iron Curtain, but by a thick veil of secrecy for more
than half a century.
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