Russia releases video of largest nuclear bomb in history



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Russia has released a classified recording of the world’s largest nuclear explosion, triggered when the Soviet Union detonated the so-called “Tsar Bomb” almost 60 years ago.

This hydrogen bomb, whose strength was 50 million tons of conventional explosives, was detonated in a test in October 1961, at 4,000 meters above the remote archipelago of Novaya Zemlya, on the Arctic Circle.

The images show a huge fireball and a 60-kilometer-high mushroom cloud, which rises after the explosion lit up the sky.

The views were captured from various angles by cameras installed on the ground and aboard two Soviet aircraft.

«The test of an exceptionally powerful hydrogen charge confirmed that the Soviet Union is in possession of a thermonuclear weapon with a power of 50 megatons, 100 megatons and more«Explains a narrator to the audience.

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The documentary was posted online by Russia’s state nuclear agency ‘Rosatom’ last week, as part of events to mark the 75th anniversary of that country’s atomic industry.

The Tsar Bomb was developed between 1956 and 1961 when the Soviet Union was participating in a nuclear race with the United States.

It has been called the “king of bombs” for being the largest in history. It was even claimed to be 3,300 times more destructive than the weapon that swept through Hiroshima.

The 30-minute film, which begins with a “Top Secret” title, presents all stages of testing, from transporting a 26-ton weapon, to post-explosion measurements of radioactive fallout.

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