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top 200 commentsshow all 245

[–]downvotethiscontent 177 points178 points ago

"Nuclear explosion photographed by rapatronic camera less than 1 millisecond after detonation. From the Tumbler-Snapper test series in Nevada, 1952. The fireball is about 20 meters in diameter in this shot. The spikes at the bottom of the fireball are known as the rope trick effect."

[–]ososinsk 37 points38 points ago

That means that the cables would have to be heated to the point of vaporisation by radiation before the fireball even had time to reach them. Crazy.

[–]unfortunatejordan 24 points25 points ago

Just want to quote some more of my favourite facts about this effect:

The surface of the fireball, with a temperature over 20,000 kelvin, emits huge amounts of visible light radiation (more than 100 times the intensity at the sun's surface).

Malik observed that when the rope was painted black, spike formation was enhanced, and if it were painted with reflective paint or wrapped in aluminium foil, no spikes were observed.

Really is incredible what happens at such high energy levels.

[–]Highboi 14 points15 points ago

this is why I love reddit

[–]equatorbit 11 points12 points ago

this is why I love ropes

[–]dertydan 11 points12 points ago

It used to be that every thread was like this:(

[–]andrewembassy 2 points3 points ago

woah!

[–]CrazyHatLady 6 points7 points ago

It wasn't until I read this comment that I realized the picture wasn't of a microscopic subject. The odd detail in the middle is reminiscent of textbook pictures of viruses and whatnot, I just assumed the other stuff was interference or some shit, so the words "20 meters" kinda totally blew my fucking mind.

[–]Greatwhiteturtle 2 points3 points ago

Thank you. This picture didn't really mean anything to me without being able to tell the size.

[–]shmooshmoo 1 point2 points ago

Yeah same. I thought it was microscopic until I realized that didn't make sense.

[–]62sheep 45 points46 points ago

i long ago happened across a color version of this which I find breathtaking

[–]MAJKong1981 21 points22 points ago

http://imgur.com/kFMno

My favorite nuclear image, labeled for your ease of comprehension of scale.

This is the same yield as Hiroshima BTW.

[–]robo23 4 points5 points ago

Fuck magnets, this is science.

[–]Dibby 3 points4 points ago

SPIRIT BOMB!

[–]fapmaestro 18 points19 points ago

this scares me more than anything over at /r/WTF

[–]JawnF 0 points1 point ago

Well, how is a bunch of children getting a tan supposed to be frightening, anyway?

[–]roland1014 0 points1 point ago

No no no, that's over at /r/ImGoingToHellForThis

[–][deleted] ago

[deleted]

[–]TheRealJeffMangum 0 points1 point ago

To me it's tame, but it is full of people who think just being offensive is funny.

[–]mdthegreat 2 points3 points ago

Do you have any idea where I would be able to snag a large print poster of this picture? Either the b&w or color. I'm stumped.

[–]jbrizzly 2 points3 points ago

rasterbater

[–]bwcall 2 points3 points ago

[–]I_am_a_mormon 2 points3 points ago

My guess would be to find a high resolution photo, and go to somewhere that does prints (walmart, kinkos, office max, etc.) and have them print it.

[–]RebelWithoutAClue 2 points3 points ago

I don't think this image was captured in color. I stood in front of a print of it at an Edgerton exhibit at MIT and I recall it was in black an white. A big print from floor to ceiling. I didn't immediately understand what was depicted as I hadn't read the caption. I felt a sense of dread like I was looking at Death's head just after looking at a grainy color picture of an apple pierced by a bullet.

After reading the caption I recalled a Buddhist statement that Feynman quoted in one of his biographies: "To man is given the key to the gates of Heaven. That same key opens the gates of Hell."

[–]RebelWithoutAClue 0 points1 point ago

That's still monochrome.

[–]kyletheking89 -2 points-1 points ago

So wait, that's legitimately color? Like, right after the explosion, everything turned dark red?

That's fucking fascinating

[–]whimsicalsteve 474 points475 points ago

This is what death looks like as an embryo.

[–]ubelong2matt 14 points15 points ago

Death starts at contraception!

[–]Schym 85 points86 points ago

Poetry, mate, poetry.

[–]Ninjatertl 33 points34 points ago

Death is a metroid, aye? Can't say I'm not surprised really...

[–]Chazzey_dude 12 points13 points ago

Death feeds off the living, like a metroid does, so pretty much, aye.

[–]metroidslayer 1 point2 points ago

one of those baby ones

[–]blarg_dino 1 point2 points ago

Disturbing...

[–]fadeawayagain 1 point2 points ago

That's deep, man

[–]R3luctant 97 points98 points ago

We need the slow mo guys to do a nuclear explosion.

[–]haterlove 5 points6 points ago

"This camera is capable of making 15 million images per second."

1950's analog, man. Not sure if it was the height of human-scale technology, but maybe. Maybe.

[–]MrWoohoo 0 points1 point ago

That's the good stuff...

[–]harvest-moon 1 point2 points ago

Metroids

[–]I_REALLY_LIKE_BIRDS 34 points35 points ago

After watching Gavin's work with Achievement Hunter, I'm not sure I'd trust him with any sort of bomb...

[–]R3luctant 45 points46 points ago

uh guys, I've done something terrible, I forgot to hit record.

[–]A_Wild_Missingno 4 points5 points ago

I've done it. I've really done it in this time! Gally wags! I've trimmed my trousers on this one

[–]bejouled 3 points4 points ago

woah. I had no idea Gavin did stuff other than Rooster Teeth things.

[–]jmier 4 points5 points ago

They talk about him and Slow Mo Guys all the time.

[–]Hellsgate11 5 points6 points ago

Shout out to Dan by the way!

[–]SonicFrost 5 points6 points ago

SHOUT OUT TO RAY.

OBLITERATE

[–]koy5 1 point2 points ago

That company is such a sleeping giant in the entertainment community. They create great entertaining content and do it all online. They have a fairly decent business model. I can't wait to watch them explode in popularity, it will be as beautiful as watching the function y=x10 get past x=1.

[–]SonicFrost 0 points1 point ago

Theyre not popular already? Theyre the 8th most watched channel on YouTube, i believe.

[–]xInToxiic 1 point2 points ago

I had no idea Gavin did other stuff than Slow Mo Guys' things.

[–]indyK1ng 14 points15 points ago

Nuclear detonations happen so fast most of the film we take is actually in slow motion. For example, the only thing a human observer would note in the first seconds of a nuclear explosion is a very bright flash.

As a result, there are already lots of slow motion nuclear videos on YouTube.

[–]hlharper 13 points14 points ago

Really cool video, but I don't think that they should have put that to the music of the William Tell Overture. Doesn't seem to suit the mood.

[–]mjolle 8 points9 points ago

Some odd disco remix, no less!

[–]hlharper 5 points6 points ago

I would think something like Mars - Holst would have been a more appropriate choice, but maybe they were going for a more light-hearted juxtaposition.

[–]JustDial911 1 point2 points ago

Great piece, was my favorite piece to play back when I was actively playing.

[–]mjolle 1 point2 points ago

You have excellent taste in music.

[–]bagpiper 0 points1 point ago

Hooked on Classics, anyone?

[–]CowplusCowequalsCows 1 point2 points ago

Yes, why not Jive Bunny! Nuclear apocolyse? Then get your glad rags on and twist away to the end! I dare you not to! And boy, if you don't die with a smile on your face, you didn't deserve to live!

[–]ErmagherdPerpterts 1 point2 points ago

Aaaaand then this started playing in my head. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MFbn8EbB4k

EDIT: WALTER MURPHY- A Fifth of Beethoven

[–]mjolle 0 points1 point ago

Thanks for that, now it's gonna be stuck in my head the rest of the day.. :)

[–]indyK1ng -1 points0 points ago

I had the volume off.

[–]Ogwizard -2 points-1 points ago

This was basically that. This picture was taken without a digital camera. They rigged it to shut down free seconds because the film span so fast taking so many image a lot of te prototypes had burned themselves out.

[–]cephalic666 27 points28 points ago

Kind of reminds me of this. http://i.imgur.com/Kgkh5.png

[–][deleted] 11 points12 points ago

Nuclear weapons are absolutely fucking beautiful. I love 'em. They may be doomsday weapons but they are stunning to look at.

[–]CowplusCowequalsCows 3 points4 points ago

I know exactly what you mean. I think this Sigur Ros video sums up that dichotomy.

It's the same as the beauty that can be seen in natural disasters. they are terrible things that cause massive suffering. But they remind you of your small place in the ecosystem/universe.

At any moment something completely out of your control could happen, and bang! You're gone. And yet it's pure, emotionless, totally natural, and with out design.

[–]Aggnavarius 1 point2 points ago

I always found this video moving: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qFcWyhBLiY

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point ago

[–]SkySilver 10 points11 points ago

Can someone explain to me why the fireball isn't smooth(er)?

[–]Quixeh 12 points13 points ago

Im wondering the same, thus far, my only credible thought is the geometry of the device lead to the shape you see.

I have a masters in physics but it would take a physicist who works specifically with nuclear weapons to explain most of these things (and they're not really allowed to tell us who they are!)

[–]MatchedFilter 24 points25 points ago

My father did hydrogen bomb testing back in the fifties (man, the stories... seeing the insides of blast caverns, etc.) Anyway, your explanation matches what he used to say about it.

[–]WhitePawn00 36 points37 points ago

AMA request: your father.

[–]MatchedFilter 11 points12 points ago

I'm sure he would have agreed, but we're about twenty years too late for that.

[–]xMIASMAx 2 points3 points ago

Oh...well then. starts jetpack

[–]FaultyTrigger 13 points14 points ago

Second'd

[–]Kingmudsy 6 points7 points ago

The motion carries.

[–][deleted] ago

[deleted]

[–]mecharedneck -1 points0 points ago

What is a 'ute'?

[–]Trickster_2212 0 points1 point ago

I don't know, he's just an electrician.

[–]stox 0 points1 point ago

A good friend's father did the Hydrogen Bomb.

[–]xMIASMAx 0 points1 point ago

That some sort of new dance you kids are doing now days?

[–]stox 1 point2 points ago

I'll give you a hint, his name was Edward.

[–]xMIASMAx 1 point2 points ago

Oh, I am team jacob no doubt man.

[–]bearlokey 1 point2 points ago

[–]stox 1 point2 points ago

Yup, that's him. We use to call him BoomBoom behind his back. He finally found out, and was rather amused.

He was an amazing man. He made some terrible mistakes ( eg. Oppenheimer ), but was absolutely honest in his opinions, and performed enormous service to our country. He also achieved Nobel's dream, a weapon too horrible to use.

If you haven't done so already, his memoirs are a fascinating read.

[–][deleted] ago

[deleted]

[–]MoarVespenegas 1 point2 points ago

This is also the leading hypothesis as to why our universe has uneven mass distribution.

[–]waxwing -1 points0 points ago

Well no it isn't because "it's uneven because it was uneven" is not much of a hypothesis.

[–]MoarVespenegas 5 points6 points ago

It's more of a "It's uneven now because it started out uneven" but I guess I see what you mean.

[–]SkySilver 5 points6 points ago

I'll give you a light pat on the back if you devote your life to find an answer to this question.

[–]Quixeh 7 points8 points ago

I shall assemble a team immediately!

My second thought is slight pre-existing local variations in temperature and pressure creating slight directional bias to plasma/fireball formation (assuming that even is plasma, I haven't looked into this much).

I'm ruling out wind speed, orders of magnitude too slow. But bear in mind someone said the radius was 10m so we are still talking relatively small effects.

[–]yamahastic 5 points6 points ago

You were right the first time. It's two things, first the implosion itself isn't 100% perfect and second the weapon has various amounts of mass surrounding the core at various positions. Just like the rope forms that cone, these chunks of metal contribute more or less to the shape of the fireball as they are vaporized at a gazillion degrees C.

[–]FaultyTrigger 0 points1 point ago

You sir, are very, very, clever.

[–]Tetha 2 points3 points ago

I guess that would be it. Every explosive I know works by turning solid or fluid matter into highly pressurized gas. This gas doesn't like being under too much pressure, and thus it expands outwards. Every particle on the surface of the gas travels outwards at about the same speed, so the general shape and geometry of the initial solid mass or fluid should remain the same until a sufficient obstruction is hit.

[–]GoGoGadgetReddit 4 points5 points ago

The test bomb was sitting on the top of a tower, and the white spikes under the explosion in this photo are where the the tower's guy wires anchored it to the ground. The top of the tower has already vaporized.

A better explanation of the peculiar spikes and surface mottling is here.

[–]1plusperspective 4 points5 points ago

If I remember correctly the spikes are the tower wires becoming plasma as for the rest I would assume imperfections in the reaction material and imperfections in the trigger causing varying rates of reaction.

[–]BlaccMoses 24 points25 points ago

Metroid

[–]NighthawkXL 1 point2 points ago

Exactly the first thing I saw when I looked... even before I read the title. /r/gaming would get a kick out this.

[–]Potatoe_away 8 points9 points ago

Can a physicist explain the rope trick affect?

[–]Saphiric 16 points17 points ago

I'm not a physicist, but it is relatively straightforward.

Basically the surface of the fireball, due to its ridiculous temperature, is giving off a massive amount of visible light and other radiation. So much light in fact that it is able to completely vaporize the mooring cables that help stabilize the tower resulting in the "spikes" at the bottom of the explosion.

TL;DR: The spikes are cables being vaporized by the explosion.

[–]canadianman001 6 points7 points ago

So the spikes are basically vaporous metals that had constructed the guide wires?

[–]VioletTritium 9 points10 points ago

Pretty much. Imagine taking an ice cube and shining a heat lamp at it that is so incredibly bright that the ice instantly turns to steam. For a brief moment, there would be a small cloud of steam before it expanded and dissipated.

That's exactly what is happening here, the heat from the nuke is so unfathomably intense, it can vaporize metal cables into gas in less than 0.001 seconds.

[–][deleted] ago

[deleted]

[–]MayoSimba 1 point2 points ago

You're not nice at all :c

[–]Im-in-dublin 0 points1 point ago

I bet one could.

[–]stvb95 -1 points0 points ago

Someone should xpost to /r/askscience

[–]bubbafloyd 5 points6 points ago

OK. For the tin-foil-hat crowd. Harold Edgerton is the MIT guy that developed these cameras for the first nuclear tests. He founded a company called EG&G which is still in business today. They operate out of a bunch of very nondescript buildings located near McCarren airport in Vegas. The exteriors are not gated but if you go park in their lot for more than 3 or 4 minutes a security guard will come up and ask you to move along unless you have business with the firm. Nobody gets past the front door without clearance and an escort. A former employee of mine got a job there as a secretary right after 9/11 and clearances were extremely backlogged so for the first year she worked there she was allowed to sit at her desk but if she stood up for anything (like to go pickup something she printed at the printer in the cube next to her) she had to have an escort. Any trips to the restroom needed an escort. She said all the walls in the office were covered with framed enlargements of these nuclear test photos.

EG&G runs many diverse projects for the Defense Dept. One of their subsidiaries is the sub-contractor for all security at the Nevada Test Site. When you read about the black Jeeps that show up if you get to close to Area 51? those are owned and staffed by EG&G. The "Janet" flights of 2 or 3 737's without tail numbers painted white with a red stripe that come and go from McCarren all day long? EG&G owns and operates those planes. I would love to have a couple of hours with admin privileges in their network. Which is probably why I would never possibly be hired at a place like that.

[–]donagan 0 points1 point ago

Millisecond? Really? I would guess microsecond.

[–]waxwing 2 points3 points ago

If microsecond the camera would need to be less than a 300m away to receive any photons post-criticality. Millisecond sounds much more reasonable.

[–]palanoid 0 points1 point ago

The exposure time was three microseconds (on average) and the cameras were several miles away.

I googled it for you:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_trick_effect
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapatronic_camera
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQp1ox-SdRI

[–]waxwing 0 points1 point ago

The title refers to time after detonation, but thanks for that info anyway.

[–]palanoid 0 points1 point ago

ah yes. Now your comment makes perfect sense.

[–][deleted] 5 points6 points ago

how is this picture even possible to take?

[–]Notmyrealname 17 points18 points ago

The photographer was inside a refrigerator.

[–]claymore_kitten 0 points1 point ago

i have no idea what you're talking about that never happened in the only 3 indiana jones movies ever made.

[–]DarkSchnider 23 points24 points ago

Science.

[–]jdog1977 3 points4 points ago

liar. It took a lot of praying to get this shot.

[–]Quixeh -1 points0 points ago

Lol. The explosion creates a LOT of photons, and is therefore extremely bright, hence the way it's frozen in time with a decent exposure. The camera will be linked to the detonation system for the timing.

[–]Theappunderground 1 point2 points ago

Not quite. They use special cameras which have two piece of polarized glass, one of which can change the polarity with electricity.

So they polarize it so no light comes through, then the timing mechanism is attached to a capacitor that dumps everything into the piece of glass for 1 millionth of a second, which allows light to pass through, to a single sheet of film. Every frame is a different camera.

[–]Ch13fWiggum 2 points3 points ago

I think this is the work of Harold "doc" Edgerton- have a look at his high speed pictures, they're awesome.

Edit - tried posting a link, alienblue doesn't like it or I've forgotten the syntax

[–]Campenu 1 point2 points ago

Trial and error. Remember all those nuclear winters?

[–][deleted] ago

[deleted]

[–]Maraboduus 45 points46 points ago

I have never seen it so who gives a fuck.

[–]Devanismyname 5 points6 points ago

Yeah but it sounds cool when people get mad over a re-post.

[–]frostysnowcat 3 points4 points ago

I know I've seen it a lot more recently than that. Like, within the last 30 days.

[–]borkedddd -1 points0 points ago

[–]1plusperspective 0 points1 point ago

I wish we could do this with modern lab grade high speed.

[–]fotiphoto 1 point2 points ago

I see a face in the flames.

[–]deathcomesilent 1 point2 points ago

It looks like a metroid!

[–]GlufkeMD 0 points1 point ago

Came here to say this. Was not disappointed.

[–]fuso00 0 points1 point ago

i had this book once, with more awesome shots http://www.michaellight.net/work100suns.html

[–]soliddave 0 points1 point ago

Edgerton, right? I wrote a paper on him last year, easily one of my favorite photographers.

[–]assi9001 -1 points0 points ago

DAT POWER

[–]pghazanfari 0 points1 point ago

It blew the color right out of the photograph.

[–]mrmonkeypbbt 0 points1 point ago

Someone call in Samus

[–]SPARTAN_TOASTER 0 points1 point ago

DAFUQ I CAN SEE A SKULL IN IT!!!!

[–]ThatOtherGai 0 points1 point ago

What's with the halos coming out of the bottom?

[–]Halaku 0 points1 point ago

It looks like Cthulhu doing yoga. Wings and all.

[–]CptnCanuck 0 points1 point ago

ITS A METROID! KILL IT!

[–]ValeraTheFilipino 0 points1 point ago

woahh

[–]cammer258 0 points1 point ago

Just looks like a giant skull to me

[–]h4ppydaze 0 points1 point ago

If you dare look into it, you can see God

[–]axel_thatcher 1 point2 points ago

I saw this photo as a child, before I truly understood exactly what a nuclear weapon was, or what it could do.

I was terrified of this photo for years.

[–]MostlyIrrelephant 0 points1 point ago

I'd be all for one more test detonation if they would use MIT's trillion-frames-per-second camera to film it.

[–]windinsea 0 points1 point ago

I wish I could blow this joeg up its been seen on here so much.

[–]Donakebab 0 points1 point ago

"Many Bothans died to bring us this information."

[–]Zbones1123 -1 points0 points ago

FOR SCIENCE!!!

[–]chach888 1 point2 points ago

this is really disturbing.

[–]harvest-moon 1 point2 points ago

Nokia cellphone testing grounds. The cell towers in the background didn't survive the blast.

[–]secretlakr 0 points1 point ago

Face of death

[–]Mr_Zero 0 points1 point ago

How did they do this?

[–]baracudaboy 0 points1 point ago

That can't be good.

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point ago

That looks the kidney stone I had to pass... I sold it for $25,000 and some freak in dark clothing with an extreme amount of piercings on his face came to my door and picked it up... He told me he owned an oddities store just down the road and I should come check it out... I told him I'll pierce- I mean think about it.

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point ago

The flying spaghetti monster is real!

[–]Potgut 1 point2 points ago

[–]Throwawaychica 0 points1 point ago

Looks like a germinating pea

[–]gabriee 0 points1 point ago

It looks like the forest spirit / nightwalker in Princess Mononoke.

[–]mentos33 0 points1 point ago

it's a metroid! run!!!

[–]DamnNoHtml 0 points1 point ago

Oh its going to make such a big mess!

[–]Enzimy 0 points1 point ago

Science bi.ch

[–]armandordx 0 points1 point ago

Bacteria? embrion? No, it's a nuclear bomb.

[–]Captain_Rod 0 points1 point ago

Reminds me of a seed germinating

[–]pwnstar -1 points0 points ago

repost. and fucking awesome every time.

[–]GrotesDZs 0 points1 point ago

[–]Jody_Fosters_Army 1 point2 points ago

What are the lines coming up from the ground?

Edit: looks like it was detonated atop a tower.

[–]BrokeDiamond -1 points0 points ago

How did the camera even survive? I thought they had to be hidden behind giant lead blast shields...

[–]stox 1 point2 points ago

The camera was in a bunker, using a mirror outside. The mirror was vaporized soon thereafter.

[–]Quixeh 2 points3 points ago

Zoom lens.

[–]calyphus 7 points8 points ago

Telephoto. A zoom lens has a variable focal length and can range from very wide angle to telephoto. The zoom capability compromises some optical quality compared to a single focal length (prime lens).

[–]avatar28 0 points1 point ago

I was about to correct you that it was probably a telephoto lens when I realized that was exactly what you said. Derp. I need sleep bad.

[–]jigielnik 2 points3 points ago

This gives you an infinitely tiny (by comparison) understanding of the inflation that occurred after the big bang. In well under a milisecond, the universe expanded from the size of a singularity to something impossibly large

[–]MrMedicated 1 point2 points ago

Carl?

[–]jigielnik 0 points1 point ago

I wish ;)

[–]DigThat -1 points0 points ago

Yeah do you have a way of finding out the setting of the blast? I'm confused

[–]apteryx_274 1 point2 points ago

probably the Nevada Test Site, or less likely, Bikini Atoll. I think that by the Bikini tests weren't done for a very long time, but the NTS was active for quite a bit longer.

[–]jahern11 1 point2 points ago

wouldn't have wanted to be that photographer

[–]joeyisapest -1 points0 points ago

This is the way the world ends

This is the way the world ends

This is the way the world ends

Not with a bang but a whimper.

[–]thepeck -1 points0 points ago

how far away was camera

[–]heshgnar -1 points0 points ago

Science is awesome.