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[email protected] gfretwell@aol.com is offline
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Default A genuine home repair question.

On Tue, 25 May 2021 04:57:51 +1000, "Rod Speed"
wrote:



"trader_4" wrote in message
...
On Sunday, May 23, 2021 at 7:39:46 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Sun, 23 May 2021 18:21:22 -0400, Ralph Mowery
wrote:

In article , says...

"Water is incompressible"

IIRC, it actually is but it takes a really large amount of energy.
If
the sun were 100% converted to energy, it still wouldn't be enough.


I doubt that.
And what volume of water compressed by how much?

Plutonium "fission" atom bombs originally (and probably still) work on
"implosion". Explosives around the plutonium reduce the volume of the
solid metal sphere to 1/2 the original volume (so the entire sphere is
suddenly "critical").



The info I see is the plutonium is a hollow sphere filled with hydrogen
gas, so relative easy to compress with the bomb around it that sets it
off. It is not a solid sphere.
No Plutonium bombs were "gun" type bombs. Half the Pt was at one end
of the "barrel" and it was fired into the other half to become
critical.


That's wrong, it was early gun type bombs that used uranium,
implosion devices use plutonium because plutonium required it.
AFAIK, the US only set off one of gun type, the bomb at Hiroshima.


The first test one in the USA was too.

The detail of the various later tests is less clear.


Trinity was an implosion bomb.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinit...uclear_test%29

Gun types won't compress uranium enough to go critical so is a sphere
with explosives all around, timed perfectly to focus the pressure wave
into the center form all sides at once.


That's wrong too. The first uranium pile at the University of Chicago
went
critical when the graphite moderating rods were removed, starting the
first
nuclear fission reactor and nothing was compressed with explosives or
anything
else at all.