Dumbasses aside, thank you for the explanation
Comment on China detonates non-nuclear hydrogen bomb, blast creates 1,000°C fireball
Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 days agoNot like this, no. Please consider reading articles further before making such statements. I cannot speak for the veracity of the experimental claims, but it isn’t a simple clickbait about hydrogen gas - it’s a breakthrough in chemical engineering.
In a controlled field test, as reported by the South China Morning Post, the 2kg device produced a white-hot inferno exceeding 1,000C for over two seconds—15 times longer than equivalent TNT blasts
This is similar to napalm in temperature, but rather than spraying hot burning goo, you’re effectively igniting the air itself. For two entire seconds, which is a lot longer than it sounds when discussing a literal ball of fire.
When triggered by conventional explosives, the material fractures into micron-scale particles, releasing hydrogen gas that mixes with air and ignites. This creates a self-sustaining combustion loop: the heat from the initial explosion propagates further decomposition of magnesium hydride, releasing more hydrogen and extending the fireball’s duration.
This isn’t an article about a hydrogen gas experiment like in school. It’s about them finding a way to mass produce the amount of magnesium hydride required for such a potentially devastating firebomb.
For comparison, one cubic meter can contain 45 kg of hydrogen pressurized at 700 atm, 70 kg of liquid hydrogen, or up to 106 kg of hydrogen bound in magnesium hydride
AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works 4 days ago
remon@ani.social 4 days ago
It’s essentially hydrogen combustion, so it has nothing to do with a hydrogen bomb (which is fusion). Still shitty clickbait.
Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 days ago
It’s a device - full of hydrogen - that explodes. Do you really believe it’s clickbait to call that a hydrogen bomb?
remon@ani.social 4 days ago
Yes.
Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 days ago
¯\(ツ)/¯
SaltSong@startrek.website 4 days ago
Maybe not “just.” But the clear intent is to confound the reader so they will click the link.