Largest-ever hydrogen bomb blast shown in declassified Russian video

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Tsar Bomba was the most powerful nuclear weapon ever built and tested, with more than 3,000 times the power of the Hiroshima bomb.

A declassified video showing the detonation of the most powerful nuclear weapon ever built and tested, the Tsar Bomba, has been published.

When the hydrogen bomb was tested over the Arctic archipelago of Novaya Zemlya on 30 October 1961, it created the most powerful man-made explosion ever, equivalent to 50 megatons of TNT.

The video shows the massive explosion from a range of angles and distances, as well as revealing some of the work that went into building the device.

According to the documentary, the Soviet bomber used to drop the device had to be coated with reflective white paint to protect it against the radiation from the blast.Advertisement

The bomb is also said to have been dropped with an enormous parachute to allow the plane to get far enough away before it detonated.

Tsar Bomba was the most powerful nuclear weapon ever built and tested. Pic: Rosatom
Tsar Bomba was the most powerful nuclear weapon ever built and tested.

Tasr Bomba was detonated 2.4 miles (4km) above the ground and the explosion utterly destroyed everything within a 21-mile (35km) radius.

The blast spread even further, destroying all the buildings in a military town called Severny 34 miles (55km) away, and windows were reportedly cracked up to 560 miles (900km) from ground zero.

The shock wave was recorded by seismometers across the world, while the mushroom cloud rose 42 miles (67km) into the atmosphere, seven times the height of Mount Everest.

Declassified video of the Tsar Bomba, the most powerful nuclear device ever detonated, has been released. Pic: Rosatom
Declassified video of the explosion has now been released.

Despite its terrifying power, the bomb was considered something of a gimmick by US analysts, who regarded it to have limited military use.

The real impact was geopolitical.

Following the fallout of nuclear material across Scandinavia, two years after the detonation the US and the Soviet Union signed a treaty banning nuclear tests unless they were underground.

SkyNews