Probably many were wondering what would happen after the nuclear bomb dropped on some point of the globe, what would be the consequences of the explosion, the most terrible weapon invented by man. And more recently, developers have created a three-dimensional simulator that will allow users to drop nuclear bombs at any point in the world. As a result, Google Earth generates a map reflecting the changes that occurred. The project was named NUKEMAP3D.
The user can select any area on the map, the size of the bomb in kilotons, the type of air transport, the drop height. A number of predefined settings are also available - for example, you can use the 100-megaton "Tsar-bomb".
The developer of the simulator is Alex Wellershtein, a specialist in nuclear weapons and nuclear safety at the Center for the History of Physics at the American Institute of Physics.
Wellershtein commented that he wanted to do something completely new, unlike other similar programs. There are many alternative sites created before NUKEMAP that allowed this to happen. "I found that, despite the possibility of organizing a virtual nuclear attack, something was missed. All users of such applications had to think independently about what would happen after the bombing. To solve this problem, it was decided to create a 3D version of NUKEMAP to display the real scale of destruction from a nuclear strike. "
You can try to destroy the land here.