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What a Nuclear Apocalypse Would Actually Look Like (NOT Like Movies)

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0:00A never-ending nuclear winter, a Mad Max desert  hellscape, or a wasteland full of mutated zombies?  
0:06Movies promise all three. But the real answer  is much harder to survive. This is everything  
0:11Hollywood gets WRONG about the nuclear apocalypse! Let’s start with the big moment - the detonation.  
0:17You’ve seen it in every movie that features  a nuke going off. First comes the thermal  
0:21blast. A 100 million degree Celsius (180 million  degree Fahrenheit) fireball that is accompanied  
0:24by a bright flash of light - one that could  seriously damage your eyes if you look at  
0:28it without proper protection. Then there’s a  shockwave of crushing air pressure and winds,  
0:33along with a surface burst that  cuts a huge crater into the ground.
0:37And that’s still not the worst part.
0:39But we know what you’re really thinking.  You shelled out for that vintage,  
0:43lead-lined fridge as part of your  doomsday prepper strategy - ignoring  
0:47the whole ‘poisonous lead near your food’  issue. So could you hide in that thing and  
0:51ride out the blast like Indiana Jones  in The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull?
0:54Haven’t seen it? Don’t worry, it’s  completely forgettable. But no,  
0:57you could not survive a nuclear blast in  a fridge. This is where the movie logic  
1:02falls apart. For starters, you’d actually  need the lead encasing you to be several  
1:05feet thick to provide any meaningful  protection from radiation. Even then,  
1:09you’d likely still get cooked by the initial  thermal blast, and then there’s the shockwave.
1:14That would be traveling at the speed of sound. So  your cooked body would be launched into the air  
1:18and then come hurtling back down at around  760 miles per hour (1,223 kph). Anything  
1:23that was left of you would be reduced to a fine  liquid paste. Though really, you’re unlikely to  
1:28have even gotten that far. The fridge was likely  mostly annihilated in the thermal blast itself.
1:33But let’s just say it wasn’t, so  we can demonstrate another thing  
1:36that movies get wrong about nuclear explosions.
1:39The shockwave actually has two phases. One  positive - that’s when the wave flows out. This is  
1:44the part the movies show. And one negative - where  it flows back in. This is the part they don’t.  
1:50That’s because the blast creates a low-pressure  bubble at its center, sucking debris back in  
1:55after the initial shockwave throws everything  outward. Even if you somehow got blown out,  
2:00odds are you’d just get dragged straight back in. So if the blast itself doesn’t kill you,  
2:05Hollywood usually implies you’ve made it. The  explosion fades, the dust and debris settles,  
2:11and survivors crawl out into a post-apocalyptic  city. But that’s just a scriptwriter’s fantasy. 
2:16The reality is a lot more  destructive… and terrifying. 
2:20A nuclear explosion doesn’t end with one blast -  it starts thousands of fires at once. The thermal  
2:25pulse ignites anything flammable within miles  - cars, buildings, trees… they’re all going up  
2:31in flames. Everything will be burning all  across the city… and all at the same time. 
2:36These blazes eventually merge into massive  firestorms that create their own hurricane-force  
2:40winds, pulling in oxygen, debris, and  people. The city starts consuming itself.  
2:46It happened in Dresden and Tokyo during  World War II - and nuclear weapons are  
2:50extremely effective at triggering it. This is the part movies rarely show. 
2:55Because surviving the blast doesn’t mean safety  - it often means being trapped in a burning city  
2:59where the air itself becomes a weapon. There’s no  barren wasteland. The immediate aftermath is heat,  
3:05smoke, collapsing buildings, and walls of fire. And this is only the first few hours. 
3:10But let’s go Hollywood and say you weren’t blown  up or completely vaporized in the opening salvo.  
3:16You might be wondering who fired first? Movies  love the idea that once the first nuke flies,  
3:20the rest are automatic. And if you believe movies  like Dr. Strangelove or HBO miniseries like By  
3:25Dawn’s Early Light, a U.S. first strike would  automatically trigger Russia’s nuclear response.  
3:30It's called the Dead Hand, and it means the  world would be doomed to a radioactive hell.
3:36Except…that doesn’t really sum up  the true nature of the Dead Hand.
3:41It’s just a version of it to make movies feel  more dramatic. For starters, the Dead Hand was  
3:46never a real designation in Russian military  doctrine - it was a cool term cooked up by  
3:51author David E. Hoffman in 2009 for his book of  the same name. What the Russians actually had was  
3:56called the Perimeter System. It was developed in  the 1980s when they were worried a sudden American  
4:01nuclear attack might take out their central  command, leaving them unable to retaliate.
4:05Rather than the automatic “Doomsday Machine”  everyone is panicking about in Strangelove,  
4:10the Perimeter System was actually more  of an emergency backup. It ensured that  
4:14Russia wouldn’t immediately lose all  leverage in the event of a surprise  
4:17attack. And this system was always  human-activated, not automatic. So  
4:22nuclear war isn’t an unstoppable machine  - it’s still driven by human decisions.
4:27It’s not just the blast radius you have to  
4:29worry about - because there’s  another favorite movie trick.
4:33If you see that big, white mushroom  cloud looming on the horizon,  
4:36you might start to worry about fallout -  just like every online commenter claims  
4:40should’ve happened to Gotham at  the end of The Dark Knight Rises .
4:43But this is where we’ve got to  give Christopher Nolan some credit.
4:47When Batman detonates the nuclear weapon  that was used to hold the city hostage,  
4:50the mushroom cloud is white. It’s formed out  of all the water particulates evaporating under  
4:55the immense heat and force of the explosion.  Unless Gotham City got really unlucky with the  
5:00wind direction, they’d actually be safe, and  wouldn’t need to worry about fallout at all.
5:04Which raises an important  question: What actually is fallout?
5:08Put simply, radioactive fallout is debris  irradiated by the blast of a nuclear explosion,  
5:13which is then carried a great distance by  the force of the explosion itself. It means  
5:17the danger doesn’t stop at ground zero.  In other words, a powerful enough bomb  
5:21could spread radioactive dust far beyond the  blast site - enough to deliver fatal radiation  
5:25doses several cities away. Batman’s over-water  detonation and the relatively low range of the  
5:31bomb itself meant the citizens of Gotham wouldn’t  be seeing their hair fall out in a week or two.
5:35So, where’s the myth in all  this? Because there is one.
5:39Given the bomb in the movie has a stated  blast radius of 6 miles (9.6 km), there’s  
5:42no way Batman would have gotten  out of the danger zone in time.
5:45Hollywood - and video games - suggest  that surviving a nuclear apocalypse  
5:49means hiding in elaborate fallout shelters  for generations while the radiation outside  
5:53slowly decays. But that’s just another  one of those big, fat nuclear myths.
5:58And here’s why it doesn’t hold up.
6:00Fallout shelters are actually designed  to be occupied for about two weeks. If  
6:03a nuclear bomb drops on top of you, you’d  need to be miles underground to survive it.  
6:08Fallout shelters are not designed to help you  survive the blast of a nuclear weapon. They  
6:13just shield you from the radioactive fallout  itself while it’s still lingering in the air.
6:17So surviving the blast and the fallout  means humanity has a chance. Or do they?
6:22From our time seeing countless movies - from  Mad Max to Hell Comes to Frogtown - we know  
6:27that the nuclear apocalypse would lead  to surviving humans having freakish,  
6:31mutant babies. Or worse, ones that  can’t even survive birth itself.
6:35Would the mutant inherit the earth, or  would we not be able to breed at all?
6:39As you’ve probably already guessed, that’s  another myth right there, and it’s been  
6:42disproven by science. To quote a 1991 study  titled The Children of Atomic Bomb Survivors:  
6:47A Genetic Study, “The present results show  that there are no statistically significant  
6:52increases in the frequency of chromosome  abnormalities among the children of the exposed.”
6:57But what about animals and other creatures?
6:59From the giant insect movies of the  1950s and ’60s to Godzilla himself,  
7:04Hollywood has promised that nuclear power  creates monsters. But is there any truth to that?
7:09Thankfully - in the bleakest way possible - we  have Chernobyl and Fukushima as real-world test  
7:14cases for what long-term radiation does  to life. Severe mutations would not be  
7:18becoming freakishly large or getting atomic  breath. Real life is much crueler. Instead,  
7:23they’d be getting aggressive, cancerous tumors.  So animals with extreme genetic mutations as a  
7:28result of radiation exposure often just  end up dying painful and quick deaths.
7:33But there are more subtle and less dangerous  mutations out there, too. In the words of Prof  
7:37Timothy Mousseau, a biological scientist who’s  spent 25 years studying ecosystems at nuclear  
7:42disaster sites, “There are… mutations  that have small or partial effects,  
7:46and so they don’t kill the organism. You  might see individuals with extra digits,  
7:50strange growths or asymmetries where  one leg or wing is longer than another.”
7:54Some animals do adapt to better handle being  in a more radioactive environment - Chernobyl  
7:59tree frogs have on average 44% darker  skin than their non-Chernobyl cousins,  
8:04because it helps them better process ionising  radiation. But we’re sorry to tell you that  
8:09you almost definitely won’t be getting any  Incredible Hulk-style radioactive superpowers.
8:13But thermal blasts and fallout aren’t  the only things you need to worry about.
8:17What about the classic trope  of nuclear apocalypse movies:  
8:20the electromagnetic pulse or EMP? Would a  nuke going off really cause electrical chaos?
8:26The answer is… “IT DEPENDS!”
8:28The EMP effect of a nuclear weapon only works if  it’s detonated high up enough in the atmosphere.  
8:33It’s a key plot point in the James Bond  movie and basis for an iconic video game,  
8:37GoldenEye. Russian satellites would detonate  nuclear weapons in the upper atmosphere and  
8:41fry the electronics in key tactical areas. But  would that kind of nuclear assault actually work?
8:47You’ll be relieved to hear, visions of cars  stopping dead in the streets and entire power  
8:51grids shutting down are a Hollywood exaggeration.  Power grids are built with a large number of  
8:56redundancies for this particular scenario, as  well as more mundane power outages. You likely  
9:01wouldn’t see widespread damage to power plant  transformers. So even if the grid was disabled,  
9:06in a worst case scenario it could be back  up within a couple of months with dedicated  
9:10work - provided we’re not all dead from  a thermal blast or fallout, of course.
9:14Speaking of what the world would look like  after a big nuclear blast, do Fallout and  
9:18Mad Max have it right? Will we spend the nuclear  post-apocalypse driving custom hot rods through  
9:23an endless desert, firing Vietnam War era  guns at each other while wearing BDSM gear?
9:29This is another matter where the experts  are inclined to disagree with the Hollywood  
9:32movie magic makers out there. In contrast to the  dusty desert battles of post-apocalyptic movies,  
9:38scientists believe the world would get  much colder. In an all-out nuclear war,  
9:42up to 150 million tons of smoke could be thrown  into the atmosphere, cooling the planet into  
9:47a new ice age - one with dangerously high UV  levels. So, it’d be the worst of both worlds.
9:53And if you’re a true Mad Max fan,  
9:54you’re probably thinking this already. The  nuclear apocalypse happens after Mad Max 2,  
9:59where a nuclear war triggers a nuclear winter  that eventually gives way to a nuclear summer.
10:04The general consensus is that this brand new,  even worse ice age wouldn’t be a seasonal affair.  
10:09It’d likely last for around 30 years according  to some estimates. So if we’re thinking realism,  
10:14then Mad Max would need to be a senior citizen in  the latter movies, or more realistically still,  
10:19a frozen-over corpse. This would make the  real result of a mass nuclear war a lot like  
10:24the ones depicted in grimmer, less action-focused  nuclear war movies like The Day After and Threads.
10:30However, nothing is simple when  it comes to the end of the world.
10:33The production of massive amounts  of black smoke isn’t disputed.  
10:36But the exact effects on global  weather and the environment are  
10:39so unprecedented that no one knows  how much the planet would change.
10:44In the words of RAND nuclear policy researcher,  Dr. Edward Geist, “The main thing to keep in  
10:48mind… is that there is a tremendous amount of  uncertainty about what a real nuclear war would  
10:53be like. ,The only real-world case we have… is the  atomic bombings of Japan at the end of WWII and we  
10:59have good reason to doubt that nuclear weapons  use in today’s environment would be similar.”
11:04For context, the bombs that were  dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki  
11:07in the 1940s were equivalent in power to about  20 million tons of TNT. The modern Tsar Bomba,  
11:13the largest nuclear weapon that currently exists,  is closer to 50 million tons. As Geist said,  
11:18so much of the theory we’ve been discussing comes  from the template set by those two fateful bombs,  
11:23and extrapolating based on the  data of modern nuclear arsenals.
11:26So could all of this really turn into  a true planetary apocalypse? A nuclear  
11:31winter. A permanently scarred Earth. And if  so, how many nukes would it actually take?
11:36One bomb wouldn’t do it. Even a small  nuclear war wouldn’t necessarily end the  
11:40world. The real danger starts with hundreds  of nuclear weapons raining down on cities. 
11:45A full-scale U.S.-Russia nuclear  war, involving thousands of warheads,  
11:50is one of the few scenarios scientists think  could realistically cause enough smoke to be  
11:54launched into the atmosphere. And while that  doesn’t mean Earth becomes uninhabitable,  
11:59it could make supporting billions of  people impossible. Hollywood shows the  
12:03end of the world in an instant. But really,  civilization fails before the planet does. 
12:08The real danger was never mutant zombies,  endless deserts, or cinematic doomsday machines. 
12:13A full-blown nuclear war would be slower  - and far more devastating than Hollywood. 
12:18Now check out “This Is How You Actually Survive  a Nuclear Attack”, or watch this instead!