Posted on 08/05/2020 12:32:04 PM PDT by C19fan
Yesterday a massive explosion ripped through Beirut, Lebanon from the citys port:
Sometimes you do calculations and get a result that you know must be wrong, and you report them anyway so others can spot your errors. Reports had the explosion shattering windows 10 kilometers away, and doing damage to the Beirut airport, so I set out to calculate the explosive yield using the Nukemap, based on shattering windows at the airport (the 1 psi overpressure ring) and ignoring radiation effects. (The nukemap interface is far more user friendly than the Nuclear bomb Effects Computer at the back of Samuel Glasstones The Effects of Nuclear Weapons.)
(Excerpt) Read more at battleswarmblog.com ...
I read through the article and the level he came up with was 1.98 kt.
—I’ll stick with my tagline—
About two.
Do we know what caused the blast yet?
CNN reports it was 2,750 metric tons of ammonium nitrate. Let’s say AN and TNT are equivalent in energy/weight (they aren’t). So 2750 metric tons is 2.750 kilotons.
Does it differentiate between a ground blast and an overhead blast? I would think the latter would break windows a lot further away.
Which is pretty close to 2700 tons (2.7kT) of explosive Ammonium Nitrate................
Some say a welder................
the lying media said ‘contrary to what Trump claimed’
Trump didn’t claim anything- he said ‘from everything I’ve been told, they say it’s a bomb’
The media wanted to make out like Trump was lying about the blast- but Trump never claimed anything- He just repeated what experts were telling him=-
Check this Twitter video and see the sparkles in the fire and smoke at the bottom just seconds before the blast. You must look closely............
Thought I saw something of those careless welders nearby. We used AN when I worked at a gypsum plant in NM years ago to bust up the gypsum rock walls. They could have just gone down to white sands..............................
Such an amazingly high number, at 1.98 kilotons that’s getting into the range of small nukes. Hiroshima was 15 kilotons, this is 13% of the blast energy of Hiroshima.
I think thats right. .95 conversion rate to TNT.
I suspect a lot of it was dispersed and didnt blow up.
It also looked like a strangely slow explosion.
Ive seen my share of true HE explosions, and the wave is much faster.
I noticed that right away too. Fox News joined the chorus.
Somehow, watching that blast never gets old.
It’s amazing how FAST it went.
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This 2,700+ tons of AN (in super-sacks) has been in this warehouse over 6 years. What was so special about yesterday that it went off?
I'm trying to figure out why it was stored there, and that way, in the first place.
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