The Castle Bravo Disaster - A "Second Hiroshima"

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
  • At the time, it was the most powerful artificial explosion in human history…but it wasn’t supposed to be. On March 1st, 1954, the United States detonated the country’s first thermonuclear or fusion bomb at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands, a small coral reef and 23 islands almost equidistant from Australia, Japan, and Hawaii. In the days and weeks following the blast, the United States would pay out millions of dollars in settlements, thousands of islanders would be evacuated and re-evacuated, and the Japanese public would deem the test “a second Hiroshima,” a comparison no citizen would dare make lightly.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 10K

  • @kylehill
    @kylehill  Před 3 lety +5821

    Thanks for watching the latest “Half-Life History.” As usual, let me know what you think of the new format - more of these to come!

    • @KenpachiZarakiX
      @KenpachiZarakiX Před 3 lety +138

      I like the more serious tone. Nice change

    • @MrMcKonz
      @MrMcKonz Před 3 lety +34

      I adore this series so far. I'd love to see a video like this about David Hahn, the Nuclear Boyscout.

    • @neffdeathwatch7641
      @neffdeathwatch7641 Před 3 lety +10

      Thor compare Tsar Bombs?

    • @baxterkrug4454
      @baxterkrug4454 Před 3 lety +11

      Quite interesting, i enjoy the time and style of presentation. At 5:03 Lithium 6 has 3 neutrons.

    • @kysier6015
      @kysier6015 Před 3 lety +7

      I love science n history above all else, so these videos are perfect for me. Keep em coming!

  • @MogamiKyoko13
    @MogamiKyoko13 Před 3 lety +17022

    This left me crying a little bit. In college, my Japanese film history professor said to us, "it's something to think about that exposure to radiation creates superheroes in America and monsters in Japan."

    • @wizzerd229
      @wizzerd229 Před 3 lety +1344

      @@eggstu the bombings of hiroshima and nagasaki were war crimes and not needed

    • @wizzerd229
      @wizzerd229 Před 3 lety +685

      @@monauralsnail0669 the japanese govt was attempting to surrender before the nukes were dropped

    • @pantalonesdemuerto7960
      @pantalonesdemuerto7960 Před 3 lety +754

      @@eggstu Multiple things can be terrible at the same time.

    • @GrockleTD
      @GrockleTD Před 3 lety +588

      @@eggstu this reads like you're trying to justify war crimes by saying "well everyone else is doing it!" stop it.

    • @gibatron8072
      @gibatron8072 Před 3 lety +379

      @@wizzerd229 it’s interesting to wonder why any one person or group of individuals would ever think that it would be a good idea to kill innocent people in such a terrifying way, just to send fear into a country and it’s government.
      Edit: Especially considering those not killed by the initial blast suffer from a slow killer they can’t even see.

  • @fulcrum8583
    @fulcrum8583 Před 2 lety +6333

    "As soon as the war ended, we located the one spot on earth that hadn't been touched by the war and blew it to hell." - Bob Hope

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 Před 9 měsíci +534

    Imagine trying to build the most inconceivably powerful bomb imaginable... only to react to its detonation with, "Holy shit, that was way too damn powerful."

    • @Mangoboi699
      @Mangoboi699 Před 8 měsíci +24

      It puts it in a different perspective seeing how it is then how one thinks. like your eyes are more hungry then your stomach. You get to the point “oh shit i think this is too much”

    • @brettbuck7362
      @brettbuck7362 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Yes, it was a wonderful surprise, it made thermonuclear devices practical. That has saved us from multiple repeats of WW II and all the lives it would have cost.

    • @18Hongo
      @18Hongo Před 2 měsíci +10

      "Jesus, Larry, did you carry the three?"
      "Wait, were we doing this in metric or imperial?"

    • @asmokeus
      @asmokeus Před 2 měsíci +3

      we often like to think so hard about what we could do that we fail to take pause & consider what we _should_ do

    • @Rico-oy3dc
      @Rico-oy3dc Před měsícem +1

      The Great Kazoo made a button like that.

  • @kerrishying8722
    @kerrishying8722 Před 10 měsíci +920

    I grew up on the east COAST of Australia and as a kid I cried and had nightmares about this explosion, about the Marshallese and the 'jelly' babies they gave birth to, without bones, and the horror that they would never go home. It was my greatest nightmare for many years.

    • @buckhorncortez
      @buckhorncortez Před 10 měsíci +14

      Pobrecito...

    • @eddiekulp1241
      @eddiekulp1241 Před 9 měsíci +3

      I'm sure

    • @ScreenMasters369
      @ScreenMasters369 Před 9 měsíci +6

      My god…

    • @replexity
      @replexity Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@ScreenMasters369nice profile photo

    • @johngeiger3770
      @johngeiger3770 Před 7 měsíci +34

      Starting to understand what it meant by, "The luckiest are those who turn immediately into plasma after the initial blast. The remaining "survivor" are residence of Hell on Earth."
      Crazy to think that we are still sitting on these ultimate by-products of human madness.

  • @pipolwes000
    @pipolwes000 Před 3 lety +7025

    Two words that should never _ever_ be said together: "acceptable fallout"

    • @Spike2276
      @Spike2276 Před 3 lety +437

      That only applies if followed by the words New Vegas, otherwise no... just no

    • @ace2523
      @ace2523 Před 3 lety +120

      acceptable fallout = 0 fallout unless you a country that has nukes :(

    • @Dinoslay
      @Dinoslay Před 3 lety +57

      COUGHFallout 76COUGH

    • @reapermaster1233
      @reapermaster1233 Před 3 lety +30

      there is no such thing as acceptab;le fallout

    • @HotlistJimmy
      @HotlistJimmy Před 3 lety +47

      Well he says acceptible not acceptable so maybe you're reading into it.

  • @casualwoomy
    @casualwoomy Před 3 lety +2555

    “The test was supposed to be a secret”
    Ah yes, the VERY SECRET *15 MEGATON NUCLEAR BOMB EXPLOSION*

    • @DaemonKeido
      @DaemonKeido Před 3 lety +101

      Well it wasn't like they intended it to be 15 megatons. They were only shooting for four.

    • @t1czer
      @t1czer Před 3 lety +105

      World: What was that big boom?
      USA: Weather baloon
      World: What is that big mushroom cloud?!
      USA: Weather baloon
      World: And that ratiation?!
      USA: Weather. Baloon.
      World: Is it tho?
      USA. Yes. But actually no.

    • @argh523
      @argh523 Před 3 lety +36

      It was the KIND of bomb that was supposed to be a secret. But because the detonation was much larger than expected, it gave away the secret that it had to be a new kind of bomb, a fusion bomb.

    • @Mariko2022
      @Mariko2022 Před 2 lety +14

      Yea who would notice A NUCLEAR BOMB

    • @mills9402
      @mills9402 Před 2 lety +14

      This was 15 megaton the tsar bomba was 50 just imagine seeing that

  • @exxor9108
    @exxor9108 Před rokem +160

    This feels like a case of something going horribly "right." They got the results they wanted, then got too much of the results they wanted. Far too much.

    • @quinnholloway5400
      @quinnholloway5400 Před 28 dny +1

      They went too far and had to deal with the consequences of it

    • @d0rkl0rd92
      @d0rkl0rd92 Před 23 dny +2

      we dreamt of makimg the worlds most powerful nuclear weapon... and we succeded.

    • @admirable_kon5083
      @admirable_kon5083 Před 21 dnem +1

      ​@@d0rkl0rd92Well, the most powerful nuke would have to be the russian Tsar bomb, I think, even though nowadays there might be something even more destructive...

    • @DaleDix
      @DaleDix Před 12 dny +1

      Nope, it's America. They knew what they were doing

  • @Phobero
    @Phobero Před rokem +121

    - Did you care for the islands' inhabitants?
    - No, not atoll 😑

    • @MB-be1ew
      @MB-be1ew Před 2 měsíci +5

      I'm stealing that joke just like the U.S. stealing years off the natives lifespan

    • @simonfea2
      @simonfea2 Před měsícem +8

      Im surprised that guy in that old film didnt just admit, "They are brown, and we dont care about them. But it will be fun to see how thay fare."

    • @Ndlelex
      @Ndlelex Před měsícem

      "They're not american, who gives a s***?"

    • @cshepard09
      @cshepard09 Před 24 dny

      @@Ndlelex i mean are they wrong? the rest of the world hates us simply because of our success, why should we give a rats ass about them? you know how many countries would nuke the fuck out of us if they were smart enough?

  • @kerricaine
    @kerricaine Před 3 lety +3702

    when you're dealing with a topic like this, "until next time" is a horrifying phrase to end on.

    • @tkmothebe7631
      @tkmothebe7631 Před 3 lety +51

      Well I’m not sleeping tonight, thanks to your comment. Really good comment

    • @COctagons
      @COctagons Před 3 lety +40

      Well, there is the Tsar Bomba...!

    • @exzyyd392
      @exzyyd392 Před 3 lety +62

      Just be happy that we can say that.
      One day there won't be a "next time"

    • @Axileoni
      @Axileoni Před 3 lety +2

      yikes

    • @KingOfDepravity
      @KingOfDepravity Před 3 lety +1

      The more you know.

  • @natemogs1909
    @natemogs1909 Před 3 lety +775

    Imagine being those fisherman minding your own business then all of a sudden BAM you’re a blind, feel like you’re on fire, and hear the loudest sound of your life all in a few seconds

    • @johnduncan6379
      @johnduncan6379 Před 3 lety +17

      I’d have knew I was dead, wth would be running through your head

    • @sirawesomelyodd
      @sirawesomelyodd Před 3 lety +37

      @Nate Mogs - and then just keep fishing business as usual immediate to the blast lol.

    • @OmarOmar-vi6yh
      @OmarOmar-vi6yh Před 3 lety +2

      Blind on fire and deaf

    • @spicycaco2061
      @spicycaco2061 Před 3 lety +55

      And imagine thinking $53,000 is enough for completely fucking over someone's existence

    • @POLARTTYRTM
      @POLARTTYRTM Před 3 lety +5

      @@spicycaco2061 At that time, it was a lot of money. You are not taking inflation into account.

  • @BryantDogPhotography
    @BryantDogPhotography Před 9 měsíci +227

    Fascinating! My dad was stationed on Eniwetok during the Castle Bravo test (and others). While years later he was concerned about what radiation exposure he might have received, this year (2023) he turns 91 and looks and acts like he is 10 years younger.

    • @mamavswild
      @mamavswild Před 8 měsíci +14

      Great genes, bodes well for you

    • @matmul4850
      @matmul4850 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@mamavswildIt’s luck, not great genes.

    • @matthewcromer5399
      @matthewcromer5399 Před 14 dny

      @@matmul4850well it was a fission bomb not a fusion bomb. Fission bombs are much cleaner in regards to fallout as more of the fissable material converts to energy

    • @megaglock22
      @megaglock22 Před 13 dny

      I like reading comments like that! Blessings to you and your father!

  • @dixonmixin10
    @dixonmixin10 Před 9 měsíci +64

    Crazy how Castle Bravo instantly turned a paradise into a living hell.

    • @GTI1dasOriginal
      @GTI1dasOriginal Před 3 měsíci +4

      Forever

    • @davidwright8432
      @davidwright8432 Před 28 dny +2

      More like, dead hell.

    • @sammy4538
      @sammy4538 Před 13 dny

      That's what nuclear weapons are designed for, so no wonder really...

    • @Xer405
      @Xer405 Před 7 dny

      ​@@GTI1dasOriginal radiation doesnt kast that long lol

    • @BriGuy1974
      @BriGuy1974 Před dnem

      The Onion parodied it in the way only they can: "US Army Finds Last Place on Earth Untouched by War, Blows it to Hell." Hilariously unfunny.

  • @afinchinthedark
    @afinchinthedark Před 3 lety +2961

    These stories are honestly scarier than most horror films.

  • @TheGuitologist
    @TheGuitologist Před 3 lety +5270

    My former landlord was AT this test. His body was riddled with cancer for years. He's still alive by some miracle.

  • @unlisted9429
    @unlisted9429 Před 9 měsíci +24

    Castle Bravo was not the first thermonuclear explosion. The first was Ivy Mike on November 1, 1952.

    • @drtidrow
      @drtidrow Před měsícem +7

      Admittedly, Ivy Mike was really a proof-of-concept test, given that it used liquid deuterium as the fusion fuel. Castle Bravo was the first US test of lithium deuteride as the fusion fuel, which, being a solid at room temperature, is much easier to build a bomb out of.
      There were plans to make a deliverable bomb using liquid deuterium, but it was quickly canceled once Castle Bravo demonstrated lithium deuteride's viability as a fusion fuel.

  • @supernova1552
    @supernova1552 Před 9 měsíci +114

    Revisiting this playlist after watching Oppenheimer. Kyle's videos fills you with such unimaginable eerie feeling that i almost feel numb for good 15 minutes after. Absolute Masterpiece.

  • @wickedsickfunkyfreshroller2037

    Imagine seeing a second sun rise on the horizon and hearing literal doom and being like, “yeah let’s keep fishing.”

    • @davemwangi05
      @davemwangi05 Před 3 lety +87

      It's just like the current state we're in, hearing literal communist freemasons in the UN telling us, "Welcome to 2030, you own nothing, you have no privacy, but you've never been happier" and being like, "Yeah, let's keep watching vids."

    • @artemtsarevskiy2785
      @artemtsarevskiy2785 Před 3 lety +17

      @@davemwangi05 struck me back to reality

    • @lisaw150
      @lisaw150 Před 3 lety +47

      @@davemwangi05 what?

    • @lisaw150
      @lisaw150 Před 3 lety +102

      @@davemwangi05 yes, the world economic forum... all of them communists. They're top capitalists, you do realise that?

    • @davemwangi05
      @davemwangi05 Před 3 lety +6

      @@lisaw150 Yeah, capitalists ganged up against us. Looks like you knew this already. Now look at what all comments here are about, people are like let's just keep watching videos. zero concern, or am I the only one seeing this?

  • @takakiwatanabe136
    @takakiwatanabe136 Před 3 lety +4366

    Today, it was reported that Mr. Oishi, a former crew member of the Lucky Dragon No. 5, died on March 7. Many Japanese are grateful for the videos you made. thank you, Mr. Hill. from tokyo.

    • @DevynPlaysGames
      @DevynPlaysGames Před 3 lety +209

      holy shit, one of them survived until this year? RIP

    • @thigh.enjoyer.
      @thigh.enjoyer. Před 3 lety +177

      Man that guy was a trooper.....respect from Texas....

    • @nachosNipples
      @nachosNipples Před 3 lety +77

      thats badass that he was alive so long

    • @takakiwatanabe136
      @takakiwatanabe136 Před 3 lety +245

      @@DevynPlaysGames
      He has been fighting illness for over 50 years and died on March 7, 2021 at the age of 87. He was a nu-bomb survivor. on the bed, He writes his own story "THE DAY THE SUN ROSE IN THE WEST"

    • @takakiwatanabe136
      @takakiwatanabe136 Před 3 lety +143

      @@thigh.enjoyer.
      he said, its not the responsibility of the US. theres responsibility to all countries equal participating in the nu-weapons competition. our generations made up of the US productive innovations, thank you!

  • @JacketCK
    @JacketCK Před 9 měsíci +11

    I like how they tried to keep Castle Bravo a secret, as if you could hide a 15 Megaton Blast from anyone 💀

  • @hotarou6466
    @hotarou6466 Před rokem +149

    Re-watching this masterpiece after 2 years and oh man I appreciate the brilliant work Kyle has done even more!

    • @supernova1552
      @supernova1552 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Same!! I used to love his half life histories stories. I just watch Oppenheimer last night and remembered Kyle's videos and revisited them again after two years. Beautifully made and spine chilling indeed

  • @ryanswafford3681
    @ryanswafford3681 Před 3 lety +2585

    My grandfather was present at the Bikini Atoll during this testing. He was on a destroyer. He had documents and everything. He described seeing the bones of his hands through closed eyes when the blast detonated.

    • @soflogator
      @soflogator Před 3 lety +323

      Whoa thats insane to even imagine

    • @saintbrush4398
      @saintbrush4398 Před 3 lety +331

      That sounds extremely terrifying

    • @ginalyncox
      @ginalyncox Před 3 lety +31

      Holy moly

    • @doapin6240
      @doapin6240 Před 3 lety +89

      Whoa, imagine an explosion so bright that it becomes a huge flashlight on it’s own

    • @mariekatherine5238
      @mariekatherine5238 Před 3 lety +277

      My father was there and is still living, although he’s had all kinds of cancerous skin lesions. He suffers from dementia, but did get to speak of this before he got really sick. He told we kids once at a holiday gathering, and said he didn’t want to speak of it or hear about it again. He meant what he said, so nobody raised the matter in his presence. Our mother didn’t learn of it for years after it was declassified. I suspect he’s taking a lot of still classified information with him to his grave.

  • @patrickmcdonald8513
    @patrickmcdonald8513 Před 3 lety +1159

    "The test was supposed to be a secret." If this wasn't so serious, this would be uproariously funny.

    • @chrism6904
      @chrism6904 Před 3 lety +58

      Those idiots... How the hell can you drop a 15 megaton bomb without anyone knowing LOL

    • @bwab9051
      @bwab9051 Před 3 lety +35

      @@chrism6904 they didnt think it was gonna be 15 mt.

    • @niccolopaganini4268
      @niccolopaganini4268 Před 3 lety +42

      @@bwab9051 They thought it'd be 6, would that still be unnoticed by anyone?

    • @calgar42k
      @calgar42k Před 3 lety +35

      @@chrism6904 stop analysing mid 50 's with your 2020 knowledge at that time scientists tinkered nuclear cores with screwdrivers...

    • @1SevenCirclesDesign
      @1SevenCirclesDesign Před 3 lety +10

      @@calgar42k Even back then many knew that particular experiment was incredibly stupid the way they were conducting it

  • @andrewwhite8638
    @andrewwhite8638 Před rokem +71

    Important detail:
    The atoll of Rongelap was particularly affected. Jeton Anjain, Minister of Health and Senator in the Marshallese parliament, later testified, “Approximately five hours after the detonation, it began to rain radioactive fallout at Rongelap. Within hours, the atoll was covered with a fine, white, powder-like substance. No one knew it was radioactive fallout. The children played in the ‘snow.’ They ate it.”

  • @jamesroets800
    @jamesroets800 Před 10 měsíci +55

    I've watched several videos of the Operation Castle series of nuclear tests. All of them were intense. But it was the Bravo shot that was frightening - for the reasons you elucidate, and for those documenting the shot. There were a group of observers in a concrete bunker at the other end of the atoll from Bravo who immediately knew something was drastically wrong. The story of their survival and rescue is worthy of a video in itself. Good information Kyle. This was a comprehensive and intelligent video.

    • @Fractured_Unity
      @Fractured_Unity Před 9 měsíci

      That story sounds fascinating, I tried finding more but couldn’t. Can you share where I can find some more information about their story?

    • @jamesroets800
      @jamesroets800 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@Fractured_Unity Richard Rhodes wrote a book entitled "Dark Sun" about the development of the super. He goes into depth about the Castle Bravo shot and who was involved and what the fallout was. Fascinating strory.

    • @endoflevelboss
      @endoflevelboss Před 9 měsíci

      who says 'elucidate'? 🤓nerd alert! listen to you trying to sound clever. Anyone else would have said, for the reasons you describe or the reasons you present. 'elucidate' that's just you indulging in IQ-signalling as is your remark that it's a "comprehensive and intelligent video". To brand anything intelligent publicly is a bid to ramp up your intelligence to the reader as only an intelligent mind could brand anything else intelligent. That's your logic. This is mine, exposing the vulgar seasoning you pepper your comments with to boast about how clever you are. Disgusting. Be direct, use plain English. If you were really intelligent you wouldn't feel the need to boast about it surreptitiously in your comments.

  • @TheWretchedOwl
    @TheWretchedOwl Před 3 lety +243

    “It was the worst atomic disaster in American history”
    SUDDEN AD BREAK
    “Noooooo! Quick, get bounty, the quicker picker upper!”

    • @alextreto2867
      @alextreto2867 Před 3 lety +6

      Brooo it switches up the mood so fast😂

    • @cxfxcdude
      @cxfxcdude Před 3 lety +4

      I got an Old Spice one

    • @nmxphilip
      @nmxphilip Před 3 lety +7

      I got a happy febreze ad. CZcams algorithms should figure the mood of a video before thrusting that in.

    • @slamchowder4112
      @slamchowder4112 Před 3 lety +7

      Too much yield in your fusion bomb? Clean up that mess with Bounty, the quicker picker upper.

    • @driftertank
      @driftertank Před 3 lety

      Yeah. I got Febreeze.
      Can you say, "Mood Whiplash?"

  • @vexingnusiance8980
    @vexingnusiance8980 Před 3 lety +2683

    “The test, was supposed to remain a secret.” How the fuck do you keep a nuclear explosion a secret?

    • @kirakaffee9976
      @kirakaffee9976 Před 3 lety +309

      the ocean is a huge place

    • @sonicman7697
      @sonicman7697 Před 3 lety +565

      Use a suppressor so it dosent make boom boom

    • @randomstuff6790
      @randomstuff6790 Před 3 lety +37

      @@sonicman7697 What kind?

    • @sonicman7697
      @sonicman7697 Před 3 lety +372

      @@randomstuff6790 the one where it no boom boom

    • @jimmyz9666
      @jimmyz9666 Před 3 lety +150

      The islanders probably thought it was a giant orange cock rising above the horizon.

  • @maidros85
    @maidros85 Před rokem +24

    I just saw the other day ago that video time-lapse of all nuclear weapons tests, and I was completely overwhelmed by the fact that not a few, not a dozen, not a hundred - but thousands of tests were done by the governments of the US, USSR, France, and UK. Now that I've seen this video as well, I got a history lesson that our schools don't teach. I appreciate it! ❤

    • @markbenfield6980
      @markbenfield6980 Před měsícem +1

      2,056 nuclear tests were made between all the countries that developed and used those weapons of mass destruction during those time periods. The United States alone detonated more than half of those devices out of the total sum. Then half of what the United States detonated in total, was tested in the atmosphere.
      Most of the nuclear devices used for these tests by all countries involved the governments didn't know or acknowledge the severe devastation such acts would have on the environments and people as little to almost nothing was known, even by scientists, the long term effects radioactive fallout caused.

  • @andyelliott3198
    @andyelliott3198 Před 9 měsíci +17

    The footage of the explosion and subsequent fireball/mushroom cloud is jaw droppingly beautiful but viciously deadly at the same time. It's a weird feeling, a beautiful juxtaposition when you see a nuclear explosion, incredible awe in one hand, visceral shock in the other hand.

  • @pussyslayer6662
    @pussyslayer6662 Před 2 lety +1558

    Finally someone on CZcams telling a story in a normal voice

    • @joshuakuehn
      @joshuakuehn Před 2 lety +30

      BROOOOOOOOO
      Pussyslayer 666 with that profile pic

    • @messiahimminent9761
      @messiahimminent9761 Před 2 lety +20

      Friend, repent from your suffering and give it to JESUS. HE will help you. Be cleansed with HIS blood and prosper in HIS will. I bless you with humility to accept HIM

    • @Vowlzie
      @Vowlzie Před 2 lety +4

      NUMBER 6 STUDENT WATCHES PORN AND GETS NAKED!!!!

    • @TheRocketApollo
      @TheRocketApollo Před 2 lety +175

      @@messiahimminent9761 ratio

    • @habashaman212
      @habashaman212 Před 2 lety +18

      Jesus was a creation. Jesus needed to eat, drink, sleep, and had many other needs. The one who needs is weak and imperfect, and the weak and imperfect is clearly not the Creator of the world.

  • @WhiteCamry
    @WhiteCamry Před 3 lety +612

    Mr. President, we're proud to announce that Castle Bravo was a 250% success.

    • @caseydykes117
      @caseydykes117 Před 3 lety +35

      @Frank Harris we are in a CZcams comment section not a science article. It's okay to not be exact when making a colloqial comment.

    • @billclinton6040
      @billclinton6040 Před 3 lety +23

      @Frank Harris While you display amazing math skills, your spelling sucks. It's Los Alamos.

    • @DidivsIvlianvs
      @DidivsIvlianvs Před 3 lety +6

      Always underpromise and overdeliver? :-)

    • @DidivsIvlianvs
      @DidivsIvlianvs Před 3 lety +8

      @Frank Harris They confusingly used a range of values, 5-6 Mt. Therefore the range of success was 250% of 6 Mt to 300% of 5 Mt. But 250% makes more sense because the 60% Li-7 added to 40% Li-6 is 250% of Li-6 alone whether it would have been 5 or 6 Mt. 15 Mt comes in at the high end. The only way to get more than 250% of Li-6 alone is if the fast neutrons from fusion succeeded in causing more fission in the present Uranium (235 & 238) in a third stage.

    • @caseydykes117
      @caseydykes117 Před 3 lety +7

      @Stinky Piece of Cheese excuse me brother I was in the ICU last week in septic shock. Sorry for not being bang on with my tertiary level English

  • @jerpica.d6735
    @jerpica.d6735 Před rokem +12

    Kyle you are extremely good at breaking these stories and the science down to an understandable level for people who have not studied science past high school. I'm very impressed, thanks for being so intentional about how you break things down!

  • @JariakaBroekie888
    @JariakaBroekie888 Před 3 lety +6437

    I really like these kind of “mini documentary’s” keep up the great content Kyle

    • @ilmorifajt4092
      @ilmorifajt4092 Před 3 lety +12

      its amazing

    • @justincameron9661
      @justincameron9661 Před 3 lety +13

      Agreed, love these videos

    • @BigDaddyWes
      @BigDaddyWes Před 3 lety +11

      Gotta love a good video essay.

    • @FastSickle
      @FastSickle Před 3 lety +10

      I guess he's calling them "Half-Life Histories"? But yeah they are amazing, i send all of them to a large group of people every time lol

    • @dvanerdivkanade
      @dvanerdivkanade Před 3 lety +6

      These are the best! Please keep them coming!

  • @exzyyd392
    @exzyyd392 Před 3 lety +712

    "Castle Bravo is such a cool name for anythi-oh...oh now I'm sad"

    • @vaughnjohnson8767
      @vaughnjohnson8767 Před 3 lety +41

      I knew about the intensity of the blast but I always assumed that it was intentional. I never knew that it was an accident. I also never learned about the people that had lived there. It’s absolutely sick.

    • @binobravo5616
      @binobravo5616 Před 3 lety +6

      "oh that's so cool! My name is Bravo and- oh it's super sad".

    • @brandonlink6568
      @brandonlink6568 Před 3 lety +9

      There's a city named Castle Danger in Northern Minnesota if that makes you feel any better.

    • @iDEATH
      @iDEATH Před 3 lety +7

      I'm claiming "Tritium Bonus" for the hardcore punk band I always wanted to start!

    • @vaughnjohnson8767
      @vaughnjohnson8767 Před 3 lety +4

      @@brandonlink6568 that is the single best city name other than the real city named Batman, no really. Change my mind

  • @erictripton
    @erictripton Před 3 měsíci +9

    Ivy Mike was the first thermonuclear bomb test nov 1st 1952.
    Castle Bravo march 1 1954

  • @john-wiggains
    @john-wiggains Před 9 měsíci +37

    Listening to you describe the sailors touching the ash and licking it had my skin crawling. I just kept saying “no no no”
    Very well done story telling and pacing. It’s sad what happened to these people.

    • @TessTearoe-zp5xv
      @TessTearoe-zp5xv Před 27 dny

      Sad my aunt Fanny, so called civilization treating Marshall Island like lab rats, so glad your good with that.

  • @samsulh314
    @samsulh314 Před 3 lety +379

    Other people: "I like serial killer documentaries."
    Me: "I prefer nuclear weapons documentaries."

    • @ventu2295
      @ventu2295 Před 3 lety +18

      I mean, why not both?

    • @MinatheRaichu
      @MinatheRaichu Před 3 lety +15

      @@ventu2295 both? both. both are good

    •  Před 3 lety +11

      Space is not a bad one either, if you like feeling so small and insignificant in the grand scale of it all.... pretty images though.

    • @Stoney3K
      @Stoney3K Před 3 lety +3

      @Zwenk Wiel "Nuclear serial killers" sounds a lot like a theme Heinlein would write about.

    • @SuperibyP
      @SuperibyP Před 3 lety +1

      Trinity and Beyond!

  • @AbsolXGuardian
    @AbsolXGuardian Před 3 lety +890

    "The second Hiroshima"
    Nagasaki: Excuse me?

    • @kylehill
      @kylehill  Před 3 lety +413

      A direct quote, not my interpretation

    • @brandocolate6564
      @brandocolate6564 Před 3 lety +33

      @@kylehill my donation gave you a stroke lol “hey the the, Show Kyle Hyle Love”

    • @AxxLAfriku
      @AxxLAfriku Před 3 lety +3

      @@kylehill HELLO!!! I want to spend time with celebrities. Just kidding. GAGAGAGAGA! I only want to spend time with my two girlfriends and record CZcams videos for with the 3 of us. OH YEAH. Don't hate me for living the best life, dear jyle

    • @falcongamingproductions9938
      @falcongamingproductions9938 Před 3 lety +45

      AxxL you good?

    • @Cipher_Paul
      @Cipher_Paul Před 3 lety +19

      @@AxxLAfriku lol, you're a three-year-old dude 😂

  • @budgoodrich6000
    @budgoodrich6000 Před 10 měsíci +11

    I adore these videos. There's zero fat on your content, it's all interesting and informative from beginning to end.

  • @kek207
    @kek207 Před rokem +31

    I've been to Hiroshima and visited the museum at ground zero, it's absolutely horrendous what happened there. There are burnt toys of children on display, and you learn that that's all what's left of them. Thousands of people burning to death. Shadows on walls in the shapes of people, rags of clothing. Children dying.... It truly left me in shock how someone was willing to commit such atrocities on anyone. I can't imagine the suffering and pain that people who survived went through

    • @jackurquhart7994
      @jackurquhart7994 Před rokem +6

      an atrocity that America will tell you saved millions, im not sure about that but if its true but i hope it is, i hope that this horrible deed did infact save millions and wasn't just a barbaric act in the final stage of the war

    • @matthewparker5277
      @matthewparker5277 Před rokem +1

      @@jackurquhart7994 I think that the death and fallout of Hiroshima has kept many countries from using nukes in the years since the war, because they know what will happen if the do, but that doesn't justify it in any way

    • @smileydavis73
      @smileydavis73 Před rokem +3

      Yea.... Dont start none, wont be none. They asked for it.

    • @papascrumpeeh
      @papascrumpeeh Před rokem +1

      Truly fked up there are a lot of images with such "shadows" imprinted on walls of ppl of all ages , then u see a couple of cretins in the comment section parroting the same garbage they were feed by their brainwashed parents thinking this saved more lives than it took which is absolute horseshit

  • @Gnomereginam
    @Gnomereginam Před rokem +2643

    It's fascinating how nuclear bombs have so often been underestimated in intensity by the very people who built them.

    • @BernieHollandMusic
      @BernieHollandMusic Před rokem +30

      Almost as fascinating as when you get vaporised by one. . . . .

    • @iusethisnameformygoogleacc1013
      @iusethisnameformygoogleacc1013 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, there's definitely something disturbing about how often people who are capable of designing these things from first principles just get something *completely* wrong. Like...imagine if the guy trusted with the calculations for whether or not the Trinity test would set the atmosphere on fire and kill everything on earth fucked up to this degree? There definitely would no longer be a Los Alamos.

    • @Celeon999A
      @Celeon999A Před rokem +275

      The father of the soviet hydrogen bomb program and chief designer of the 50 megaton "Tsar bomb", Andrei Sakharov changed his attitude towards nuclear weapons right after witnessing the test of his Tsar bomb. He openly called for total worldwide nuclear disarmament and even suggested the Soviet Union should make a start in reducing its nuclear arsenal even if the USA does not agree to disarm at the same time. Of course that did not go down well with the communist leadership in Moscow and he was suspended from his position. He also made other controversial political propositions like democratic reforms and boosting ethnic minority rights within the Soviet Union which led to him being declared persona non grata and put under house arrest in the end. The EU later named its human rights prize after him, the Sakharov prize. Imagine that. One of the fathers of the hydrogen bomb and chief physicist of the entire soviet nuclear weapons program, turned into a political idol and greatest figurehead of nuclear disarmament later in his life.

    • @squibbelsmcjohnson
      @squibbelsmcjohnson Před rokem

      Dumb humans that's why, we really never know anything, just think we do

    • @Roscoe.P.Coldchain
      @Roscoe.P.Coldchain Před rokem

      They didn’t that’s why the french chose to test in the pacific and kill all the locals..They should test in France 🇫🇷...I’m against nuclear ☢️ anything....

  • @akshaykumar_r
    @akshaykumar_r Před 3 lety +770

    Note: If white stuff starts to fall from the sky in a place where it usually doesn't snow, *_DO NOT PICK IT UP AND LICK IT._*

    • @theone2-three438
      @theone2-three438 Před 3 lety +26

      I read that literally the second he said that.

    • @fruitella196
      @fruitella196 Před 3 lety +8

      Trying to find this comment lol

    • @musashi939
      @musashi939 Před 3 lety +65

      Actually you also shouldn't lick snow. It's polluted af. But then in contrast to that stuff you mentioned you will probably survive if you slick snow, lol.

    • @glorygloryholeallelujah
      @glorygloryholeallelujah Před 3 lety +12

      Don’t you tell me what to do... *you’re not my real dad!!*
      😆

    • @LeeannG
      @LeeannG Před 3 lety +21

      I’d like to propose that we expand “snow” to include anything 🤣 anyone hear the story of the meat falling from the sky? A bunch of vultures puking for like 5 straight minutes (or something like that) was the eventual explanation but really. Rotten meat falling from the sky. Don’t eat sky food, it’s gross.

  • @Db--jt7bt
    @Db--jt7bt Před 10 měsíci +11

    7:57 a big reason cancer rates shot up was that before the testing, the islanders didn’t have many carcinogens. In Hiroshima and the western US, people exposed to fallout smoked and were exposed to various carcinogens at work, like DDT, benzene, and asbestos. All that combined to make cancer cases caused by the bombs almost indistinguishable from the background noise.

    • @Calilasseia
      @Calilasseia Před 3 měsíci +3

      The 1950s were the years that effectively defined American excess.
      You're going to love this.
      As well as the 20 foot long cars with 8 litre engines and the behemoth that was the B-36 Peacemaker strategic bomber, you might want to sit down for the following two items ...
      First, one tobacco company actually suggested using asbestos in cigarette filters.
      Now that you've got over the shock of that one, Gilbert, a manufacturer of educational toys, actually marketed and sold not only extensively stocked chemistry sets, but, wait for it, a nuclear science laboratory for children. You can look this one up, some examples survive to the present. The kit contained samples of real uranium.
      1950s America was ... surreal.

  • @DingoDman
    @DingoDman Před 5 měsíci +2

    so happy i found your channel been binge watching your videos the past few nights been looking forward to bed time so i can prop up the phone and listen to these awesome story’s

  • @KuraBinges
    @KuraBinges Před 3 lety +2047

    interesting fact: Godzilla's skin or scales were inspired by radiation burns from Hiroshima and the victims of the Castle Bravo test. And the opening scene of the 1954 film with the fishing boat is a reference to this incident.

    • @peterboris3765
      @peterboris3765 Před 3 lety +209

      “Fun” fact

    • @KuraBinges
      @KuraBinges Před 3 lety +177

      @@peterboris3765 Ima be honest, I was thinking the same before I hit send

    • @0bx122
      @0bx122 Před 3 lety +44

      Godzilla was the result of nuclear testing

    • @-cookiezila-461
      @-cookiezila-461 Před 3 lety +51

      Tbh I'm a bit disgusted that Americans made godzilla a hero in the newest godzilla trilogy
      Edit: The original comment was based on a lack of information on my part, pls stop upvoting it

    •  Před 3 lety +70

      @@-cookiezila-461 The Japanese did during the appeal to kids cheesy as hell era, also he was an anti hero in several films that came after that era.
      So it wasn't just the Americans who did it, hell Legendary Godzilla is about the same as the Heisei era Japan Godzilla.

  • @andrewbernard1911
    @andrewbernard1911 Před rokem +14

    “Second Hiroshima”
    Nagasaki: am I a joke to you?

    • @Odium515
      @Odium515 Před 18 dny +1

      They typically default with Hiroshima because it was the first city hit.

  • @N01IMP0RTANT
    @N01IMP0RTANT Před 6 měsíci +12

    Isn't.... Isn't Nagasaki the second Hiroshima?

    • @kiwigaming09
      @kiwigaming09 Před měsícem

      Yes but pretty sure the quote means it metaphorically not literally

  • @TripleBarrel06
    @TripleBarrel06 Před 3 lety +866

    In light of the whole ordeal, "The Lucky Dragon" has to be the most ironic name for a ship I've ever heard.

    • @zenon459
      @zenon459 Před 2 lety +25

      Well it sure wasn't lucky

    • @snazzyjovialwyrm3314
      @snazzyjovialwyrm3314 Před 2 lety +38

      Oh it was lucky alright. Though that luck turned out to be bad.

    • @ttry1152
      @ttry1152 Před 2 lety +6

      Tickling the dragon tale. And getting struck by a random wind. Well

    • @ScooterinAB
      @ScooterinAB Před 2 lety +18

      It turned out to be very lucky, as it caused the US and the Soviet Union to start pumping the brakes on mutually assured destruction. It just wasn't terribly lucky for the crew.

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Před 2 lety

      They were caught up in a nuke - look at at these poor people who colided with sufracing submarine, probably only one within 1000km....

  • @shaheertashfeen4414
    @shaheertashfeen4414 Před 3 lety +743

    It's the middle of the night here. Quiet, not the slightest sound anywhere aside of my table clock ticking. In this environment, this video felt like a therapy for calling my mind also kinda creepy. Huge thanks to Kyle Hill. I absolutely loved it.

  • @MrWarners14
    @MrWarners14 Před 9 měsíci +23

    I can’t believe Godzilla and SpongeBob have something in common. That is bonkers.
    The disaster terrifies me greatly but it’s an important story to tell. Assumptions lead to foolish decisions. Don’t underestimate nuclear power.

  • @OneInterested
    @OneInterested Před rokem +2

    This is probably the best documentary I've seen, even tho it's short, on the potential of nuclear weapons. I was born into the age of duck and cover and had an uncle who was one of the sailors at the post bomb exposure, even swimming in the lagoon. I learned a lot from this. Thank you

  • @SangerZonvolt
    @SangerZonvolt Před 3 lety +456

    Scientist reporting back to top brass: "I have good news and bad news. The good news: Our bomb design is more efficient than we thought. The bad news: The bomb was more efficient than we thought."

    • @thecloneguyz
      @thecloneguyz Před 3 lety +19

      What I think is funny is when you look at the planning to drop the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs nobody stopped to think that the entire country was made out of bamboo and paper and not bricks and steel so it did a thousand times more damage than they planned to do!!!
      They literally didn't expect it to wipe every single building off the face of the planet

    • @jessewarr1277
      @jessewarr1277 Před 3 lety +16

      @@ShuffleUpandDeal32 nothing was selfish about it was a needed thing that had to happen the alternative would of been a full scale invasion of the island that would of resulted in more deaths than Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    • @DanielMousavi1
      @DanielMousavi1 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jessewarr1277 they stopped because of the ussr invasion not the us bombing

    • @jed-henrywitkowski6470
      @jed-henrywitkowski6470 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ShuffleUpandDeal32 The bombs were initially meant for Germany.

    • @tomdecuca3627
      @tomdecuca3627 Před 3 lety

      @@jessewarr1277 yes it had to happen - the allies had planned to send over about 700 thousand troops to Japan if the atomic bomb was not used. This would have drove the death toll to around 400 thousand american soldiers and more Japanese. It was a horrible thing and words cannot describe it. But it could have been much worse had that war not been stopped.

  • @CStone-xn4oy
    @CStone-xn4oy Před rokem +1546

    I explained to my students that a thermonuclear bomb is effectively like creating a small star on the planet Earth for a few seconds. Hydrogen to Helium, just like the Sun. Of course the reaction is unstable and unsustainable...which is for the best honestly.

    • @buckhorncortez
      @buckhorncortez Před rokem +19

      Then why have various people been pursuing controlled fusion reactions for 60+ years?

    • @CStone-xn4oy
      @CStone-xn4oy Před rokem +226

      @@buckhorncortez Because a stable fusion reaction is the holy grail of energy production but for 60+ years we have been unable to produce a controlled fusion reactions that produces more energy than it takes to sustain.

    • @mikeoxmall69420
      @mikeoxmall69420 Před rokem +25

      Yeah, nowhere near enough pressure to sustain a fusion reaction. Imagine if the flash could last longer than a fraction of a second...

    • @nightlydrugs6927
      @nightlydrugs6927 Před rokem +113

      @@buckhorncortez because if you manage to stabilize it, you’ve got the most efficient energy source ever.

    • @bobbythomas6520
      @bobbythomas6520 Před 11 měsíci +45

      @@CStone-xn4oy had the first fusion reaction that generated more energy than what we put into it. 8 months after you said this

  • @markloveless1001
    @markloveless1001 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Outstanding. When Castle Bravo is mentioned in my house, one line inevitably follows: "Who knew Lithium-7 could fuse?"
    I did have to stop at point in the video, I thought you said Selenium-141. Do what? No way! I can't believe...oh CERIUM-141. Silly me.

  • @8beef4u
    @8beef4u Před 9 měsíci +3

    FYI, Ivy Mike was the first fusion bomb, castle bravo was the second

  • @adamnixon2886
    @adamnixon2886 Před 2 lety +980

    Japan: castle bravo was like a second Hiroshima
    People of Nagasaki: ....

    • @andrehof7876
      @andrehof7876 Před 2 lety +37

      if it weren't that sad...laughable title indeed

    • @niggarino666
      @niggarino666 Před 2 lety +9

      Oh ffs, the title hurt your feelings. you know what the hell they mean.

    • @niggarino666
      @niggarino666 Před 2 lety +8

      @@andrehof7876 Keever, Beverly Deepe (February 25, 2004). "Shot in the Dark". Honolulu Weekly. Archived from the original on August 28, 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-30. The Japanese government and people dubbed it “a second Hiroshima” and it nearly led to severing diplomatic relations.

    • @DocMufasa
      @DocMufasa Před 2 lety +29

      Nagasaki be like "Am I a joke to you?"

    • @niggarino666
      @niggarino666 Před 2 lety +4

      @@adamnixon2886 Keever, Beverly Deepe (February 25, 2004). "Shot in the Dark". Honolulu Weekly. Archived from the original on August 28, 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-30. The Japanese government and people dubbed it “a second Hiroshima” and it nearly led to severing diplomatic relations.
      theres a reason second hiroshima is in quotations in the title, see above.

  • @hunderslash
    @hunderslash Před 2 lety +1167

    My Grandpa witnessed this test along with operation Ivy. He was a radarman on the USS Curtiss from 1951-1954. When the bombs dropped (edit: I know now it was a remote detonation, nothing was dropped) he said his vision was completely white, even when turned around with his face shielded. He recounted seeing palm trees, dirt, water, etc being flung into the air. Unfortunately he died in 1979 from stomach cancer, I never met him. Many of the people who witnessed these tests had cancer later in life, the casualties from this test were not all immediate.
    Anyway this video made me think, he got a double dose of nuclear bomb radiation over the course of 2 years. Crazy.

    • @LawFirm1970
      @LawFirm1970 Před 2 lety +8

      Wow

    • @felixfc8768
      @felixfc8768 Před 2 lety +51

      my grandpa was also a radar man there during that same period and he died of cancer 6 years ago. i wonder if they knew eachother. i have his lighter that is engraved with the island and atomic energy symbol and it says he was joint task force 7.

    • @mynameisrayaan
      @mynameisrayaan Před rokem +1

      What was his name btw

    • @ExtraEcclesiamNullaSalus
      @ExtraEcclesiamNullaSalus Před rokem

      What bullshit... they knew about nuclear radiation back in 1945...

    • @rwisswell
      @rwisswell Před rokem

      They weren’t dropped, they were ground based. Look it up!

  • @skun406
    @skun406 Před 3 měsíci +4

    That "Danger, No Smoking" sign next to a nuclear device must be some kind of an internal joke.

  • @itravellight
    @itravellight Před 5 měsíci +2

    Fantastic narration and well done documentary. I learned quite a bit.

  • @sanitarymailbox-8023
    @sanitarymailbox-8023 Před 2 lety +985

    For those wondering, the fireball could be seen from almost exactly one Ohio away

    • @pochakajeoi8943
      @pochakajeoi8943 Před 2 lety +81

      For the Americans

    • @charlesjackson5745
      @charlesjackson5745 Před rokem +71

      Dang that's like a half a Texas, impressive!

    • @thepawchoe2749
      @thepawchoe2749 Před rokem +11

      I never wondered that. I actually wondered if the fireball was visible from the top of the Texas panhandle to brownsville. In other words, one Texas away.

    • @makilaetkencun9358
      @makilaetkencun9358 Před rokem +19

      One what? What's an ohio?

    • @josephhussain7238
      @josephhussain7238 Před rokem +38

      @@makilaetkencun9358 Ohio has been eliminated.

  • @JohnDoe-pv2iu
    @JohnDoe-pv2iu Před 3 lety +551

    My father was one of the lucky sailors there. He died in 2019. He had had many surgeries to remove cancer. They removed the right side of his thyroid glands and about a year later the left side. He had a tumor removed from behind his right eye. He was 22 when he was at the test. In the 50s they gave Potassium Iodide to the soldiers at the Nevada tests. The Iodide would fill their thyroid glands to prevent absorption of radiation. They didn't give it to the sailors at this test because they thought that they were far enough away.
    I said my father was one of the lucky ones and he was. He lived to be 87. Most of the people there didn't live to a very old age.
    My father loved America and his home state of North Carolina. He held no hard feelings about all these issues with his health and cancer. He was made aware (by his doctors) that the test was the likely cause of the cancers. He served in the Navy for 24 years and retired as a Chief Petty officer.
    I don't care if anyone believes this or not. I just want people to understand that there were people who lived a long time and went through a lot of surgeries, treatments and chemotherapy because of this 'Test'.
    Yall Take Care and be safe, John

    • @TheXtremeBoltGuy
      @TheXtremeBoltGuy Před 3 lety +28

      Absolute legend. I'm sorry he had to go through that

    • @davemwangi05
      @davemwangi05 Před 3 lety +7

      Did he describe to you what they saw, and how the heatwave felt? I"m supposing he's one of those who watched the explosion with naked eyes. I heard that that the gov lied to them, told them it was no big deal while in reality they needed a lot of shielding, and looking directly at the X-rays was a terrible idea.

    • @DoctorTauri
      @DoctorTauri Před 3 lety +12

      It’s sad a legend like this and many many many others are forgotten by this so called democratic and “patriotic” government.

    • @VJD-15
      @VJD-15 Před 3 lety +11

      @@DoctorTauri Remind me again what Trump and the ultra-right did for these men?

    • @jbrobertson6052
      @jbrobertson6052 Před 3 lety +3

      @@DoctorTauri
      More like Pathetic government

  • @user-nf3oq2ge3g
    @user-nf3oq2ge3g Před 9 měsíci +2

    I studied this my whole senior year at university of Washington, with holly barker, these people have not recovered, their genetics have changed and their way of life will never be the same.

    • @TessTearoe-zp5xv
      @TessTearoe-zp5xv Před 27 dny

      Like anyone one on here cares. The callousness displayed is unbelievable ☹️

  • @timwrk
    @timwrk Před 11 měsíci +3

    One of the darkest moments in human history. Oh how mankind with all its ‘knowledge’ destroys every living thing on this beautiful earth

  • @ryanreynolds3630
    @ryanreynolds3630 Před 3 lety +404

    Imagine being a fish chillin on the coral reef then just being evaporated

    • @QuintonRC23
      @QuintonRC23 Před 2 lety +34

      At least it's painless. The survivors are the ones who suffer the most.

    • @bigpjohnson
      @bigpjohnson Před 2 lety +5

      Good thing fish dont really have any memory I guess.

    • @nicholasfeiock7873
      @nicholasfeiock7873 Před 2 lety +3

      Lol aerosoled, irradiated, and swept with the winds

    • @thespecter6416
      @thespecter6416 Před 2 lety +6

      @@bigpjohnson That's a myth

    • @cosuinofdeath
      @cosuinofdeath Před 2 lety +4

      Fish stick

  • @williamjones2596
    @williamjones2596 Před 2 lety +613

    Fun fact: one of the larger, if not the largest, displaced groups of Marshallese ended up in Springdale, AR. About the furthest thing from a pacific island chain you could imagine.

    • @lakecityransom
      @lakecityransom Před 10 měsíci +54

      Must have felt like being dropped on an alien planet.

    • @Rabbi_Rabbs
      @Rabbi_Rabbs Před 9 měsíci +28

      And just in time for and only 111 miles away from the Damascus Titan missile explosion. What are the odds on that?

    • @matthewparker5277
      @matthewparker5277 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Wait really? I drive through there all the time, I guess I have to stop sometime and see if I can talk to someone about it

    • @peirces.1696
      @peirces.1696 Před 9 měsíci

      @@matthewparker5277same

    • @randyboisa6367
      @randyboisa6367 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Whats so fun about that fact?

  • @pb48711
    @pb48711 Před 13 dny

    @kylehill. Astonishingly good documentary Kyle. I wish our MSM were as bold and honest as you are.

  • @SloaneLasers
    @SloaneLasers Před 9 měsíci +1

    Glad they were able to understand better how to control detonations after this. It was a very educative experience for everyone. Now we have ultra-miniaturized dial a yield 3+ stage thermonuclear devices.

  • @Skynetic917
    @Skynetic917 Před 3 lety +485

    hard to tell this is the same guy that makes all those funny, lighthearted and cheery science videos. very solemn and respectful, i applaud that

    • @CouncilofCharles
      @CouncilofCharles Před 2 lety +4

      I was sure he must've hired a narrator because there is just no way this voice belongs to that same man

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector Před 2 lety +6

      His voice definitely rang bells; very thankful he gives these stories the calm and respect they truly deserve.

    • @sussus3288
      @sussus3288 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, I first discovered this channel trough this video and was completely surpised with just how different his normal videos are to these ones.

  • @claywright1100
    @claywright1100 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Worth mentioning, Linus Pauling was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962 for his work against nuclear testing. Ava, his wife, should've gotten half the prize IMO.
    Joseph Rotblat was awarded the prize in 1995 (not '55).
    We need more brave scientists like these now more than ever. Great piece!

  • @alejandrofuentes2423
    @alejandrofuentes2423 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Here after watching Oppenheimer such a great movie !!! Really shows how insane nuclear weapons are.

  • @darksteelmenace595
    @darksteelmenace595 Před 3 lety +312

    The tragic irony of that ship being called “the lucky dragon“ is just baffling.

    • @ovni2295
      @ovni2295 Před 3 lety +35

      Dark humor here, but it wasn't just The Lucky Dragon. It was The Lucky Dragon No. 5
      What happened to the first four?

    • @fivenightsofrandomness9224
      @fivenightsofrandomness9224 Před 3 lety +43

      @@ovni2295 lucky dragon no. 1 and no. 2 sank due to poor construction when holes started to develop after the heavy loads of fish they got. Lucky Dragon No.3 was taken by the IJN during peace time as costal defence. Lucky Dragon No.4 collided with an Ocean Liner and sank

    • @dairoleon2682
      @dairoleon2682 Před 3 lety +24

      @@fivenightsofrandomness9224 It's like they cursed the boats with that name.

    • @darksteelmenace595
      @darksteelmenace595 Před 3 lety +6

      @@fivenightsofrandomness9224 Yikes

    • @jodiepalmer2404
      @jodiepalmer2404 Před 3 lety +6

      "The Lucky Dragon and her crew" in the end brought about dangers of not properly understanding the theory of Nuclear Weapons and the effects. In essence, "The Lucky Dragon" finally showed her true colours to the world.

  • @polygondwanaland8390
    @polygondwanaland8390 Před rokem +540

    You know, the statistic "as much energy as all the bombs the Allies dropped in WW2 combined" is supposed to make the Castle Bravo explosion look huge (and it does), but it really gives a scale of strategic bombing. They dropped nuclear levels of explosive one dumb iron bomb at a time using prop driven bombers. Insane.

    • @eracer1111
      @eracer1111 Před 10 měsíci +73

      Many people forget the firebombing raids on Tokyo, Dresden, and other cities that killed many more people than nuclear weapons did. Of course the logistical ease of "One plane, one bomb, thousands dead" can't be ignored. Nor can the Damocle's Sword that is the tremendous arsenal of deliverable nuclear weapons that exist in the world today.
      The most sobering statistic to me is knowing that a single Ohio-class submarine carries up to 20 missiles, each having 12 independently-targetable warheads with a combined yield 5,700 times that of the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima.

    • @richbarrows3922
      @richbarrows3922 Před 9 měsíci +24

      100,000 died overnight from fireworks over Tokyo 5 months before Hiroshima. And 300,000 in several days in target cities of Japan. Mostly civilian, women and children. Certainly there was a high tolerance for civilian casualties compared to now.

    • @leonscott543
      @leonscott543 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@richbarrows3922So using this logic you'd been ok with vaporizing Jews in nazi Germany to end a war

    • @bluewardog
      @bluewardog Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@eracer1111Dresden wasn't actually as bad as it was portrade. The official death count is high because most people died of suffercation so there was lots of body's that could be identified and weren't buried under rubble. The Nazis also turned it into properganda. Even the author of slaughter house five said he regretted how he portrade the bombing in his book saying that he was "the only person to profit from the Dresden bombings".

    • @nickhowes5348
      @nickhowes5348 Před 9 měsíci

      You mean in comparison, they dropped tiny, insignificant levels of explosives. Not nuclear levels!

  • @alexiordache760
    @alexiordache760 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I just had to rewatch this with my wife. Your videos age better than the finest wine.

  • @DannyWJaco
    @DannyWJaco Před měsícem

    👏🏼 Great video production and narration.

  • @KT-ed1dk
    @KT-ed1dk Před 3 lety +595

    Most evil oxymoron ever: "acceptable fallout"

    • @areyouready22
      @areyouready22 Před 3 lety +41

      Acceptable Fallout is not an oxymoron, it is a catastrophic contradiction.

    • @KT-ed1dk
      @KT-ed1dk Před 3 lety +6

      @@areyouready22 I like that too 😄 the alliteration is nice!

    • @douglasschmidt2869
      @douglasschmidt2869 Před 3 lety +10

      Why are there so many misspelled words these days?? “Acceptible” ... it is not. I grew up hating grammar Nazis. But all over CZcams are misspelled words like this. They spend all these hours putting together lovely documentaries but can’t double check their spelling?? It drives me nuts!

    • @KT-ed1dk
      @KT-ed1dk Před 3 lety +5

      @@douglasschmidt2869 Who are you talking to exactly? I didn't misspell acceptable. I'm old enough that I was actually taught to spell things properly.

    • @jmmahony
      @jmmahony Před 3 lety +4

      @@KT-ed1dk in the video it's written onscreen as "acceptible" at 5:55 and again at 6:26. I agree with Douglas Schmidt. It's one thing to see misspelled words when your cousin's neighbor's idiot brother posts his conspiracy theories on Facebook, but when people put a lot of effort into an informative video like this on CZcams, you'd think they would check the basics, like spelling. It leaves literate viewers wondering how reliable the rest of the info in the video is.
      Added irony here because this video is about "some of the smartest people on the planet" (9:26) making a mistake.

  • @iambiggus
    @iambiggus Před 3 lety +284

    "Lucky" Dragon. Man, people need to stop naming stuff that gives the Universe an excuse to be ironic.

    • @anhedonianepiphany5588
      @anhedonianepiphany5588 Před 3 lety +24

      So, if a boat is named the Unfortunate Weasel, it's pretty safe?!?

    • @iambiggus
      @iambiggus Před 3 lety +13

      @@anhedonianepiphany5588 You're safe. Can't guarantee people won't laugh out loud at your boat's name like I did :-)

    • @slipipipi7971
      @slipipipi7971 Před 3 lety +7

      @@anhedonianepiphany5588 Well now your inviting bad fortune to come inside your house and eat your spagetti

    • @elijahbey3366
      @elijahbey3366 Před 3 lety

      Better than being named the "Angry Dragon." 😂🤣😂🤣

  • @jonatan7238
    @jonatan7238 Před 9 měsíci +9

    Real big fan of these videos with a more laidback storytelling. And the way you present the information is phenomenal. I hope you make more videos like this.

  • @DemoMan_69
    @DemoMan_69 Před 29 dny +1

    This atomic disaster lead to one of my favorite film franchises, Godzilla and in turn, I started researching about Castle Bravo

  • @lilhollow1543
    @lilhollow1543 Před 3 lety +492

    “Despite the death and horror, it wasn’t all that bad... SpongeBob...”

    • @illbill5904
      @illbill5904 Před 3 lety +29

      I like to think in cannon Mr.Krabs uses money to cope with his trauma from the event.
      Remember he was in the navy.

    • @thetau4866
      @thetau4866 Před 3 lety +22

      @@illbill5904 he's literally living in the crater technically.
      Bikini Bottom.

    • @DespaceMan
      @DespaceMan Před 3 lety +2

      It's so funny you should move & live there.

    • @Dockhead
      @Dockhead Před 3 lety +7

      @@DespaceMan it shows the degeneracy of our current modern society, completely disregard the downfall of things for a shitty unfunny attempt at a joke.
      sure call me a Debbie downer, but its only dimwits who plaster themselves on sunbeds and do controversial things and cry out for help and cost society when we succumb to cancers and unnatural aspects of cases of other conditions.

    • @kemoni221
      @kemoni221 Před 3 lety +8

      there is one episode in Spongebob with a depiction of a shady town with weird people living there
      the road to this town goes completely vertical (downwards) at one point

  • @randallmooreao9950
    @randallmooreao9950 Před 3 lety +738

    so - at 6 minute mark - the commander had ample time to postpone the test and wait for favorable winds.....and he chose to continue, costing the US millions and the lives and health of the natives. Nice work, Congrats.

    • @Chuckiele
      @Chuckiele Před 3 lety +112

      It would have cost human lives even with ideal winds and only the originally intended size of the explosion. They dropped a nuclear bomb into a populated area and they did it again and again. Nothing can justify that insanity.

    • @henryptung
      @henryptung Před 3 lety +68

      Given how they talked about it and the era in question, I'd guess that "acceptable fallout" probably wasn't meant to indicate that the collateral damage was unintended but "acceptable".
      It meant they were part of the study. And it wasn't the first (or the last) case of human experimentation without consent in those decades.

    • @Sierrahtl
      @Sierrahtl Před 3 lety +13

      You don’t know many Navy admirals do you...they are all stupid..

    • @dish7877
      @dish7877 Před 3 lety

      6:00

    • @insertianameia2224
      @insertianameia2224 Před 3 lety +10

      @@henryptung some were foreigners, some were our own citizens. Many were our own soldiers and some were even just young children, often orphans. All were just people trying to survive in the world.

  • @padawanmage71
    @padawanmage71 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I think the only person who cheered when Castle Bravo went off was Edward Teller, who pushed to get it made.
    I highly doubt he gave much thought to the victims from the fallout….

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Moral of the story? If you ever encounter mysterious "falling, snow-like dust" ... do not "take a lick."

  • @davidcarr286
    @davidcarr286 Před 2 lety +161

    My uncle (my dad's brother) was a scientist that was exposed to radiation during the test. He died in 1960 of leukemia caused from that exposure.

    • @brianjensen5661
      @brianjensen5661 Před 2 lety

      Bullshit

    • @ralphmacchiato3761
      @ralphmacchiato3761 Před 10 měsíci

      Allegedly

    • @jonde3
      @jonde3 Před 10 měsíci +11

      ​@@ralphmacchiato3761🤦

    • @qualicumjack3906
      @qualicumjack3906 Před 10 měsíci +3

      So he was helping make a bomb to kill foreigners and ended up getting killed by that very bomb.
      Sounds like poetic justice

    • @GrapeFlavoredAntifreeze
      @GrapeFlavoredAntifreeze Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@qualicumjack3906Braindead comment. Nuclear bombs in reality have prevented millions of deaths of the last 70ish years because of the concept of Mutually assured destruction. Many scientists knew once the arms race started that despite the terrible potential of nuclear weapons, they could be the catalyst to allow the civilized world to play nice (in terms of not engaging in hot wars). And the only way a smaller nation gets enough nuclear weapons to participate in mutually assured destruction, is to develop enough as a nation where they will be mature enough to handle that many weapons appropriately. If Iran were to drop a nuke today, the response would be conventional not nuclear, but Iran would conventionally be wiped off the face of the earth. There’s a unique balance to it that has saved countless lives, as well as created a modern global society that relies on cooperation over immediate war like it used to be

  • @Abiwg1910
    @Abiwg1910 Před 3 lety +696

    ‘But not everything was so bad’
    People *died* but don’t worry you’ve got spongebob

    • @reencollett6835
      @reencollett6835 Před 3 lety +33

      I know - I was stunned at even the mention, never mind an actual pic of that banality.

    • @Newt2799
      @Newt2799 Před 3 lety +26

      Cmon man he’s just a fry cook trying to get by

    • @noahswan6014
      @noahswan6014 Před 3 lety +10

      I agree that it’s a clumsy comment

    • @talleywa5772
      @talleywa5772 Před 3 lety +2

      C'est la vie

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 3 lety +17

      Well, some levity after this tragedy is acceptable.

  • @xanmontes8715
    @xanmontes8715 Před 8 měsíci +1

    "War hardened men fell to their knees and prayed"
    Some would call these men weak or naive. That is foolish.
    These men understood that despite 'winning' the war, they had been condemned by the country they fought for.

  • @qualich
    @qualich Před 11 měsíci +1

    Wow. Long time Godzilla universe enjoyer myself didn't know this fact. Thanks for these videos.

  • @uchiha_murilo3148
    @uchiha_murilo3148 Před 3 lety +338

    Outside the Wire makes even more sense now, "it's just collateral"

    • @SeraphFemboy
      @SeraphFemboy Před 3 lety +8

      Was a pretty good movie ngl

    • @based_prophet
      @based_prophet Před 3 lety +5

      Where just collateral hug ur kid n be glad thats possiable that day

    • @oldnelson4298
      @oldnelson4298 Před 3 lety +8

      @@SeraphFemboy It was shit. 2 out of 5. An interesting initial concept, if not particularly original, that was completely squandered by the end. The story was a total mess with multiple plot holes and even the action was pretty boring. Like when the US robots end up fighting the Russian robots in the street, I thought at least this bit of action would be entertaining, but no. Another missed opportunity.

    • @DeosPraetorian
      @DeosPraetorian Před 3 lety +7

      @@oldnelson4298 k

    • @falcongamingproductions9938
      @falcongamingproductions9938 Před 3 lety +7

      Old Nelson not a single person in the entire universe asked for your opinion

  • @Tottleminerftw
    @Tottleminerftw Před 3 lety +338

    The problem was that when the Soviets heard of this they basically said challenge accepted.

    • @MrBilld75
      @MrBilld75 Před 3 lety +47

      and they won the final battle of baddest bomb ever made with the Tsar bomb. After that the U.S. and Russia agreed no more nuclear tests.

    • @Raven1024
      @Raven1024 Před 3 lety +37

      Though I don't know if "won" is the right word... I'm sure more powerful bombs could be made and tested today.
      More just that that particular bomb was at the right point in a fiery game of leap frog where even the military had to step back and go "Hmmm... Should we keep doing this?"

    • @robertnett9793
      @robertnett9793 Před 3 lety +12

      @@Raven1024 Wasn't there this whole 'setting the atmosphere itself on fire' that made them ponder about wether they should go on... So yes. I don't see an engineering problem to make a bigger bomb... But... you know a complete pyrolytic self cleaning of the planet might be considered a bit overkill for even the worst warmongers...

    • @Lewd-Tenant_Isan
      @Lewd-Tenant_Isan Před 3 lety +24

      @@robertnett9793 you are correct. Before the first detonation of the first atomic bomb, the threat of the entire atmosphere being lit on fire was a legitimate concern. As for bigger bombs, yes there are no engineering problems, only moral and mortal ones.
      The Tsar Bomba could have been larger, but they limited its size to allow enough time for the bomber and her crew to escape the blast. They even attached a parachute to the bomb to increase the amount of time the crew had.
      Unfortunately for us, there is no such thing as overkill. The total amount of nuclear warheads the world currently has, is enough to destroy every city in the world and still have around 1500 left (assuming every city requires 3 nuclear warheads each to be utterly destroyed)

    • @GuyVinmara
      @GuyVinmara Před 3 lety +16

      @@Raven1024 One cannot help but think that conceivably the high incidence of cancers in the 20th century might possibly be from all those radioactive particles that were(and continue to be) carried around the world after this and Russia's own test.

  • @michaelbobic7135
    @michaelbobic7135 Před 9 měsíci

    This is excellent work. You really are an exceptional science educator.

  • @veerigo
    @veerigo Před 9 měsíci

    i always come back to this video it’s so good

  • @robertnorton92
    @robertnorton92 Před 2 lety +1539

    "Every effort was made to assure the comfort and well-being of the natives."
    Months earlier...
    "Sir, it may not be comforting nor good for the well being of the natives to detonate the bomb near their island. Should we make an effort to choose a different location?"
    "No."

    • @matthewjdouglas6471
      @matthewjdouglas6471 Před rokem

      Hello can you see my comment a little further up??

    • @robertnorton92
      @robertnorton92 Před rokem +17

      I cannot see it-I scrolled for a bit but there are 8,476 comments to look through. What did it say?

    • @notdoppler83
      @notdoppler83 Před rokem +30

      Yeah, that sounds like America. Russia would also do that too.

    • @johnviera3884
      @johnviera3884 Před rokem +3

      @@notdoppler83 Russia and USA
      Also the reason we’re not speaking German

    • @gabrielc.4906
      @gabrielc.4906 Před rokem

      @@johnviera3884 not everything is black and white though, especially governments. Yes, Russia and the US fought the Nazis in WWII. But that doesn't make them the good guys in everything else.

  • @cameronmaberry8604
    @cameronmaberry8604 Před 3 lety +180

    My grandpa was there and saw it. His name is Ron Yoxsimer, and is still alive surprisingly, and still is very healthy at 89 years old.

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector Před 2 lety +45

      If he's willing, set up a camera and interview him....before his story is lost. Kudos to him for being one tough SOB.

    • @agentepolaris4914
      @agentepolaris4914 Před 2 lety +3

      Maybe radiation gave him superpowers

    • @kinsmart7294
      @kinsmart7294 Před 2 lety +15

      People are resistant to radiation. The US exposed some unwilling test subjects to low doses of radiation for long periods of time and no health effects were seen.
      The body can heal low doses, but if the damage passes an threshold it causes too much damage for the body to repair.

    • @florjanbrudar692
      @florjanbrudar692 Před 2 lety +1

      @@agentepolaris4914 Haha...

    • @user-fh9vh6hr7w
      @user-fh9vh6hr7w Před 2 lety +1

      That's amazing.
      I really would interview him while he's still with us. It would be very interesting to hear an in depth account from sombody who was there.

  • @user-vg2zl8bn3r
    @user-vg2zl8bn3r Před 2 měsíci +1

    Kyle, the first test of a thermonuclear device was Ivy-Mike, yielding 10 megatons. Castle-Bravo came after it.

    • @charliefoxtrot5001
      @charliefoxtrot5001 Před 2 měsíci

      Correct! Ivy Mike was the first and produced 10.4 MT, using cryogenic liquid deuterium.

  • @user-ef6zo1ix3t
    @user-ef6zo1ix3t Před 4 měsíci

    You are a stricking looking fellow & explain it all very well. Thank you.

  • @theshogum4970
    @theshogum4970 Před 3 lety +84

    The most wierdly spooky line in the whole video "The 60 percent that was Lithium 7 would be inert, and wouldn't react. .... And then it did."

    • @lostbr0
      @lostbr0 Před 3 lety +2

      Lithium 7 == thermal nuclear/fusion reactor helper

    • @talleywa5772
      @talleywa5772 Před 3 lety +2

      *curb your enthusiasm theme starts playing*

  • @rogertroja4400
    @rogertroja4400 Před 2 lety +639

    I am a Radiation Protection Technologist and have worked in US Nuclear plants since 1974. The man who gave me my first training at that time was in charge of radiation protection for the Navy during this test (not the bomb, but the measurement and control of the exposure from the blast and fallout on the naval vessels in the area.) I heard this story back then along with some interesting descriptions of what happened on the navy ships that were in the area. Needless to say, no one was prepared for what really happened. We learned a lot from this and other tests that went...better. This was a pop gun compared to some devices that have been developed since.
    Please don't make the foolish mistake of comparing nuclear bombs to nuclear power. They have very little to do with each other. We could not make one of our nuclear plants explode like that if we were desperate to do so.

    • @TheReapersSon
      @TheReapersSon Před rokem +77

      Thank you for your comment. I'm a big proponent of nuclear power. There's a lot of slander against it. Ironically, Germany had to wake up a bunch of coal plants recently, after they deactivated their nuclear reactors for some odd reason. This life is one of constant visible irony and contradiction.

    • @Boudica234
      @Boudica234 Před rokem +16

      It is true that u can't compare the explosions of nuclear plants with thermonuclear bombs. However, the issue of spent fuel pools is quite serious. In 2016, the journal Science estimated that a spent fuel pool fire in Pennsylvania would contaminate approx. 100,000 square kilometers and require the evacuation of around 20 million residents.

    • @lofl6968
      @lofl6968 Před rokem +21

      @@TheReapersSon As a German I confirm and agree, that was pretty dumb of our government (not too surprising though)

    • @wolfgg00
      @wolfgg00 Před rokem +6

      @@TheReapersSon The decision to extend operation time of German nuclear plants has not been made yet, although it is not unlikely in the current world situation.
      Renewables are the much better option imo, as the spent fuel final storage is still unresolvef and unattainable in one of the most populated European countries

    • @user-nc6rn3rd2h
      @user-nc6rn3rd2h Před rokem +21

      @@wolfgg00 containing the very small amount of waste from nuclear plants has had a safe solution for actual decades. It is extremely safe especially in comparison to how we produce energy from other sources. Kyle has done a video on it and it’s an eye opener. Certainly worth watching.

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The starter for the bomb was like that at Nagasaki, the Hiroshima device was a uranium bullet, which was a compression device.

  • @mariekatherine5238
    @mariekatherine5238 Před 2 lety +295

    My father saw this while in the Navy. He never said much about it, but Mom said it affected him badly, especially as it was classified for decades. He started developing skin cancers, not melanoma, but all sorts of odd growths, on his arms and hands.

  • @themcflurryman2525
    @themcflurryman2525 Před 3 lety +348

    “It was dry and had no taste”
    NO TASTE, THEY ATE IT?!

    • @ZatWonGuy
      @ZatWonGuy Před 3 lety +36

      With no context, I think it's more likely that they just put their tongue on it. Scientists do that to get comprehensive reports

    • @ZatWonGuy
      @ZatWonGuy Před 3 lety +25

      Okay so I just got to the part in the video and honestly it still makes sense. He interpreted it as snow, from what I understand

    • @RobertMcBride-is-cool
      @RobertMcBride-is-cool Před 3 lety +2

      Gritty, not dry.

    • @matthewlofton8465
      @matthewlofton8465 Před 3 lety +16

      @@ZatWonGuy One scientist discovered no less than 9 lethal elements that way. He is not officially credited with those discoveries, as he always worked with colleagues and grad students and always deferred credit to them...but he literally ate all 9 elements just to see what it would do to him.

    • @brixan...
      @brixan... Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah. He said it looked like snow

  • @Hugo123ll50
    @Hugo123ll50 Před 6 měsíci +2

    With the way you explained how a fusion bomb works theoretically we could make a bomb as big as we wanted. Maybe even bigger than Tsar bomba

    • @raygamma36
      @raygamma36 Před 6 měsíci

      Theoretically, you could have a Secondary stage, a Tertiary stage,,, even a Quadrary stage. 😄😄