If the united states really wanted to...could it put like 500 hydrogen bombs 100 miles under the surface of the ocean, and create a huge tidal wave? lol
If the united states really wanted to...could it put like 500 hydrogen bombs 100 miles under the surface of the ocean, and create a huge tidal wave? lol
You scare me...
Here is what I would do:
requirements:
Fleet of large airplanes/zeppelins
a ........-ton of liquid nitrogen
plan:
Wait for an overcast and/or very dense fog to appear over your major city of choice. Next load up all your nitrogen on the planes/zeppelins so that you can release the gas mid-flight. Take it over the city and release the nitrogen into the clouds. Now, wait for a gigantic ice block to form over the city and let gravity do the rest.
I was really proud of myself for coming up with this scheme until I realized I would probably just make it start hailing.
That's got to be one of the most random things I've heard this week.
"That's got to be one of the most random things I've heard this week."
I only wish I could say the same.
M.Eng Computer Engineering CandidateB.Sc Computer Science
Robotics and graphics enthusiast.
>could it put like 500 hydrogen bombs 100 miles under the surface of
>the ocean, and create a huge tidal wave?
You're the overly clever, but impractical and ultimately unsuccessful super-villain type, aren't you? Why waste 500 good hydrogen bombs creating a tidal wave when you can sell most of them for scrap and use the handful left to do far more economic, military, and moral damage by placing them strategically?
Pfft, n00b.
My best code is written with the delete key.
Also with the sheer power of the hydrogen bomb, 500 of them would not be necessary.
My friend and I are pretty sure the world will just tip over and we'll all fall skywards until we can't breathe anymore and sufficate, or explode. This was when we were thinking about gravity theory (you fail science if you don't know the difference between law and theory) so we were free to think that the reason gravity worked was because the world was right-side up.
I told her to "grab the grass!" but she lives in Arizona, so I was kinda stumped after I realised that there was prolly not gonna be grass around her when and if it happened.
we could just strap one to your chest and have you walk into Iran...Originally Posted by Kleid-0
personally, I think all we need is an idea like the movie "the core", except we stop it from spinning... to make it short, we send a vessel into the core of the earth, and with perfectly timed nuclear explosions, halt the spinning of the core, which would destroy earth's magnetic fields and leave us all unprotected from the sun's radiation
Last edited by major_small; 04-25-2006 at 08:22 PM.
Join is in our Unofficial Cprog IRC channel
Server: irc.phoenixradio.org
Channel: #Tech
Team Cprog Folding@Home: Team #43476
Download it Here
Detailed Stats Here
More Detailed Stats
52 Members so far, are YOU a member?
Current team score: 1223226 (ranked 374 of 45152)
The CBoard team is doing better than 99.16% of the other teams
Top 5 Members: Xterria(518175), pianorain(118517), Bennet(64957), JaWiB(55610), alphaoide(44374)
Last Updated on: Wed, 30 Aug, 2006 @ 2:30 PM EDT
>> If the united states really wanted to...could it put like 500 hydrogen bombs 100 miles under the surface of the ocean, and create a huge tidal wave?
or maybe just like that siberian meteor - flatten a thousand trees, but you'd be the only one to hear it.
Code:#include <cmath> #include <complex> bool euler_flip(bool value) { return std::pow ( std::complex<float>(std::exp(1.0)), std::complex<float>(0, 1) * std::complex<float>(std::atan(1.0) *(1 << (value + 2))) ).real() < 0; }
Peace
I'm not immature, I'm refined in the opposite direction.
> Also with the sheer power of the hydrogen bomb, 500 of them would not be necessary.
Yeah, you'd probably just succeed in making a lot of steam.
-Govtcheez
[email protected]
You'd probably turn Earth into a larger version of the moon only crispier.
Or the sheer magnitude alone would ignite our atmosphere and turn Earth into a mini sun.
Just get some anti-matter and have it meet it's equal matter equivalent.
Sniper Sas that would be a very, very bad idea.
The tidal wave one is good though, put 5 or so along an ocean fault near an overpopulated area. I'm not sure if things work like this, but you might even be able to get earth on your side if you trigger a 'quake along side your wave. The other benefit is deployment: succesfully triggering bombs in a populated area would be quite difficult, not to mention getting the bomb there anways. (Although smart terrorists should build the stuff inside of the enemy, and I'm not so sure that is already happening )
My thought as of late has been that if a couple thousand intellectuals came together bent on destruction, they would be able to suceed in a huge way (maybe a billion casulties). I just don't think anyone cares to do that.
Well, that all depends on who the thousand individuals are. If they're a group of people with different connections to various government agencies world wide as well as access to certain top secret information and various skills that would provide great use in destruction, then yes, they can do some damage.Originally Posted by MadCow257
If they're just regular, highly intelligent, people with no real first hand information or knowledge on how to destroy the world, then I don't think they could get much done.
Sent from my iPad®
On the contrary, I am quite sure 500 would not nearly be enough.Originally Posted by citizen
Last edited by Sang-drax : Tomorrow at 02:21 AM. Reason: Time travelling