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The world after us
The world after us












  1. THE WORLD AFTER US TV
  2. THE WORLD AFTER US FREE

Buildings, forests, plastic, and even the asphalt in the roads will burn. The areas around the blast centers will be charged with an incredible amount of energy and will burst into flames. For a long time after the bombs fall, we can expect to live without electricity-and without clean water.

THE WORLD AFTER US FREE

But that’s assuming that people are free to work on it. It’s expected that it would take six months of concentrated work to get a country back online after it gets shut down. Worst of all, water treatment facilities will break down and we’ll lose clean drinking water. The data on every computer will be erased. Every refrigerator storing food will shut down. So after the bombs fall, the lights will go out. If a bomb designed to send off an electromagnetic pulse were to explode 400–480 kilometers (250–300 mi) over a country the size of the United States, the entire electric grid across the country would shut down. Since then, bombs have been designed to do it on purpose.

THE WORLD AFTER US TV

In one nuclear test, the pulse sent out by detonating a single atomic bomb was so powerful that it blew out street lamps, TV sets, and telephones in homes 1,600 kilometers (1,000 mi) away from the blast center. When a nuclear explosion goes off, it can send out a pulse of electromagnetic radiation that can shut down an electrical system-or even the electric grid for an entire country. We have every reason to believe that it’ll happen again if another bomb falls.ĩ An Electromagnetic Pulse Will Shut Off All Electricity It was strong enough that the aftereffects of the rain can still linger today in the places it landed back then. There was enough radiation in that liquid, though, to make changes in a person’s blood. Struggling through the flames, they’d become so desperate for water that many opened up their mouths and tried to drink the strange liquid falling from the sky. The city around the survivors was burning and tearing up the oxygen around them, and they were already dying of thirst. It covered an area about 20 kilometers (12 mi) across around ground zero, covering the countryside with a thick liquid that could douse anyone it touched with up to 100 times more radiation than stepping into the blast center. In Hiroshima, the black rain started to fall 20 minutes after the bomb exploded. They’ll be thick, black globs with a texture like oil, and they might kill you. These won’t be little patters of raindrops clearing away the dust and the flames. Moments after the atomic bombs hit, a hard black rain will fall.














The world after us