The Joint Evaluated Fission and Fusion (JEFF) Nuclear Data Library is a collaboration between NEA Data Bank participating countries. The JEFF library combines the efforts of its different Working Groups to produce sets of evaluated nuclear data, for fission and fusion applications.
https://www.oecd-nea.org/jcms/pl_27365/the-jeff-nuclear-data-library
After seeing Russia’s non-nuclear weapons, I honestly don’t believe they have that many nuclear weapons.
I’m not saying they have none, but I don’t think they’ve kept up the maintenance required for 7,000.
I mean, the actual number they have is irrelevant because there’s no way of knowing which ones are duds until it’s too late. If they were to launch a nuclear attack, the countries they’re attacking wouldn’t wait to see if it was a dud before responding. Because even if there’s only a 10% chance it detonates, that’s still 700 nukes detonating.
Mos likely a lot of them are really old and not ik workikg conditions but they like to keep up the illusion that they could just nuke the whole globe
Yup. It's actually fascinating to read up on how the US maintains and tests nuclear weapons.
Your username as two, wait three names in it, and none are jeff. I am confused, flabbergasted and quite possibly bamboozled.
Exactly what I asked your mom.
She's got three as dildos and two of them are of same size. Fucking hoarders smh.
Wow ordered list in descending order. 100-120 is somehow higher in the list than 110-130