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Published on: AS

1946

Hans Bethe answers a question before the U.S. Senate about the possibility of igniting the entire atmosphere with a nuclear explosion. He states that it would require heating a huge volume of air and water, perhaps comparable to the volume of the Sun, to a temperature of millions of degrees, all at the same time. He concludes that at the time of the Trinity test, there was solid theoretical certainty that the atmosphere would not be ignited.