Terme de Glossaire
TNT
An abbreviated form, and the most common, to designate trinitrotoluene, a nitrate explosive, derived from toluene (a hydrocarbon), particularly powerful, with a chemical formula of C7H5(NO2)3. The power of atomic bombs is generally expressed by a TNT equivalent. We thus use the kiloton (1,000 tons of TNT) or the megaton (1,000,000 tons of TNT). The bomb dropped on Hiroshima had, for example, a power of around 15 kilotons, or 15,000 tons of TNT. The most powerful bomb ever tested, by the Soviet army, had a power of some 50 megatons, or the equivalent of 50 million tons of TNT.
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
U0vXG4CvD7xQ8SsN