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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
kXy1qQySZumfCrpj