How We Know North Korea Didn't Detonate a Hydrogen Bomb 176
StartsWithABang writes: The news has been aflame with reports that North Korea detonated a hydrogen bomb on January 6th, greatly expanding its nuclear capabilities with their fourth nuclear test and the potential to carry out a devastating strike against either South Korea or, if they're more ambitious, the United States. The physics of what a nuclear explosion actually does and how that signal propagates through the air, oceans and ground, however, can tell us whether this was truly a nuclear detonation at all, and if so, whether it was fusion or fission. From all the data we've collected, this appears to be nothing new: just a run-of-the-mill fission bomb, with the rest being a sensationalized claim.
(Related: Yesterday's post about how seismic data also points to a conventional nuke, rather than an H-bomb.)
Forbes Warning (Score:5, Informative)
WARNING: The link goes to Forbes.com. Do no click on it.
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Just click on the Continue to site button and the first thing you see is the gleaming face of the only well fed North Korean.
I've got uBlock Origin and Ghostery to take care of most of the tracking.
Though disabling Javascript delivers a white page.
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I've started tagging all submissions from this person as bangspam. You are free to do likewise, or not.
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I use something like bluehipsterfixieridingupsidedownheadfucktard
Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:4, Insightful)
OK, over half of the topics you suggest are your personal pet peeves, rather than current news stories. The others have already had their run here. What do you suggest, that they keep rerunning your issues with software development until your satisfied with the end result? Now, that being said, some of the articles here have been pretty bad.
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His list was also what I'd call my list. Perhaps you just don't fit in with us.... I'm with him.
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You mean you *are* him.
Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:1)
Well I don't know about these other assholes... But I'm not him. I'm not me either. Maybe I'm you.
Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:1)
No, you are definitely him.
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+1 Funny !
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I'm not him.
I'm Spartacus.
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No I'm AC!
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Radar: [to Hawkeye ]Are you one?
Hawkeye: Yes, are you one too?
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Damn it, undoing a mod so that I can comment I'm with them.
I've been here since ~2001. I rode out 9/11 on Slashdot, read about Bittorrent and the iPod being released. (Where's that Nomad now?)
I'd read and comment on any number of those articles he proposed. Especially over stuff that they've been posting.
The comments on Slashdot are still better on some topics than Reddit or anywhere else.
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I think we need a technical solution in FOSS.
I think the climate of the internet is ready for it. Everyone is sick of Slashdot's turn for the worse. Redditors are crying about reddit going down. Everyone is complaining about the twitter sinking ship. Facebook is... facebook.
We haven't seen a new, good, decentralized site in years. Personally I think all of the software is already written, it just needs a bit of tweaking.
- Usenet for discussion.
- IRC for chat.
- nginx front end.
The only thing that needs to be
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Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:2)
I mod, therefore I am part of the collective. I don't care about SJW issues and I don't care for censorship in most forms. That being said, if your being an ignorant troll, I will mod you as such without hesitation and if you want to create a flamewar, your post will be modded into -1 purgatory. If someone does abuse their mod points to silence criticism and legitimate debate, I both use my points to counter them and report them to the admins. If you're a moderator and you don't do these things, you're n
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His UID has an entire extra digit than ours. Not just an extra digit, nearing 3x. I don't think he remembers old mods or moderation.
I got 5 mod points once every other month. I certainly didn't squander them on bad posts. It's not like Reddit where it takes a fake account (or bot net) and you can easily push conversation however you want it.
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Me too, certainly more than half.
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Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:2)
I've been here quite a while too, if that counts. I am in violent agreement with the others in this thread. I like my 4 digit uid, but I long ago realized that Slashdot can't be saved. When cmdrtaco left and it was sold to dice, that was the end.
Slashdot has always been about its user community, so I am sure that a technical solution can easily be made, and that community will find it when that happens.
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His list selections are all SLASHDOT material. That's kinda what this site used to be about. If you want "current news stories" go to ..er.. FOX ;-)
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* The fall of the GPL thanks to people wanting to use truly free licenses like the BSD and MIT licenses.
This is still news. It's an ongoing issue. It's causing the FSF and software like GCC to become irrelevant.
This is silly, GCC is just a technologically inferior option to LLVM/clang -- ask anyone working in the compiler space about it. Even the folks working on GCC admit that's not aging gracefully.
If GCC becomes irrelevant, they will have no one to blame but themselves.
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It exists, and it's really good:
pipedot.org [pipedot.org]
Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:1)
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I've found that SN has a serious problem with abusive moderation. Like you stated, it has a small community. This means that a small number of people have mod points. And to put it nicely, pretty much all of the mods over there are crazies. If you post a comment that doesn't fit into their rather fucked up world view, then they will very often gang up on you and downmod you. At least Slashdot has a big enough mod community that it isn't monopolized by a small number of whackos. If somebody mods abusively he
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Mobile friendly pages can die in a fire.
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The destruction of the GNOME project thanks to the horribly failed GNOME 3 debacle. * The destruction of the Firefox web browser thanks to numerous fucking idiotic changes being forced on its users by Mozilla.
Nobody cares any more because realize that Mozilla is so f'ed up that it has to get worse before it gets better.
* The destruction of Linux as a viable OS, especially when used on servers, all thanks to systemd being forced by all of the major distros.
FreeBSD FTW. If it's good enough for Sony and Apple, ...
* The fall of the GPL thanks to people wanting to use truly free licenses like the BSD and MIT licenses.
You say that like it's a bad thing to replace a restrictive license like the GPL with a freer license.
* The fall of Ruby and Ruby on Rails.
That was an easy one to figure out pretty much right from the get-go. Only the n00b language-of-the-month people got sucked into that.
* The Rust and Perl 6 programming language disasters.
And? There weren't that many people using Rust, and Perl 5x still works fine.
* The Go and Swift programming language success stories.
Nobody who's not using it cares
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Grouping these up in a way that makes a touch more sense.
The destruction of the GNOME project thanks to the horribly failed GNOME 3 debacle.
* The destruction of the Firefox web browser thanks to numerous fucking idiotic changes being forced on its users by Mozilla.
Nobody cares any more because realize that Mozilla is so f'ed up that it has to get worse before it gets better.
* Firefox OS failing worse than nearly any software project has failed in a very long time.
How is this not a GOOD thing? Maybe it will force them to concentrate more effort on core products, like fixing the memory leaks and other bugs in Firefox.
See, there's always a silver lining around every cloud.
Firefox lost me with the insatiable pace of updates knocking my extensions out of compatibility. The fact that Google offered a hugely more streamlined experience sealed it's fate. Now, I only use it when I am testing something that requires cross-browser support. It can die and I could not care less, neither would I care to read an article about it.
* The rise of FreeBSD and OpenBSD, thanks to systemd ruining Linux.
* The destruction of Linux as a viable OS, especially when used on servers, all thanks to systemd being forced by all of the major distros.
This has to be some of the most cleverly disguised FUD campaigns I have ever seen. Linux is still quite
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* The destruction of the Firefox web browser thanks to numerous fucking idiotic changes being forced on its users by Mozilla.
... Moves designed to protect users from MalWare. Of course that's "destruction"...
* The destruction of Linux as a viable OS, especially when used on servers, all thanks to systemd being forced by all of the major distros.
I use Linux extensively. SystemD has been a very minor speed bump. All the people screaming and crying about systemD haven't been able to down out the simple fact that SystemD works just fine and carries numerous benefits.
I personally don't care enough about the other issues to comment.
Re: What the fuck has happened to Slashdot?! (Score:1)
I think he means 'compared to older windows versions'. I think in that case he is right. It became a lot less awkward doing admin things since windows 7.
Nothing in comparison to a well-configured unix derivative, though.
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* The fall of the GPL thanks to people wanting to use truly free licenses like the BSD and MIT licenses.
Your phrasing clearly shows an agenda. This "fall" is occurring only in the dreams of those who want to corporatise OSS software while giving nothing back.
* The Go and Swift programming language success stories.
*What* Go and Swift programming language success stories?
* The rise of FreeBSD and OpenBSD, thanks to systemd ruining Linux.
While I'm not a huge fan of systemd (wouldn't miss it, were it to... die in a fire, for instance), this hasn't kept *me* from using Linux for the last decade-plus. I don't see it stopping many other folks, either.
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Forgot one:
* The destruction of the GNOME project thanks to the horribly failed GNOME 3 debacle.
"And nothing of value was lost".
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I wholeheartedly agree with this post. When I was first on Slashdot there weren't many items in the daily email with the links in it that I wouldn't read, nowadays I am struggling to find 2 or 3 each day out of the 15 stories that are sent.
Let's get back to Linux, programming, web and general IT Industry news like it used to be!
Siv
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It's called monetization. Looks like Slashdot tries to become MSM, not news for nerds.
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Whew (Score:5, Funny)
Re: Whew (Score:3)
Well, they can only destroy one city per bomb instead of one country (or US western state) per bomb. Sound like a small difference except that they have so few of them to work with.
Re: Whew (Score:5, Informative)
a fusion bomb may have much more power in terms of megatons TNT, but it won't destroy more than a medium sized city.
Re: Whew (Score:3)
I was thinking of the super powerful ones we tested in the pacific. Now that you mention it, they can come in smaller sizes though.
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Teller pretty much said that fusion bombs are limited to 100 megatons, which wipes out ~30x30 mile area. Due to curvature of the earth, a bigger bomb wouldn't do more damage, it would just push the fireball faster into space. So it's still 1 bomb per city...
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You're confusing maximum yield with extent of damage. Teller's claims were effective military use, where making one 10 times as large simply does not cause 10 times as much effect anymore. So larger devices are conceivable, and even technically possible. They're just not worth the extra difficulty.
Teller also wasn't looking at fallout and climate change. Hitting a coastal city or an ocean or island strike with enough power will vaporize square miles of shallow ocean and cause a global climate event matched
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The dinosaur killer asteroid is estimated at roughly 100 Megaton equivalent, and Teller didn't know about the dinosaur killer asteroid theory.
If by "100 Megaton" you mean "240 Gigatons", sure.
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You're off just a wee bit...
From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The Chicxulub impactor had an estimated diameter of 10 km (6.2 mi) or larger, and delivered an estimated energy equivalent of 240,000 gigatons of TNT (1.0×1024 J).[21] By contrast, the most powerful man-made explosive device ever detonated, the Tsar Bomba, had a yield of only 50 megatons of TNT (2.1×1017 J),[22] making the Chicxulub impact almost 5 million times more powerful. Even the most energetic known volcanic eruption, which
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Fusion weapons scale well. The Tsar Bomba would destroy any size city and then some. It was also run without the uranium jacket, roughly halving the yield, but making it much cleaner.
The big superpowers were interested in huge bombs when they couldn't guarantee an accurate, direct hit. Interest waned completely when accurate ICMBs arrived.
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Hmm.. global warming - nuclear winter. .. are you thinking what I am thinking?
Well if you are, I'm sure discussing whether kids would want them if they call them unhappy meals is sure to be off topic.
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Re: Whew (Score:5, Informative)
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It would also cleanly eliminate The Great Rat's dark hold on Orlando.
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How the fuck is that "5, informative"?
"Oh, a Hydrogen Bomb only makes a fireball with a diameter of 2 fucking km, rips the lungs of every living being in a diameter of 14 km and topples most stuff that can be toppled, kills everything and burns everything in a diameter of 25 km with third degree burns and gives second degree burns and sets stuff on fire even beyond that. And oh, there is also fallout. Massive fallout. That is not bad at all".
How the fuck is this informative in any way on a website that shou
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I was thinking South America, high in the Andes away from the tsunamis. Far away enough from the crazies with nukes and in altitude away from toxic particles. Just don't try the seafood from the lowlands.
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llamas and vicunas are plentiful in the antiplano. Potatoes originate from that part of the world too...
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Well at least there are no unfriendly countries that could afford one of those. It must cause a couple billion dollars.
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Doesn't a fusion bomb use a fission bomb to ignite it? Isn't a more likely explanation that the fusion part failed to detonate but the fission part worked? So technically it was a fusion bomb, but it didn't work right so we only got the fission part?
Anyway, lets just stop with the bombs, but keep on with the Korean girl bands.
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North Korea Destroys all of Asia [theonion.com]
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You can't test a full H-bomb under ground. It wouldn't stay under ground.
Phew - I'm glad all those full H-bombs tested underground didn't know that at the time.
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(2^31)-1 dollars ought to be enough for anybody.
Smells fishy. (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm no Korean speaker, but did they actually announce a hydrogen bomb explosion, or certain technologies involved hydrogen bomb production? It's not like they wouldn't be aware that foreign organisations would know what's going down, of course, so this might just be an internal propaganda exercise that the RoW decided to pick up on. Maybe they wanted to see sensationalised headlines from the West to prove to their people that they were under threat again.
Re: Smells fishy. (Score:5, Insightful)
There's no doubt that this is all about propaganda, it's just a question of who the story is aimed at.
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It's aimed squarely at US presidential candidates, so they can say a bunch of bullshit about NK to keep it in the news
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They probably saw the sweet deal Iran got and are posturing for something similar. Ever since the 94 deal which they pretty much ignored, they sort of have a habit of rattling sabers a bit to threaten world peace and then wait for offers to settle down.
Re: Smells fishy. (Score:5, Informative)
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Just follow the first link or use DuckDuckGo.
TWICE IN ONE DAY! (Score:3, Informative)
WTF Slashdot.
Two fucking Forbes articles in one day.
Two fucking StartsWithASlashvertisement posts in one day.
How many more readers do you want to leave? I'm getting to my breaking point!
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They actually fucking admit right then and there that the post is a dupe, and they link to his spam blog anyways.
We all need to start hitting the http://slashdot.org/firehose.pl [slashdot.org]Firehose more frequently and downmodding Ethan Siegel's blogspam on sight.
Why they detonated it (Score:4, Interesting)
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It's got to be lonely being the Supreme Leader of a shithole country after you've killed almost everyone you know to gain power.
So lonely.
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Fuck Forbes, and in particular Ethan Siegel (Score:5, Informative)
I've posted this, today, on slashdot and I'm posting it again.
In particular, Fuck Ethan Siegel, the handle resembling a human name used by the StartsWithABang guy, well-known Internet troll and manipulator of disinformation ("digital strategist" in today's Internet dysphemism [medium.com]), who is claimed to be "professor" perhaps of nothing but the art of aggressive marketeering.
dieethandie.
Forbes is a well known scam site.
The website "offers" 17 trackers on a single page serving what they claim to be "content", by the count of Ghostery. In comparison, Slashdot serves 6.
The site claims to promise "light ad" and nags you to turn off the ad blocker. In reality, it's 4% content and 96% ads [twitter.com].
What's worse, the blogs hosted there offers no information that is so unique that is worthy of whitelisting the site in your content blocker. The "Starts with a bang" blog, for example, "publishes" stories that are actually regurgitated, thinly-wrapped, dumbed-down, borderline plagiarism from science journals, websites and blogs. The link to the actual news is usually buried with a wall of distracting text and images copied or re-phrased from the original source. The whole blog serves no other purpose than baiting the reader for the purpose of tracking.
In addition, it appears that the purpose of hosting ads includes malware delivery [engadget.com].
The behavior of Forbes.com is at best sociopathic and outright criminal at worst. They look really desperate.
It's only a matter of time before this hub of mal-adverts gets its page ranks bitchslapped by Google, and pulling down the rank of all prolific referrers, including Slashdot.
Which is completely deserved.
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I get the animosity toward Forbes and these type of articles, but why the animosity toward Ethan? That's a serious question.
When I googled I found information that certainly seems to suggest he has a legitimate PhD in a field in something more complicated than I'll ever understand. He also seems to hold (or have held) real teaching positions. Please help me see what I am missing.
References:
http://www.phys.ufl.edu/siegel/
http://startswithabang.com/?page_id=4
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Because he does this on every content aggregator, from Slashdot to Fark to HackerNews. It's clickbait and self-promotion. He is not interested in participating in these communities; he's merely dropping his name and his cut-and-paste-crap-from-Wikipedia-and-Google-image-search blogspam to any site that will garner him clicks.
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Clickbait, no: there's actual, real, high-quality content to what he writes.
Self-promotion: so what? If someone writes something interesting and informative, I want it to be brought to my attention -- even if they're the ones to bring it to my attention.
So Duck and Cover Still Good Advice? (Score:1)
I don't want to look silly, after all.
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We can try to shoot down the missile inbound and it they get off they will be wiped out.
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Duck and cover still works. For those who don't know it:
1. Duck under a table, a desk, or something else to help protect against falling debris.
2. Cover yourself with a blanket to shield you from dust and flying glass
3. Tuck your head between your legs and kiss your ass goodbye/
Duck and Cover works for asteroid strike (Score:3)
Ha, ha, and ha, very funny but completely unoriginal.
In the Chelmyabinsk asteroid air burst, there was a video of people who saw the flash and then stood there for multiples of seconds until the blast wave bloodied their faces with glass shards.
Duck and Cover is for real for all wide-are effect events in the kiloton to megaton range, whatever their source. If you are close enough, yes, you will be vaporized. If you are far enough away that you can be conscious after seeing the flash, it will take som
Effective immunization against US aggression... (Score:5, Insightful)
According to the Norh Koreans:
"...The Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq and the Gaddafi regime in Libya could not escape the fate of destruction after being deprived of their foundations for nuclear development and giving up nuclear programs of their own accord, yielding to the pressure of the US and the West keen on their regime changes... a bitter lesson should be drawn from those events..."
I wonder why I am inclined to believe them. Am I alone?
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Pretty much, you are. Their alliance with China is more than enough to repel any "US Aggression". It's the reason that the Korean War/Conflict ended in a 50+ year long cease fire.
I know because... (Score:2)
Bill Clinton got a treaty ! (Score:1)
North Korea wouldn't be the first country to prete (Score:1)
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Anything to back that up? We didnt pretend anything in 1957.
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I assume he's referring to Orange Herald, which was a big fission bomb that was meant as a "backup" in case the actual H-bomb didn't work, so they could pretend that they'd developed the technology.
However, since the real H-bomb (Grapple X) was tested successfully less than 6 months later, it was all a bit moot.
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Even the first "failed" British test in 1957 has a 300kt yield. The recent NK test was about 10kt.
I don't think we can say that NK is claiming to have an H-bomb in the usual sense of the word.
They've probably attempted to boost it with tritium, which I've learned from Tom Clancy is a lot easier than a Teller-Ulam design.
Is there any evidence that NK has progressed beyond a gun-type u235 weapon like the South Africans had?
A 10kt weapon is peanuts compared to their conventional capability. Unless/until they
Turn of your ad blocker (Score:2)
to lazy to do that.
Conventional? (Score:1)
Remember when all nukes were "unconventional"? I guessed we missed the invite to the first annual nuke convention.
It probably didn't have a catchy name like "Nuke Expo" or "Nukecon".
Re: Oh that's nice (Score:2)
*rolls eyes*
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We have equipment that distinguish a large conventional explosion from a nuclear one - called seismometers. Using them one can detect the power and the impulse of an explosion meaning that either the NK have a nuclear weapon or an unknown type of conventional explosive with similar characteristics of that of a nuclear weapon. And if they have a conventional explosive of that type it would be even more dangerous than the nuclear alternative.
But don't worry - it is impossible to make conventional explosives w