What Would Happen If a Nuclear Bomb Was Used in Ukraine?

Other effects of the 1945 bombings include an abnormally high increase in leukemia among people in surrounding areas, particularly among children. Other cancers increased, but in lower numbers.

Further long-term impacts of the radiation included increased instances of small head size, slower physical growth, and mental disability among children still in the womb when the explosions occurred some studies have suggested. This generally wasn’t the case for children conceived after the bombings, as other research has shown.

Nuclear Weapons Are Potentially More Lethal Now
Weapons experts distinguish between tactical and strategic nuclear weapons.

Generally, they say that tactical weapons travel short distances and can win battles, and that strategic weapons travel farther and can win wars.

The bombs used at Hiroshima and Nagasaki were considered strategic weapons at the time — the type that win wars rather than those that only win battles.

But Spaulding said that nuclear weapons have intensified to such a degree in the decades since that some of today’s tactical nuclear weapons could be more intense than the strategic ones used to end WWII.

Many of the weapons in modern nuclear arsenals are many, many times more powerful than what was used in Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” Spaulding said. “In terms of yield, as much as 80 times more powerful.”

So, it’s hard to use the historical bombings of Nagasaki and Hiroshima as an exact guide to what might happen today but they are an indication.

Damaged Food Supply Could Kill Billions
There are, however, attempts to simulate what nuclear fallout would look like after a contemporary bombing.

Alex Wellerstein, a historian of science and nuclear weapons at the Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey created a website called NUKEMAP to do just that. It compares the fallout from bombs detonated in the sky with those detonated on the ground.

Then, a study published in the journal Nature in August offered some projections of what would happen to the environment, population and global food supply if Russia and the US waged a weeklong nuclear war using strategic nuclear weapons.

The authors of the study estimated that there would be 360 million immediate fatalities from the use of the weapons themselves, and over five billion people would be left without food for two years after such a nuclear war — that is around 60% of the world’s population. The disruption to the food supply would be caused by massive amounts of soot emitted by fires ignited by explosions.

Researchers also attempted to model what destruction would look like in other scenarios. For example, a weeklong nuclear war in 2025 between India and Pakistan. The South Asian neighbors own far fewer nuclear weapons than the US and Russia, but the authors still predicted around 164 million fatalities and over 2.5 billion people without food for two years after such a war.

Alan Robock, a professor of environmental sciences at Rutgers University in the US, was one of the authors of the Nature study.

In earlier research, Robock estimated that the bombings at Hiroshima and Nagasaki had emitted around 0.5 teragrams of smoke. In the more recent study, he and others estimated that a US-Russia scenario would create around 150 teragrams of smoke and the India-Pakistan scenario would produce 16-47 teragrams of smoke.

Robock said the paper made predictions based on the impact of strategic weapons, “which simply means those that came from a long way away.”

Any use of nuclear weapons can escalate into a full nuclear war between NATO and Russia, and would produce a nuclear winter,” Robock told DW. “Almost all war games played with military officers result in this once nuclear weapons are used. There is not much chance that a nuclear war can be stopped once started.  Panic, fear, miscommunication, and bad information would result in commanders using the weapons they have.”

Clare Roth is a Fulbright Young Journalist in Germany.This article was edited by Zulfikar Abbany, and is published courtesy of Deutsche Welle (DW).