Mirror

https://t.me/belnarrepublic/14753


https://t.me/operativnoZSU/157750


NASA FIRMS

56.501029,31.721973




Mirror





Jet engine noise, possibly from a Ukranian “Palyanytsya” cruise missile.

https://t.me/yigal_levin/72508


https://x.com/georgewbarros/status/1836412693114183794


  • Bosht@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Closest thing I’ve seen to a nuclear detonation, holy shit. What type of munitions? Mortar rounds?

      • MataVatnik@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        There are many videos online of ammo caches going off that look like a nuke. Not a huge number but it’s a thing

      • Ulara@sopuli.xyz
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        2 months ago

        Indeed, there may have been a tactical nuke stored among other armaments. I hope people there have Geiger counters.

        • thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Just do a quick search for “mushroom cloud”, and you’ll find that all this combined is nowhere near what a nuke would look like.

          The mushroom cloud formed from a small nuke like little boy (small by modern standards) reaches up to about 8 km. that’s close to cruising altitude for an airliner. The reason the cloud from a nuke “mushrooms” in a different way than conventional munitions is that the intense heat is causing enough hot air to rise to form a literal cloud when it reaches high enough that the humidity condenses. This can even cause radiative rain shortly after the bomb has gone off.

          The fireball of Little Boy is estimated to have been almost 400 m in diameter with a surface temperature approximately equal to that of the sun, and every building within about 1.6 km was instantly completely destroyed.

          It is difficult to comprehend just how much more powerful even a small “tactical” nuke is than any conventional weapon. There’s a reason soldiers that were shown blast tests of them during the Cold War have told stories of breaking down crying at the sight, because they just couldn’t fathom what they were seeing.

          There was no nuke blowing up here.

    • modifier@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      Its difficult for me to even get a grasp of scale. I really have no actual concept for what I’m looking at, above some kind of minimum threshold for what must be several buildings at least.

    • Wilshire@sopuli.xyzOP
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      2 months ago

      The 107th GRAU arsenal was often used to store various munitions, including 122-mm rockets for the Grad MLRS and 82-mm artillery shells, - OSINT researcher Tatarigami.