TNT Equivalent
TNT Equivalent
TNT Equivalent
Contents
Kiloton and megaton The explosion from a 14-kiloton
Historical derivation of the value nuclear test at the Nevada Test
Site, in 1951.
Conversion to other units
General information
Examples
Unit system Non-standard
Relative effectiveness factor
Nuclear examples Unit of Energy
References Conversions
1 t in ... ... is equal to ...
SI base ≈ 4.184 gigajoules
Kiloton and megaton units
CGS 109 calories
The "kiloton (of TNT)" is a unit of energy equal to 4.184
terajoules (4.184 × 1012 J).[2]
The "megaton (of TNT)" is a unit of energy equal to 4.184 petajoules (4.184 × 1015 J).[3]
The kiloton and megaton of TNT have traditionally been used to describe the energy output, and hence the
destructive power, of a nuclear weapon. The TNT equivalent appears in various nuclear weapon control
treaties, and has been used to characterize the energy released in asteroid impacts.[4]
But, even on this basis, comparing the actual energy yields of a large nuclear device and an explosion of
TNT can be slightly inaccurate. Small TNT explosions, especially in the open, don't tend to burn the
carbon-particle and hydrocarbon products of the explosion. Gas-expansion and pressure-change effects
tend to "freeze" the burn rapidly. A large open explosion of TNT may maintain fireball temperatures high
enough so that some of those products do burn up with atmospheric oxygen.[10]
Such differences can be substantial. For safety purposes a range as wide as 2673–6702 J has been stated for
a gram of TNT upon explosion.[11]
So, one can state that a nuclear bomb has a yield of 15 kt (6.3 × 1013 J); but an actual explosion of a
15 000 ton pile of TNT may yield (for example) 8 × 1013 J due to additional carbon/hydrocarbon oxidation
not present with small open-air charges.[10]
These complications have been sidestepped by convention. The energy liberated by one gram of TNT was
arbitrarily defined as a matter of convention to be 4184 J,[12] which is exactly one kilocalorie.
A kiloton of TNT can be visualized as a cube of TNT 8.46 metres (27.8 ft) on a side.
Energy Corresponding
Grams TNT Symbol Tons TNT Symbol Energy [joules]
[Wh] mass loss
milligram of nanoton of 1.162
mg nt 4.184 J or 4.184 joules 46.55 fg
TNT TNT mWh
gram of TNT g
microton of
μt 4.184 × 103 J or 4.184 1.162
46.55 pg
TNT kilojoules Wh
kilogram of
kg
milliton of
mt 4.184 × 106 J or 4.184 1.162
46.55 ng
TNT TNT megajoules kWh
megagram of
Mg ton of TNT t 4.184 × 109 J or 4.184 1.162
46.55 μg
TNT gigajoules MWh
gigagram of
Gg
kiloton of
kt 4.184 × 1012 J or 4.184 1.162
46.55 mg
TNT TNT terajoules GWh
teragram of
Tg
megaton of
Mt 4.184 × 1015 J or 4.184 1.162
46.55 g
TNT TNT petajoules TWh
petagram of
Pg
gigaton of
Gt 4.184 × 1018 J or 4.184 1.162
46.55 kg
TNT TNT exajoules PWh
1 × 10−12 1.162 Wh ≈ 1 food Calorie (large Calorie, kcal), which is the approximate
amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of one kilogram
of water by one degree Celsius at a pressure of one atmosphere.
Under controlled conditions one kilogram of TNT can destroy (or
1 × 10−9 1.162 kWh
even obliterate) a small vehicle.
2.4 × 10−7–2.4 × 10−6 280–2,800 kWh The energy output released by an average lightning discharge.[20]
Conventional bombs yield from less than one ton to FOAB's
(1–44) × 10−6 1.16–51.14 MWh 44 tons. The yield of a Tomahawk cruise missile is equivalent to
500 kg of TNT.[21]
A real 0.454-kiloton-of-TNT (1.90 TJ) charge at Operation Sailor
Hat. If the charge were a full sphere, it would be 1 kiloton of TNT
(4.2 TJ).
3.2 × 10−3 3.6 GWh The Operation Big Bang on April 18, 1947, blasted the bunkers on
Heligoland. It accumulated 6700 metric tons of surplus World War
II ammunition placed in various locations around the island and set
off. The energy released was 1.3×1013 J, or about 3.2 kilotons of
TNT equivalent.[27]
Minor Scale, a 1985 United States conventional explosion, using
4,744 tons of ANFO explosive to provide a scaled equivalent
4 × 10−3 9.3 GWh airblast of an eight kiloton (33.44 TJ) nuclear device,[28] is believed
to be the largest planned detonation of conventional explosives in
history.
The Little Boy atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on August 6,
1945, exploded with an energy of about 15 kilotons of TNT (63 TJ)
killing between 90,000 and 166,000 people,[29] and the Fat Man
atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, exploded
(1.5–2) × 10−2 17.4–23.2 GWh
with an energy of about 20 kilotons of TNT (84 TJ) killing over
60,000.[29] The modern nuclear weapons in the United States
arsenal range in yield from 0.3 kt (1.3 TJ) to 1.2 Mt (5.0 PJ)
equivalent, for the B83 strategic bomb.
875,000 1.02 EWh
3.61 × 106 4.2 EWh The solar irradiance of the Sun every 12 hours.[53][56]
The estimated energy at impact when the largest fragment of
Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 struck Jupiter is equivalent to
6 million megatons (6 trillion tons) of TNT.[57]
6 × 106 7 EWh
9.32 × 106 10.8 EWh The energy released in the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami
was over 200,000 times the surface energy and was calculated by
the USGS at 3.9 × 1022 joules,[58] slightly less than the 2004
Indian Ocean quake. This is equivalent to 9.32 teratons of TNT. It
was estimated at a Richter magnitude of 9.0 - 9.1.
9.1 × 1010 106 ZWh The total energy output of the Sun per second.[69]
2.4 × 1011 280 ZWh The kinetic energy of the Caloris Planitia impactor.[70]
The photo of the Caloris Planitia on
Mercury. Taken by the
MESSENGER orbiter.
5.972 × 1015 6.94 RWh The explosive energy of a quantity of TNT of the mass of Earth.[71]
7.89 × 1015 9.17 RWh Total solar output in all directions per day.[72]
The explosive energy of a quantity of TNT of the mass of the
1.98 × 1021 2.3 × 1033 Wh
Sun.[73]
This enables engineers to determine the proper masses of different explosives when applying blasting
formulas developed specifically for TNT. For example, if a timber-cutting formula calls for a charge of 1 kg
of TNT, then based on octanitrocubane's RE factor of 2.38, it would take only 1.0/2.38 (or 0.42) kg of it to
do the same job. Using PETN, engineers would need 1.0/1.66 (or 0.60) kg to obtain the same effects as
1 kg of TNT. With ANFO or ammonium nitrate, they would require 1.0/0.74 (or 1.35) kg or 1.0/0.32 (or
3.125) kg, respectively.
Calculating a single RE factor for an explosive is, however, impossible. It depends on the specific case or
use. Given a pair of explosives, one can produce 2× the shockwave output (this depends on the distance of
measuring instruments) but the difference in direct metal cutting ability may be 4× higher for one type of
metal and 7× higher for another type of metal. The relative differences between two explosives with shaped
charges will be even greater. The table below should be taken as an example and not as a precise source of
data.
Some relative effectiveness factor examples
Nuclear examples
Nuclear weapons and the most powerful non-nuclear weapon examples
Total yield
Weight
Relative
Weapon (kilotons of
(kg) effectiveness
TNT)
Bomb used in Oklahoma City (ANFO based
0.0018 2,300 0.78
on racing fuel)
GBU-57 bomb (Massive Ordnance
0.0035 13,600 0.26
Penetrator, MOP)
Grand Slam (Earthquake bomb, M110) 0.0065 9,900 0.66
BLU-82 (Daisy Cutter) 0.0075 6,800 1.10
MOAB (non-nuclear bomb, GBU-43) 0.011 9,800 1.13
FOAB (advanced thermobaric bomb, ATBIP) 0.044 9,100 4.83
W54, Mk-54 (Davy Crockett) 0.022 23 1,000
W54, B54 (SADM) 1.0 23 43,500
Hypothetical suitcase nuke 2.5 31 80,000
Fat Man (dropped on Nagasaki) A-bomb 20 4600 4,500
Classic (one-stage) fission A-bomb 22 420 50,000
W88 modern thermonuclear warhead (MIRV) 470 355 1,300,000
650–
Typical (two-stage) nuclear bomb 500–1000 900,000
1,120
272–
W56 thermonuclear warhead 1,200 4,960,000
308
B53 nuclear bomb (two-stage) 9,000 4,050 2,200,000
B41 nuclear bomb (three-stage) 25,000 4,850 5,100,000
50,000–
Tsar nuclear bomb (three-stage) 26,500 2,100,000
56,000
Antimatter 43,000 1 43,000,000,000
See also
Brisance
Net explosive quantity
Nuclear weapon yield
Orders of magnitude (energy)
Relative effectiveness factor
Table of explosive detonation velocities
Ton
Tonne
Tonne of oil equivalent, a unit of energy almost exactly 10 tonnes of TNT
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