Most professional firework is shot from a mortar or cannon and the projectile is not self-propelled.
It is then correctly referred to as a bomb, in contrast to self-propelled missiles or rockets.
If you look carefully at the title, you will find that op correctly identified the projectile as a bomb.
Well, hydrogen bombs explode in the air, just above specific places.
But then fireworks do that too, so really hydrogen bombs are just really big, and not as fun fireworks.
Also missiles and rockets are the same thing, except that a missile is a rocket with a warhead if you don't know what a warhead is it is the part of the missile that makes alot of noise when missile impact my friend
jesus ******* christ mate, do you think nasa got to the moon by manually controlling their rockets? nah it was guided, missiles are a rocket with a payload designed for warfare, also known as a warhead.
I was talking strictly munitions. No need to jump down my throat.
"In modern military usage, a missile, or guided missile, is a self-propelled precision-guided munition system, as opposed to an unguided self-propelled munition, referred to as a rocket."
i thought you were talking about all rockets, in which case it sounds incredibly stupid calling a Nasa rocket for a missile, have a good day and sorry if i was rude.
Rockets also use liquid fuel usually liquid oxygen with either kerosene or liquid hydrogen , but they can also use solid propellants. Usually solid-fuel rockets are called boosters.
thatwasAWSOMEDO IT AGAIN! AGAIN! AGAIN! QUE THE OVERTURE! that was INTENSE! I just tought of something, imagen that with nukes. oh boyo, might as well call that an end of the world scenario I love it when something goes horribly wrong with fireworks. its so pretty and colorful.
That's not the weight of the bomb.
Tsar bomba had a weight of 27,000 kilograms (60,000 lb) (according to wikipedia).
The megaton number describes the power of the explosion in equivalent to TNT.
I.e. you'd need about 67 tons of TNT to create an equally strong explosion