I wonder about just how effective a nuclear detonation would be in a space enviroment.
Becasue of the lack of atmosphere there would be no blast wave, or fireball effect. Going by this link most of the imediate damage is from the blast effect. That just leaves the thermal pulse effect and radiation.
Thermal damage would drop off with distance but does anybody know how quickly that would be? This link seems to state that a one megaton explosion causes third degree burns up to five miles on exposed skin, which would not be happening in space combat. Also on the page is data saying that after five miles the damage drops considerably.
A greater concern would be 'flash blindness' which can occur up to 53 miles in atmosphere on a clear night. However flash blindness supposedly only lasts for a few minutes in most cases, and permanent damage only occurs in cases where people directly viewed the flash.
As for radiation here's a quote:
SourceThe level of initial nuclear radiation decreases rapidly with distance from the fireball to where less than one roentgen may be received five miles from ground zero.
I know these examples are from a one megaton weapon and that larger weapons should scale to have larger damage areas but does anybody know HOW it scales? It a simple arithmatic scale or is it geometric?
Can anybody help me out with this? Am I missing something or does it seem like the only (realistic) damage from a nuclear weapon detonation in space would be from the thermal pulse and the radiation effects. These effects seem to have a (revativly) rapid drop off rate.