On Fri, May 18, 2018 at 11:26:17PM -0400, Cheng Tseng wrote: > Now back to determining how powerful a nuclear weapon has to be so > that the detonation on the Moon (And any after effects.) can be seen > from Earth... The first part is trivial. Pretty much any nuclear detonation above the surface on the near side will be visible from Earth by anyone looking in the right direction at night. A large one would likely be visible during the day. It would require an enormously larger weapon than anything we have now to leave a crater visible from Earth with even good telescopes, though. Perhaps one detonating well above the surface might discolour it over a wide enough area to be visible. If a detonation just needs to be visible at all, without needing to be visible to naked eye, even a non-nuclear explosion would do. There are thousands of telescopes of various sizes pointed at the Moon at any given time. Some of them are even specifically watching for explosions, though they would be expecting meteorite impacts rather than nuclear detonations and most are not monitored in real time. Flashes due to impacts on the lunar surface are recorded frequently, all of them less than a hundredth of the energy of even small nuclear detonations. - Tim