Jd0g33 said:
Take a hydrogen bomb. The instant after the atom is split, what happens? I always imagined it as the protons and neutrons stay in tact, but the separation of their strong force bonds releases a bunch of energy in the form of EM radiation. But how does a bunch of EM radiation cause such huge shock waves and damage?
There are two types of nuclear weapon: the fission device, more commonly known as the A-bomb, and the fusion device, also known as a hydrogen bomb, or H-bomb.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_weapon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_nuclear_explosions
In an A-bomb, a critical mass of U-235 or Pu-239 undergoes a chain-reaction, where the atoms of uranium or plutonium are split into smaller pieces. In an H-bomb, varying amounts of deuterium or tritium, isotopes of hydrogen, undergo fusion into helium.
The reactions in the nuclear bombs release a large amount of energy within a fraction of a second. This enormous energy heats the surrounding atmosphere, which wants to rapidly expand as a result. The atmosphere does indeed expand, reaching supersonic velocities in the immediate vicinity of the blast, and slowing as the shock wave expands around the explosion. This shock wave creates a zone of high pressure, which is able to destroy or damage structures on the ground.
Some of the energy from the blast is released in the form of gamma rays, which can't travel very far in the atmosphere, but which rays are then converted to X-rays, which can travel large distances, since the atmosphere is essentially transparent to this form of radiation.
People on the ground near a nuclear explosion are injured or killed either due to the effects of being exposed to the heat of the blast, being exposed to a high dose of radiation, or are hit by flying debris or trapped within a collapsing structure.
Or in TNT, there is a chemical reaction and the through conservation of energy, a lot of EM radiation is produced. What is actually doing the damage to your body if you are near an explosion?
TNT, or trinitrotoluene, is a chemical explosive. When it detonates, the result is a very fast-moving reaction where the TNT chemically decomposes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinitrotoluene
Unlike a nuclear device, a TNT explosion produces no lethal EM-radiation. This type of explosion generates a very-fast moving shock wave in the atmosphere, the over-pressure from which can destroy structures and cause lethal injuries to people in the immediate vicinity. Think of TNT as a more sophisticated version of gunpowder.