What if a Nuclear Bomb Hit Rio de Janeiro?

Brazil · Population 6,748,000 · Density 5,300/km²

About Rio de Janeiro

Brazil's second-largest city, famed for its coastal geography and host of the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Below are four scenario calculations using historical and modern nuclear weapons. Each row shows the radius of an effect zone in kilometers and a rough order-of-magnitude estimate of people inside that zone, derived from the city's urban population density. Numbers are educational approximations — see the methodology page for the underlying formulas.

Little Boy on Rio de Janeiro (15 kt)

USA · 1945 · Hiroshima bomb

Effect zoneRadiusEst. affected
Fireball (vaporization, 100% fatal)0.43 km~3,055
Severe blast (20 PSI, ~98% fatal)1.18 km~19,590
Moderate blast (5 PSI, ~50% fatal)2.52 km~41,205
Light blast (1 PSI, glass injuries)7.16 km~37,416
3rd-degree thermal burns2.03 km

W76 on Rio de Janeiro (100 kt)

USA · 1978 · Common SLBM warhead

Effect zoneRadiusEst. affected
Fireball (vaporization, 100% fatal)0.91 km~13,937
Severe blast (20 PSI, ~98% fatal)2.20 km~65,267
Moderate blast (5 PSI, ~50% fatal)4.71 km~144,121
Light blast (1 PSI, glass injuries)13.39 km~130,871
3rd-degree thermal burns4.43 km

Castle Bravo on Rio de Janeiro (15 Mt)

USA · 1954 · Most powerful US nuclear test

Effect zoneRadiusEst. affected
Fireball (vaporization, 100% fatal)6.79 km~767,423
Severe blast (20 PSI, ~98% fatal)11.51 km~1,395,127
Moderate blast (5 PSI, ~50% fatal)24.60 km~3,935,032
Light blast (1 PSI, glass injuries)69.98 km~3,573,262
3rd-degree thermal burns34.54 km

Tsar Bomba on Rio de Janeiro (50 Mt)

USSR · 1961 · Largest nuclear weapon ever tested

Effect zoneRadiusEst. affected
Fireball (vaporization, 100% fatal)10.99 km~2,010,656
Severe blast (20 PSI, ~98% fatal)17.13 km~2,776,373
Moderate blast (5 PSI, ~50% fatal)36.60 km~8,710,605
Light blast (1 PSI, glass injuries)104.12 km~7,909,786
3rd-degree thermal burns56.58 km

Limitations

These estimates assume an idealized air burst over the city center, uniform population density, and no advance warning or sheltering. Real-world casualties would depend on:

  • Time of day (population is concentrated downtown during business hours)
  • Sheltering and basements (subway systems can reduce casualties significantly)
  • Building construction (reinforced steel/concrete vs. wood-frame)
  • Weather and atmospheric conditions
  • Detonation altitude (air burst vs. surface burst)
  • Subsequent fallout and infrastructure collapse

Other City Scenarios

FAQ

What would happen if a nuclear bomb hit Rio de Janeiro?

Rio de Janeiro has approximately 6,748,000 people and an urban density around 5,300 per km². A Hiroshima-yield warhead (15 kt Little Boy) detonated over Rio de Janeiro would produce a moderate blast radius of about 2.5 km, with an estimated 22,645 immediate fatalities in the severe-blast zone. A modern strategic warhead (W76, 100 kt) would extend the moderate-damage zone to roughly 4.7 km with thermal burns reaching 4.4 km. Run the interactive simulator above to see the exact zones overlaid on the map.

How many people would die in Rio de Janeiro from a nuclear strike?

A 100 kt W76 strategic warhead air-burst over Rio de Janeiro could cause an estimated 223,325 immediate fatalities and around 130,871 additional injured. For comparison, a 50 Mt Tsar Bomba — the largest weapon ever tested — would put roughly 180,501,654 people inside the 1 PSI light-blast zone alone. Real casualties depend strongly on time of day, sheltering, weather, and altitude of detonation.

What is the blast radius of a nuclear bomb over Rio de Janeiro?

For a 100 kt strategic warhead over Rio de Janeiro: fireball radius 0.91 km, severe blast (20 PSI) 2.20 km, moderate blast (5 PSI) 4.71 km, light blast (1 PSI) 13.39 km, third-degree thermal burns 4.43 km. Larger yields scale these radii roughly as the cube root of yield for blast and the 0.41 power for thermal effects.

Is Rio de Janeiro a likely nuclear target?

This is an educational simulator and does not assess threat probability. Rio de Janeiro is one of the world's most prominent cities in South America, which is why we feature it as a scenario. The purpose of these visualizations is to convey the humanitarian scale of nuclear weapons — not to make any operational claim.

See also: full Weapons Database (45+ entries) · Scientific methodology · Data sources.