News
A Moorestown teenager who had explosives materials in a lab in his basement and brought them to a friend’s house to use in a ...
The New Orleans truck attacker built two bombs using what investigators believe was an explosive so powerful that they could have sprayed shrapnel hundreds of yards and potentially killed or ...
Police say what appears to have started as a science project resulted in the FBI and New Jersey state police discovering a ...
The New Orleans truck attacker built two bombs using what investigators believe was an explosive so powerful that they could have sprayed shrapnel hundreds of yards and potentially killed or ...
New Jersey police uncovered an explosives lab in the basement of a teenage boy living in Moorestown who offered his “expertise” to help students with a science project.
Hosted on MSN2mon
Simulations reveal microscopic hot-spot formation in high explosivesWhen high explosives are subjected to sudden shock waves, such as from an impact or detonation, tiny regions of intense heat—called hot spots—form at microstructural defects such as pores.
As authorities sift through debris at a Palm Springs fertility clinic, investigators are looking at how bombing suspect Guy Edward Bartkus learned to build a bomb and where he acquired the parts.
have shown that while a high-explosive charge will burst a common shell into more pieces, the general effect on the surroundings is, on the whole, rather less than when they are burst by ordinary ...
4don MSN
Authorities executed a search warrant at the teen’s residence on the 400 block of East Oak Avenue on Sunday and found ...
Guy Edward Bartkus is the sole suspect in the bomb attack at a Palm Springs fertility clinic last Saturday. In the years leading up to the incident, his life was touched by family acrimony and a keen ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results