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Bombs using red mercury had no real critical mass and could be developed at any size.
Thanks to red mercury he would be able to fit his bomb into a briefcase.
Those who want to believe in the existence of red mercury are unabashed.
He can also choose to disable two of the red mercury bombs.
The following assumptions about red mercury have been proved as false:
Red mercury was speculated to eliminate this costly and time-consuming step.
All that remains is the single Red Mercury stamp attained in the trade.
More recently, Cohen was the main proponent of what most consider to be a mythical substance, red mercury.
Red mercury was described by many commentators, and the exact nature of its supposed working mechanism varied widely among them.
Pravda claims that red mercury was first synthesised in 1968 and has been smuggled out of Russia for many years.
Red mercury is a 19th-century term for protiodide or iodide of mercury.
Claiming to be based on leaked top secret memos, they noted that red mercury was:
Red Mercury samples that have turned up in Europe have proved to be innocuous.
Similiarly, a story about "red mercury" imports for bomb-making were untrue, Burden says.
A theory popular in the mid-1990s was that red mercury facilitated the enrichment of uranium to weapons-grade purity.
"Red mercury doesn't exist," said the spokesman.
They reached a red Mercury Sable.
He says his company, Promecologia, based in Yekaterinburg, has developed a technique to synthesise 100kg of red mercury a day.
Red mercury may have several meanings:
Additionally, it appears there is no independent confirmation of any sort of Cohen's claims to the reality of red mercury.
Red mercury is a term used for a number of substances that are supposed to exist (or that could possibly exist).
The testers buckled their seat belts and set out in a red Mercury Sable in the fall of 1999.
A key event in the history of the red mercury story was an article in the daily Russian newspaper Pravda in 1993.
No-one has proved the existence of red mercury, but it is believed to be a key ingredient of dirty bombs usually used by terrorists.
That raises the alarming prospect that red mercury may actually be a codename for real substances that are needed to make nuclear bombs.