Whats the difference in yield and construction of atomic/hydrogen and neutron bombs?
atomic (1 kiloton of TNT = 4.184 TJ) hydrogen (about 50kT) 50 times TNT 4.184 TJ neutron bombs For current US weapons 600 to 2200 kilotons of TNT per metric ton (2.5–9.2 TJ/kg) Basically it entirely depends what yield you wish to get from the bomb for dependent on example how much material you use (what material also affects this) or the specific design you use (some designs use neutron reflectors to decrease the amount of material needed for it to achieve criticality). The general listing of power is an atomic bomb working under just fission principles (breaking a very heavy atom into two separate atoms). You can boost these kinds of devices by using something like a tritium (or other suitable substitute) bottle that feeds into the centre of the bomb and can dramatically increase the output of such a device. Above this you have hydrogen bomb as the next highest output. It works on a tamper made of a material that can undergo fission like Uranium 238, that inside it contains a deuturid