1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident
0 sources
1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident
Summary
1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident is an incident[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of incident entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (891 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident is in the country of Soviet Union[3].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's instance of is recorded as incident[4].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's instance of is recorded as nuclear warfare[5].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's instance of is recorded as nuclear close calls[6].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's location is recorded as Serpukhov-15[7].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's has part is recorded as Oko[8].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's has part is recorded as false alarm[9].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's point in time is recorded as +1983-09-26T00:00:00Z[10].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 55.068333, 'lon': 37.041389}[11].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0h3m8t9[12].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's participant is recorded as Stanislav Petrov[13].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's has cause is recorded as false alarm[14].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's spoken text audio is recorded as EN-1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident-article.ogg[15].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's present in work is recorded as The Man Who Saved the World[16].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's YouTube video ID is recorded as TaOST3hV8zI[17].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's RIA Novosti reference is recorded as 1505275264[18].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's does not have effect is recorded as launch on warning[19].
- 1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident's does not have effect is recorded as nuclear warfare[20].
Why It Matters
1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident ranks in the top 6% of incident entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (891 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]