A detonation is a particular type of destabilization event. In a true detonation, a shock wave passing through a detonating substance or mass destabilizes the substance at the wavefront, causing it to explosively decompose, thus fueling the shockwave further. It should be noted that the 'wavefront' travels inside the substance, whether from the inside out or the outside in, but wherever it reaches the surface it expands outward as explosive gases and/or electromagnetic energy. High explosives are those which detonate; at least, they detonate at standard temperature and pressure. This is not to be confused with deflagration, which while similar is not the same phenomenon. Low explosives tend to deflagrate rather than detonate.

Therefore, if the reaction front arrives before or simultaneous with the shock wave from the explosion, it was a detonation rather than a deflagration. Both reactions can be exhibited in the same explosion; this can be caused either by multiple reactants and/or reactions taking place (some detonating, some deflagrating) or by a deflagration 'morphing' into a detonation via a Deflagration to Detonation Transition.