Manhattan Project: The Untold Story of the Making of the Atomic Bomb by Groueff, Stephane(May 12, 2000) Paperback
[2023-11-17 15:49:01]
Most people know all science and all scientists who make atomic bombs at the laboratory level during the Second World War. However, most people do not have the concept of industrial engineering at an unprecedented level. It requires the use of the scientific concept of fission and its application to the actual production of these concepts. The scientific prediction and discovery that uranium can split at the atomic level and bring unprecedented levels of energy is only the beginning. When scientists complete their theoretical work, industrial engineers must design vast systems and facilities that are actually needed to produce the necessary fissile material. Prior to the Manhattan plan, we did not make a historic effort on the large-scale approach to the myriad tasks necessary to make nuclear fission science a reality for nuclear weapons production. Battle with Japan
The readers were introduced to people who do not know much about the majority of the people building the workers' cities, they had not lived far before, and he designed a filter that could separate uranium atoms by weight And people who can develop pipes. Extreme corrosion of uranium in conversion to human gas state All these unique stories are spoken to amateurs in words.
I read this book for the first time in a year or two from the first publication, and I was fascinated by this story. This is a very good story about the relatively unknown aspect related to the production of the atomic bomb industry. This story shows that many people are involved in many unimaginable work, and I should have a note to record them. Years ago, I wanted to read this wonderful story again, and I read it three times during the next 40 years. It will be a wonderful story.
Reference book History of the atomic bomb, Michael Blow, copyright 1968, decided to abandon bombs, Len Giovannitti and Fred Freed, copyright 1965 Reduction of code name, Thomas B. Allen and Norman Polmar, Copyright 1995 Manhattan Project, Stephane Groueff, copyright The story of all 1967 World War II, Henry Steel Commerter, copyright 1991
Nuclear war was achieved by the invention of the atomic bomb. The atomic bomb was originally thought to have been in 1939. Manhattan plans to research and manufacture bombs (Serendipity: Manhattan Project para. 1). After six years and two billion dollars, Manhattan plans to produce the first atomic bomb in history (Serendipity: Manhattan Project para. 5). The bombs were tested on 16 July 1945 in northern New Mexico. The creator of the bomb saw the first explosion. Creator of Bhavad Gita says: "I am dead and became a destroyer of the world." New Mexico's bomb test was the first explosion, but it was not the last explosion
Prior to that, the Manhattan plan was a plan to develop the atomic bomb. Scientists in the Manhattan Project use uranium and plutonium to develop atomic bombs. On July 16, 1945, the first three completed bombs were successfully tested in Alamogordo, New Mexico ("The Manhattan Project"). Bombs were used as psychological weapons, not pure military tools. After Alamogord succeeded in testing the atomic bomb, US President Harry S. Truman made a fierce discussion on whether to use a new weapon against Japan. In early June, the Interim Committee advised Truman that the atomic bomb should be used against Japan as soon as possible. American planners believe that the use of bombs will end the war and likely to save the lives of many Americans.
Most atomic bombs are manufactured in the United States. There, the bombs were carefully studied and manufactured exactly by top secret project called Manhattan Project. For the Manhattan plan, the atomic bomb was first tested in a dessert called July 16, 1945 in New Mexico State Jornada del Muerto (death city), and it worked very well. Soon, on August 6, 1945, the same bomb was used to bomb the Hiroshima and Japan. On 9th August 1945 the bomb was used to bomb the Japanese Nagasaki.