Atom Bomb Lecture Notes
Atom Bomb Lecture Notes
Atom Bomb Lecture Notes
The scale of atomic structure made it one of the last mysteries of science to be unraveled, during the first half of the
20th Century.
1905 - Marie Sklodowska Curie (1867-1934), her husband Pierre Curie (1859-1906), and Henri
Becquerel received the Nobel Prize for physics for their work on radioactivity, and Marie was granted her
doctorate the same year. After Pierre was killed while crossing a street in 1906, Marie continued with her
work, and the couple received a second Nobel Prize in 1911 for discovering two radioactive elements,
radium and polonium.
1906 – While working at the Cavindish laboratory at Cambridge University, New Zealander Ernest
Rutherford discovers that alpha particles were deflected on passing through atoms, by measuring the
deflection in a magnetic field and allowing the particles to impact photographic film. He receives the 1908
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for this discovery.
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1907 - While working at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern, Albert Einstein publishes three articles in the
German publication Annals of Physics. These include 1) The quantum theory to explain the photoelectric
effect; 2) The relation of mass to energy; and 3) A special theory of relativity. A fourth article on
Brownian Motion confirmed the atomic theory of matter. He demonstrates theoretically that mass and
energy are different aspects of the same thing. Einstein’s radical new theory suggests that if a nucleus
were to be broken, the mass of the two parts would be less than the original sum, the difference being
accounted for in the release of energy. If the atomic nucleus could be broken apart, an enormous amount of
theoretical energy would be released.
1920s – Einstein is awarded the Nobel prize in Physics in 1921, Nils Bohr of Denmark receives it in 1922.
Experimental and theoretical physics is explored by many scientists working a major centers of learning in
Europe and America. One of the most famous schools is the University of Gottingen in Germany, who
graduates a young American Ph.D. named J. Robert Oppenheimer in 1927.
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Atomic numbers refer to the mass of atoms, which increase with the number of positively charged protons and
neutrally charged neutrons in their respective nuclei, as sketched here.
Einstein’s famous mass-energy equivalence equation was originally conceived in 1905, 40 years before the first
atomic device was detonated near White Sands, New Mexico.
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Harold Urey (1893-1981) James Chadwick (1891-1974) Irene and Frederick Joliot-Curie
1932 – Harold Urey of Columbia University discovers the hydrogen isotope Tritium, leading to the
recognition of “heavy water”. He is awarded the Nobel Prize for this discovery in 1934. Deuterium has
twice as many hydrogen atoms as ordinary water, and weighs about 10% more than normal water. Gilbert
Newton Lewis (1875-1946) at U.C. Berkeley isolated the first sample of pure heavy water in 1933.
1932 – The neutron is discovered by English scientist James Chadwick, working in the Cavendish
Laboratory at Cambridge (and awarded a Nobel Prize in 1935). Neutrons were electrically uncharged
particles which could be used a “missiles” to split an atom without being deflected.
Chadwick’s discovery of the neutron in 1932 was of monumental significance in helping to unravel atomic
structure.
1934 – The Norwegian government (Norsk Hydro) builds a giant hydroelectric facility at Vemork, about 60
miles west of Oslo, along the coast. This plant uses electrolysis to produce ammonium nitrate fertilizer,
producing deuterium oxide as an unintended byproduct of the electrolysis (deuterium cannot be split up
into hydrogen and oxygen components like normal H 2O via electrolysis). Ordinary water contains 1 out of
6,760 hydrogen atoms that is deuterium, so vast quantities of water must be passed through an electrolysis
process to collect minute quantities of deuterium (Deuterium has an atomic number of 20 versus 16 for
ordinary water). Vemork becomes the only facility in the world routinely producing deuterium oxide, or
heavy water.
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Harold Urey’s discovery of the hydrogen isotope deuterium oxide D2O was given the name “heavy water” when
separated from regular H2O. Only one in 6760 H2O atoms is D2O, so enormous quantities of water were necessary
to extract minute volumes of heavy water.
May 1935 – French physicist Frederic Joliot-Curie and his wife Irene (daughter of Pierre and Marie
Curie) are awarded the 1935 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their discovery of artificial radioactivity.
1936 – Enrico Fermi awarded the Nobel Prize for splitting a uranium atom in 1934 by bombarding it with
neutrons
Left: Enrico Fermi (1901-54); Middle: Leo Szilard (1898-1964); Right: Lise Meitner (1878-1968) and Otto Hahn
(1879-1968)
1938 – Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard arrives in the United States, joining Enrico Fermi and Herbert
Anderson at Columbia University on a reactor project using heavy water as a neutron moderator.
Late 1938 – German physicists Otto Hahn, Lise Meitner and Frederich Strassman discover fission
during experiments. Sometime later, Hahn’s former assistant Lisa Meitner and her nephew Otto Frisch
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proved that the nucleus of a uranium atom that absorbs a neutron will split into two nearly equal parts. A
chain reaction was, therefore, possible.
In 1938 German scientists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassman excited the scientific world by reporting the formation of
Barium, Kripton and two neutrons by bombarding the heavier U235 with neutrons.
The discovery by Hahn and Strassman conformed Einstein’s theory that energy would be released when the atomic
nucleus gave up neutrons, which could ht other atoms of uranium and give rise to a chain reaction. The chain
reaction made production of an enormous energy-releasing bomb theoretically possible, as sketched here. .
March 1939 – Frederic Joliot-Curie and his assistants publish an article in the scientific journal Nature
titled “Liberation of Neutrons in the Nuclear Explosion of Uranium”. They state that when neutrons split a
uranium atom, the reaction causes new neutrons to spew out of the atom at high speed. The authors assert
that they intend to achieve such a sustained reaction in the near future by producing one neutron for each
fission. Szilard and Fermi made the same discovery at about the same time at Columbia, but do not
publish it, out of fear that their German colleagues will pursue similar avenues of research.
On April 22, 1939 Joliot publishes a second article in Nature stating that “on average, about 3.5 neutrons
were emitted by a uranium nucleus during fission.
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Niels Bohr of Denmark, Yakov Frenkel of the Soviet Union and John Wheeler of the USA had all
published papers describing the process of fission before World War II commences, on September 1,
1939, when Germany and the Soviet Union jointly invade Poland.
Hastened by recent German aggression, Leo Szilard drafts a letter for Albert Einstein to send to
President Roosevelt on October 11, 1939, outlining the possibility of setting up nuclear chain reactions
from uranium, through which enormous volumes of energy could be released, possibly as a gigantic bomb.
Although Roosevelt agrees to support investigative work at Columbia University, a coherent plan of
nationally-funded research does not arise for another two years. At the end of 1939 there was only one
ounce of ordinary metallic uranium in the entire United States.
Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard reenact their historic October 1939 meeting at Princeton in late 1945, after the
secret Manhattan Project became public.
In January 1940 the Germans convened a governmental conference on heavy water in Berlin. Paul
Harteck and Han Suess of the University of Hamburg felt that deuterium could be an effective moderator
for a nuclear reactor, thereby facilitating a chain reaction. Harteck warned that the uranium fuel and the
deuterium moderator should not be mixed in the reactor but should be separated in alternate layers to
prevent an explosion. German officials were dubious about the production of deuterium because one
hundred thousand tons of coal would have to be burned to supply the electrical power to produce one ton of
heavy water.
May 1940 – Edwin McMillan and Philip Abelson produce the first man-made element (#93), Neptunium,
by bombarding uranium at the University of California, Berkeley.
June 1940 – President Roosevelt forms a committee of executives, engineers, scientists and economists to
provide advice on technical defense related projects. This became the Office of Scientific Research and
Development (OSRD), headed by Vannevar Bush and his deputy, Harvard University President James
B. Conant.
Summer 1940 – Word reaches the west that the Germans have recovered 3,500 tons of uranium ore from
Union Miniere in Belgium, which had been mined at Katanga, in the Belgian Congo. After April 1940 the
Germans now had control of the greatest stockpiles of raw uranium and heavy water (at Vemork, Norway).
In addition, the Germans also controlled uranium deposits in Czechoslovakia.
Late 1939 through August 1940 - Edgar Sengier, director of the Belgian uranium mine at Katanga, heard
about uranium‟s military potential in 1939. He has the foresight to quietly ship 1,200 tons of high grade
uranium ore to New York in 2,000 steel drums, before it could be sent to Belgium and confiscated by the
Germans.
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In October 1940 Edwin McMillan and Glenn Seaborg at Berkeley produce the new element by
bombarding Uranium-238 with neutrons, becoming U-239. After U-239 losses two beta particles it
becomes Pu239, which they christen Plutonium. This material showed promise of being fissionable, like
the U-235 isotope of uranium.
Summer 1941 – English physicists Rudolf Peierls and Otto Frisch found that it was possible to separate a
sufficient quantity of U-235 to fashion a fission process atomic bomb. The Germans came to the same
conclusion around the same time. By September 1941, German scientists formally recognize the
theoretical possibility of a fission bomb, but doubt that it is technically feasible. Their vigorous pursuit of
heavy water production at Vemork convinces British and American intelligence that they are working on
developing a nuclear reactor, and hence, a atomic weapon. This is pure inference.
Three young scientists at Berkeley who had an enormous impact on the Manhattan Project: From left, Edwin
McMillan (1907-91), Philip Abelson (1913-2004,) and Glenn Seaborg (1912-99).
October 1, 1941 – Dr. Vannevar Bush briefs President Roosevelt and Vice President Wallace about
ongoing research by British atomic physicists, who had determined how much uranium might be required
to assemble an atomic bomb. The President agreed to finance American efforts with secret funds for the
time being.
Saturday December 6, 1941 – First meeting of the newly formed Atomic Sub-committee (called S-1) of
OSRD was held in Washington, DC. The committee was charged with determining whether or not an
atomic bomb device could be built, and if so, at what cost. They were to report back to President
Roosevelt in 6 months. Pearl Harbor was attacked the next day. In the late spring of 1942 the S-1 Sub-
committee reports that a bomb might be buildable, would cost upwards of $100 million, and could not be
completed prior to July 1944.
Moderators
The extra weight of deuterium oxide (heavy water) served as a slow motion mechanism, moderating the
speed of neutrons set free in a nuclear reactor (atomic pile), and thereby allow the neutrons to split uranium
atoms in a chain reaction to produce P-239 plutonium – the fissionable element that could be used to make
an atomic bomb. Plutonium contains an additional neutron as compared to the more stable U-238.
In June 1939 German physicist Walther Bothe sails for the United States to attend a scientific meeting in
Chicago. Along the way he meets a young lady named Ingeborg Moerschner, with whom he becomes
romantically involved. Upon debarkation in New York, they visit the New York World‟s Fair and San
Francisco Pan Pacific Exposition at Treasure Island. After his return to the University of Heidelberg, he
resumes work on the nuclear qualities of graphite as a neutron moderator, between letters to Ingeborg.
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In January1940 the French government contacts the Norwegians about procuring their available stores of
heavy water, to prevent the Germans from taking them. German firm I.G. Farben owned 25% of the shares
of Norsk Hydro. At that time Norsk Hydro was producing about 10 kg of heavy water each month and had
amassed a stockpile of almost 200 kg. Between March 4-10, 1940 French agents clandestinely visit Oslo
and Vemork, and take 185 kg of heavy water in canisters to Scotland, then on to France.
Vemork, Norway was the largest hydroelectric power plant in the world during World War II (left). The plant as it
appears today (right).
The Germans invade Norway in April 1940 and commandeer the Vemork facility, initially asking them to
triple their production of heavy water, from 10 kg/month to 30 kg/month. On May 10, 1940 the Germans
invade France, Belgium and Netherlands. By May 16th the French lines were penetrated near Sedan, and
the heavy water canisters are spirited off to England (Paris was subsequently occupied by the Germans on
June 15th).
In 1940 no heavy water existed in the United States. Because of this Szilard and Fermi sought alternative
materials. Szilard considered graphite, and gained an audience with Union Carbon and Carbide Company,
who had hoped to meet with Fermi. Szilard asked them to donate $2000 worth of pure graphite. Unable to
reveal the precise reason for the requisition, he was politely turned down.
On November 1, 1940 the US Government awarded a $40K grant to Columbia University to fund
fundamental research on nuclear chain reactions. This grant provides the first formal support for Leo
Szilard since he emigrated from Hungary in 1938.
By January 1941 a love-struck Walther Bothe concludes that graphite, no matter how pure, will not work
as an effective moderator of freed neutrons. The errors in his calculations were subsequently discovered by
German scientist Karl Wirtz, but too late in the War to have any effect on the outcome of the German
atomic program.
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After President Roosevelt appointed a Uranium Committee in 1942, and its members met on October 21,
1942. Leo Szilard again asked for $2000 to cover the cost of pure graphite. This time the request was
quickly granted.
In 1939 the German government agreed to financially support the efforts of German physicists to build a
nuclear reactor at Leipzig, purely for research. By May 1942 Werner Heisenberg and Robert Doepel had
managed to construct their fourth attempt at an atomic reactor pile in their Leipzig laboratory, using
jacketed U-238 surrounded by 140 kg of heavy water. They were trying to construct the world‟s first chain
reacting nuclear pile.
On June 4, 1942 Germany‟s top military and scientific leaders convened a meeting at the Kaiser Wilhelm
Institute in Berlin-Dahlem to determine priorities for war production. Werner Heisenberg, the country‟s
leading nuclear physicist, describes the vast power stored up in an atom. Several weeks after this meeting
Albert Speer briefs Adolf Hitler on atomic fission and the assistance his government will render for
scientific research. At this point, things were looking up for the Germans, after all, they had the largest
cache of raw uranium in the world, and the only reliable supply of heavy water, thought to be the only
effective neutron moderator at the time.
The same day that Speer briefed Hitler (June 23, 1942), the German program suddenly and irrevocably
goes awry. Heisenberg and Doepel had amassed atomic pile L-IV in their laboratory in Liepzig in May.
On June 23rd it had almost reached critical stage when the mass unexpectedly began to emit bubbles.
Upon testing Doepel found them to be hydrogen, and immediately suspected a leak had developed between
the jacketed uranium and the surrounding heavy water. When Doepel ordered a technician to unscrew the
inlet so he could determine the extent of the leakage, the sudden drop in pressure allowed a stream of hot
gasses to vent, glowing with bits of burning uranium. A flame then shot out of the opening and more
uranium was set on fire.
American soldiers dismantling the German’s unfinished nuclear reactor at Heigerloch in April 1945. The Allies
also recovered 1200 tons of uranium ore the Germans had confiscated in 1940.
Doepel panicked, dumping a bucket of water on the fire, which quenched the flames, but was followed by a
plume of black smoke pouring out of the opening. He then rushed to the phone and called Heisenberg,
describing the increasing heat of the pile. The two men decided to open up the pile with a chisel to reduce
the buildup of pressure at several points around the jacketed uranium. As they did so, the uranium began to
swell and shudder. The two exchanged glances and decided to run for it. Just as they reached the street,
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the laboratory exploded, showering the area with bits of burning uranium. The Leipzig fire department
arrived on the scene shortly thereafter, but was unable to extinguish the fire for another two days!
This was the turning point in the “race” to develop the atomic bomb (June 23, 1942). The Germans spent
the next few years trying to get back to where they had been, needing to replace the lost heavy water and
enriched uranium. They never came close to actually designing an atomic bomb, in part, because
Heisenberg never calculated the critical mass of U-235, believing it would exceed their ability to
manufacture.
In early 1942, the Germans charge the Vemork facility with producing 5 tons annually (a 3800% increase
over pre-war production). The Vemork hydro plant had 18 high concentration cells of deuterium, each 4‟-
2” high, placed in the basement of the powerhouse. The SIS-Norwegian Section of British military
intelligence enjoys an unceasing train of reliable intelligence from Vemork, via a system of British trained
Norwegian underground agents who live and work around the Vemork facility. Based on this intelligence,
British scientists conclude that the Germans must be well on the way to building an atomic pile using
deuterium as the neutron moderator.
Oct 16, 1942 – Following a successful British commando raid on the Glomfjord hydroelectric plant in
northern Norway, Hitler orders all allied commandos (whenever captured) to be turned over to the Gestapo
for immediate execution, within 24 hours of capture.
November 19-20, 1942 – The British launch Operation Freshman, sending 46 commandos of the Royal
Engineers, First Airborne Division, into southern Norway in two Horsa Gliders, towed by two RAF Halifax
bombers. Both gliders and one Halifax crashed in the mountains west of Vemork. 10 of the 34
commandos were killed in the crashes, while another 7 died aboard the Halifax bomber. The 24
commandos who survived were taken prisoner by the Germans and promptly executed.
On the night of February 27-28, 1943, nine British-trained Norwegian commandos sneaked into the
basement of the Vemork electrolysis plant and planted plastic explosives around all 18 deuterium cells,
setting these off in a muffled explosion that destroyed 1000 pounds of heavy water. All 9 commandos
evaded capture. By June 1943 Norwegian intelligence reports that damage to deuterium cells has basically
been repaired by the Germans, and heavy water production resumes.
Nine British-trained Norwegian commandoes accomplished the impossible by disrupting heavy water production at
Vemork in February 1943. This diagram shows the ski hut they used as a base of operations in the mountains and
the precipitous route used to approach the hydroelectric powerhouse, where they planted plastic explosives. All nine
survived the raid and the ensuing German reaction.
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August 1943 – British intelligence informs the Americans that deuterium production at Vemork is back up
to 4-1/2 kilos per day. BGEN Leslie Groves and Vannevar Bush request that Vemork be targeted by the
US 8th Air Force stationed in England. On Nov. 16, 1943 the US 8th Air Force hits Vemork with 388 B-17s
and B-24s launched against various Norwegian targets, to split German aerial defenses. 160 B-17s of the
3rd Air Division (including the veteran 95th and 100th Bomb Groups) are tasked to bomb Vemork. Each
plane carries six 1,000-lb or 12 500-lb bombs, with an additional 15,000 lbs of fuel. The hydroelectric
power plant was hit by 174 aircraft, which dropped 828 500 and 1000 lb bombs, between 11:30 AM and
12:15 PM. Because of its position beneath the hydroelectric facility, only two of the bombs actually hit the
electrolysis plant, and the heavy water tanks were untouched. One bomb hit the civilian bomb shelter in
Vemork, killing 8 men and 14 women and children. The Nitrate plant in nearby Rjukan was accidentally
destroyed by B-24s of the 392nd BG The Norwegian government-in-exile in England strongly protested
the raid because it was carried out without their approval or prior notification.
The American bombing raid on the Vemork plant at Rjukan did considerable damage and killed a group of school
children huddled in the town’s only bomb shelter, which took a direct hit. Although the bombs could not penetrate
to the lowest galleries of the power plant where the heavy water was extracted and stored, it did manage to destroy
the exposed penstocks feeding water into the plant and convinced the Germans that they should relocate their heavy
water extraction program to the Alps.
Even though the electrolysis plant was only hit by two bombs, the exposed steel penstocks leading into the
hydroelectric plant were heavily damaged, severely limiting how much water could be fed into the
electrolysis plant. The Germans dispatched physicist Frederich Berkei to survey the damage and he
concludes that the damage is too extensive to justify complete repair (as the penstocks could simply be
bombed again). Three days after the raid, the Germans announce that new heavy water separation plants
will be constructed in Bavaria and at the Montecatini hydroelectric plant in northern Italy, which were more
protected (having underground penstocks) and further from American heavy bombers. All existing stores
(canisters) of heavy water at Vemork were to be shipped to Germany. Members of the British-trained
Norwegian underground prepare to intercept this shipment.
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The Norwegian ferry Hydro (at left) was sunk in the deep waters of Lake Tinn (right) in February 1944, carrying all
the remaining heavy water supplies from the Vemork hydroelectric facility.
On Feb 19-20, 1944 – Norwegian resistance saboteurs (including one of those who led the February 1943
commando raid) planted plastic explosives charges in the bilge of the Norwegian ferry Hydro, which was
transporting railcars and passengers across Lake Tinn. The commando stole aboard at Mael on a Saturday
night. The ferry exploded around 11 AM Sunday morning, when ¼ mile from its destination at Tinnoset,
on the opposite shore, where the lake was 1,300 feet deep. The railroad cars carrying the canisters of
deuterium slid off the listing ferry, into Lake Tinn and were lost. 26 passengers perished while 27
survived, including 4 German soldiers.
In April 1945 – The dismantled electrolysis plant from Vemork was captured by American forces in
Bavaria, together with stores of heavy water and uranium. The Germans lacked about 700 liters of heavy
water to get their reactor started.
The world’s first successful nuclear reactor was constructed on a squash court beneath the bleachers of Stagg Field
at the University of Chicago. It incorporated 40,000 blocks of pure graphite, weighing 500 tons, provided by Union
Carbide. The first successful chain reaction was recorded on December 2, 1942, six months after the German
reactor in Leipzig caught fire and was destroyed.
In May 1942 Enrico Fermi assembled a reactor pile at Columbia University that came within 5% of
emitting more neutrons than it absorbed (a chain reaction is defined as the process wherein more neutrons
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would be emitted than were absorbed by the uranium). This near successful test in the heart of New York
City had enormous impact on funding the Manhattan Engineering Project.
The pile tests were shifted from Columbia to the University of Chicago in the fall of 1942, under Enrico
Fermi’s direction, during construction of permanent test facilities at the Argonne National Laboratory (20
miles outside Chicago). Fermi‟s group assembled a graphite reactor pile in the squash courts beneath the
University‟s Stagg Field. The pile was comprised of 40,000 blocks of pure graphite, weighing 500 tons.
These were stacked in 57 layers, into which tiny cubes of uranium or uranium oxide were inserted. It took
workers two shifts a day for 16 days to construct the 16 feet high pile.
The first pile tests began on November 7, 1942, and by December 2 nd, the world‟s first sustained chain
reaction was recorded. Control bars coated with cadmium were used to stabilize the pile, until the chain
reaction was initiated. As the cadmium rods were withdrawn, fewer and fewer of the uranium‟s freed
neutrons were absorbed, inducing increased fission. Once all the cadmium coated bars were withdrawn at
June 1942 Arthur H. Compton (who directed nuclear research at the University of Chicago) wrote to
ORSD head Vannevar Bush stating that “We have just recognized how a chain reaction started with a
small heavy-water plant can quickly supply material for a high power plant for producing [fissionable
material]”. He also assumed the Germans were preceding along the same track (intelligence reports
filtering in from Norway confirmed that the Germans had stepped up heavy water production at Vemork by
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ten-fold). Compton concluded that the Americans would not be able to overtake the Germans unless they
overlooked some possibilities that the Americans recognized, or through delays caused by military
intervention.
The Corps of Engineers organization responsible for developing the atomic bombs was officially created on
June 19, 1942 in New York City, under the command of Col. James C. Marshall, a 1918 graduate of
West Point, then serving as District Engineer at Syracuse, New York. The new organization was called the
Laboratory for the Development of Substitute Metals and was based in New York City, not far from
Columbia University. Marshall chose 34-yr old LCOL Kenneth D. Nichols as his deputy, who was then
working at the Pennsylvania Ordnance Works. Nichols was a 1929 West Point graduate with an MSCE
from Cornell (1933) graduate study at the Technische Hochschule, Charlottenburg, Berlin, Germany (1934-
35), and a Ph.D. from Iowa State University (1937) in hydraulics (only the second regular Army officer to
receive a PhD in engineering). On August 13, 1942 the project was formally established as the Manhattan
Engineer District, which provided an effective cover because Corps districts were named after the cities in
which they were based. Unlike other districts, the Manhattan District had no geographic boundaries. The
United States would eventually commit $2 billion to funding what became know as the Manhattan Project.
From left: Former professors Vannevar Bush (1890-1974) and Arthur Compton (1892-1962) conferring during the
war. Bush was Director of the Office of Scientific Research and Development while Compton served as Chairman of
the National Academy of Sciences Committee to Evaluate Use of Atomic Energy in War. They essentially
represented the nation’s scientific talent to Presidents Roosevelt and Truman. Middle: Colonel James C. Marshall,
first commander of the newly formed Manhattan Engineering District in June 1942. Right: Lt-Colonel Kenneth D.
Nichols (1907-2000).
Major General Leslie R. “Dick” Groves (1896-1970) and Professor J. Robert Oppenheimer (1904-1967) were the
consummate odd couple, who, together, accomplished the impossible. Groves initially thought that the appointment
would be a disastrous dead end, but his promotion to brigadier general was obligatory for a career Army officer. He
referred to the atomic bomb as “the gadget” while it was under development.
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Leslie R. Groves, Jr. – Dick Groves was the descendent of French Huguenots that settled in America in
mid-seventeenth century. He was born in August 1896 in Albany, New York, son of a career Army
Chaplain recognized for valor during the Boxer Rebellion in Peking, China in 1900. Groves was unusual
for a career Army officer in that he possessed 10 years of formal education. He had attended the University
of Washington for a year, and MIT for two years, before spending 2-1/2 years at West Point, he graduated
4th in his (accelerated) Class of June 1918. After graduation, he spent the next three years attending
various Army Engineer schools at Fort Belvoir. He missed overseas duty during the First World War and
was not promoted to Captain until 1934, achieving the rank of Major in 1940.
Groves was consistently recognized in the Corps of Engineers as a capable officer and organizer, and he
was jumped over a number of people to become the Chief of the Operations Branch of the Corps of
Engineers Construction Division in 1940, directing $800 million of construction each month! He was
tapped to head the Manhattan Engineering District along with a promotion to Brigadier General on Sept 23,
1942. He knew he had accepted a “make-or-break proposition, upon which his career and the very
outcome of the war might depend. Groves was subsequently promoted to Major General in 1944. After
COL Marshall’s transfer (and promotion to brigadier general) in mid-1943 Kenneth Nichols became his
senior assistant and was promoted to full Colonel. In January 1945 BGEN Thomas F. Farrell was
appointed as Groves’ formal deputy.
J. Robert Oppenheimer was born in New York City of German-Jewish immigrants in April 1904.
Oppenheimer was something of a prodigy, completing a 4-year course in chemistry at Harvard in three
years, then heading for the famous Cavendish Physics Laboratory at Cambridge in the summer of 1925,
where he went to work for English physicist (and later, Nobel Laureate) J.J. Thompson. But, after only 3
months, he accepted an offer from Max Born to study physics at the University of Gottingen in Germany,
where he began working on the elemental theories of quantum mechanics with Gottingen Professor Erwin
Schrodinger. That same year Oppenheimer published his first articles (on quantum mechanics), in the
Journal of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. Oppenheimer completed his doctorate in physics with
distinction in the spring of 1927. He returned to Harvard for short while as a research fellow, then
accepted a National Research Council fellowship at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
While in residence at Caltech, he received 12 offers for university professorship, 10 in the USA and two
from abroad. He decided on accepting a position at the University of California, at Berkeley, though he
continued to lecture at Caltech each spring, and was retained the privileges in title and pay as a member of
Caltech‟s faculty from 1928-45, advancing to full professor at Berkeley in 1937 and at Caltech in 1938.
When he joined the Berkeley faculty in 1930 he began collaborating with experimentalist Ernest O.
Lawrence (see below) and gained a reputation as an adored intellectual and fascinating lecturer, who
“could charm the pants off most anyone.”
Ernest O. Lawrence (1901-58) was a professor at the University of California, Berkeley between 1928-58. He played
a major role in the Manhattan Project, developing the U235 separation schemes employed at Oak Ridge. In 1929 he
invented the cyclotron, a device for accelerating nuclear particles to very high velocities without the use of high
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voltages. The swiftly moving particles were used to bombard atoms of various elements, disintegrating the atoms to
form, in some cases, completely new elements. The image at right shows the 27-inch cyclotron, completed in
December 1932. Larger and more powerful versions of the cyclotron were built by Lawrence during his
distinguished career. He received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1939.
Frustrated by his student‟s inability to gain employment in teaching physics because of the Great
Depression, Oppenheimer flirted with left wing politics, becoming involved with several organizations
that harbored lose ties with American communists. His younger brother and fellow physicist Frank joined
the Communist Party in 1936. Although he never joined the communist party, he married the ex-wife of a
former party functionary in 1940.
Oppenheimer became involved in the newly-kindled American research efforts into nuclear fission
research in the fall of 1941 through E. O. Lawrence. In January 1942 Arthur Compton, then Head of
the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago, asked Oppenheimer to work full time on the
new research project, asking him to become “Coordinator of Rapid Rupture”, basically the scientist
charged with designing an atomic bomb – if it could be done. The initial goal was determine the critical
masses of potentially fissionable materials. In the summer of 1942, Oppenheimer convened a team of
experts at Berkeley, meeting in the top of LeConte Hall, near his office. That group was making
impressive progress when newly-promoted BGEN Leslie Groves arrived at Berkeley on October 8th, as
part of his inaugural tour of the nation‟s atomic research centers. Oppenheimer singularly impressed
Groves as the man who had the organizational skills to deal with fellow scientists, while maintaining their
collective respect.
A week later, Oppenheimer was riding a train with Groves and his senior aides Kenneth Nichols and
James Marshall between Chicago and New York, where he outlined an ambitious plan to bring all the
scientists together in one giant cohesive think tank, a larger version of what Gottingen had been to the
physics world in the 1920s. Oppenheimer pushed for a remote site, and convinced Groves that Los
Alamos, New Mexico would suffice. Groves chose Oppenheimer, even though the FBI recommended
against granting him a security clearance. Groves knew the task before him was unprecedented, and he
reasoned that anyone who would freely admit all his left wing sympathies on his initial security
questionnaire (filled out in January 1942) was unlikely to be a spy. His hunch proved correct.
Oppenheimer and Groves agreed that a central research facility should be established where scientists
could gather to work out the methods of constructing an atomic bomb. The big problem was how to make
a sub-critical mass within a bomb container and suddenly cause it to go critical. On November 25, 1942
approval was given to acquire the Ranch School at Los Alamos, New Mexico, along with about 50
miscellaneous structures. The school as located about 20 miles northwest of Santa Fe, surrounded by
national forest. The project are encompassed about 50,000 acres (75% of this being in the former national
forest). Administration of the facility was to be under the University of California. Everyone‟s address at
Los Alamos was “P.O. Box 1663, Santa Fe, NM”. In March 1943 construction of Los Alamos Laboratory
began.
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Los Alamos Laboratory was a top secret installation during the Second World War that would nurture several
thousand of the nation’s most promising scientists, who would go on to dominate post war teaching and research in
physics, chemistry, and weapons research. Its improbability as a likely site for such a significant project was tied
solely to Robert Oppenheimer.
The Manhattan project set about design and construction of specialized manufacturing facilities, intended
to separate the U-235 uranium isotope and produce the new element plutonium (Pu-239). Natural uranium
only comprises about 1 percent of U-235, with the rest being U-238 and U-234. These were the only
radioactive elements thought capable of fomenting a rapid sustained chain reaction, necessary for
constructing an explosive device.
In late September and early October 1942 BGEN Groves and his assistants toured the various research
facilities involved in government-funded atomic research. These included: 1) the reactor pile group under
Fermi recently transplanted to the University of Chicago; 2) the U.C. Berkeley group investigating
electromagnetic separation of U-235 and the theoretical requirements to produce a bomb; 3) a centrifuge
separation method by Westinghouse Research labs in Pittsburgh; and, 4) gaseous diffusion of uranium
hexaflouride at Columbia University. The centrifuge process was discarded, but work proceeded on
constructing enormous enrichment facilities at a 92-sq mile site near Oak Ridge, Tennessee, about 20 miles
west of Knoxville. The location was relatively remote, had abundant supplies of water and hydroelectric
power. In September 1942 construction began.
The Y-12 Plant was the first uranium manufacturing facility to house the electromagnetic process for
separation of U-235 from U-238. These plants were operated by Tennessee Eastman, a subsidiary of
Kodak. The Berkeley magnets were scaled up to be 250 feet long, creating a magnetic field so powerful it
could pull tools out of the pockets of passing workmen. The magnets each weighed between 3,000 and
10,000 tons. These were wrapped with 6,000 tons of silver wire, supplied by Fort Knox. Altogether five
such “Alpha Plants” were built, each with 96 separation units in two oval racetracks, with semi-circular
mass spectrometer tanks. All of these could be operated independently. These were dubbed the
“Caluatrons”. The resulting product was only 13 to 15% pure, and had to be concentrated in Beta
machines, where 90% of the U-235 was again lost. It was a slow process of enrichment, subsequently
discarded in favor of plutonium manufactured at Hanford.
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The massive Y-12 plant at Oak Ridge, Tennessee was designed and built in record time by the legendary Boston
engineering firm Stone & Webster.
Alpha tracks, or Caluatrons, at the Y-12 Plant were constructed as oval racetracks, for separation and enrichment
of U-235. These were conceived by Ernest Lawrence at Berkeley. Only one U-235 atomic bomb was ever
manufactured, this enrichment process being discarded in favor of the plutonium plant in Hanford, Washington.
The Carbide and Carbon Chemicals Co. was given charge of operating the gaseous diffusion process of U-
235, using a uranium hexaflouride HF6 feed stream. A huge U-shaped facility was built, 2,500 feet long on
each side, 450 feet wide and 60 feet high. It occupied 44 acres and was dubbed the K-25 Plant. The HF6
had to pass through 3,000 stages in a continuous cascade, to slowly filter out the lighter U-235 atoms. The
diffusion holes were two millionths of an inch in diameter. The plant did not enter operation until
February 20, 1945 and the resulting U-235 only had a purity of 1.1%. This material was then fed into the
Y-12 plant for final enrichment.
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K-25 Plant at Oak Ridge. This U-shaped facility was 2,500 feet long on each side, 450 feet wide, and 60 feet high,
occupying 44 acres. Here uranium hexafluoride (HF6 ) was forced through 3,000 stages in a continuous cascade, to
slowly filter out the lighter U-235 atoms.
Another enrichment process attempted at Oak Ridge was thermal diffusion, pioneered by the Navy and
undertaken at the S-50 Plant, which began operation on September 16, 1944. The resulting product was
only 1.4% pure, and was also added to the feed stream in the Y-12 Plant.
The X-10 graphite reactor at Oak Ridge opened Nov 4, 1943 as the prototype reactor for plutonium production at
Hanford. Thousands of reactor operators were trained here over the ensuing 20 years, until the reactor was shut
down in 1963. The oldest nuclear reactor in the world, it is a National Historic Landmark and open to the public at
the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
The X-10 graphite reactor at Oak Ridge was supervised by the scientific team from the University of
Chicago. It was to serve as a pilot plant for the design of larger production reactors to be built out at
Hanford, Washington. The purpose of the X-10 reactor was to produce sufficient plutonium to allow for
further research on enrichment of the material. The X-10 reactor came on line in November 1943 and
remained in operation until November 4, 1963.
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The process of transforming U238 to Pu239 was explored at the X-10 reactor throughout 1944-45. This shows how
U238 is bombarded with neutrons, gradually transforming it to the more stable Plutonium 239. These developments
were unforeseen at the outset of the Manhattan Project.
Like Oak Ridge, Hanford was initially selected because of its remote location and proximity to water and
hydroelectric power. The primary purpose of the Hanford facility near Richland, Washington was to
produce plutonium. The critical mass of plutonium need for a bomb was only 11 pounds, less than a third
of that required for U-235. Plutonium was produced when the uranium in an atomic pile (reactor) was
subjected to a slow chain reaction. Some of the bombarded uranium is converted to P-239, but remains
within the U-238 ingots, slugs or rods. Separation of the P-239 from the uranium and subsequent
enrichment were necessary to produce pure quantities of plutonium. Construction of the necessary
facilities began in June 1943.
The first plutonium reactor built at Hanford was dubbed the B Reactor. It used 2,000 tons of pure graphite
as a moderator and was brought on line during September 1944. The reactor had to be shut down because
of the unanticipated build-up of Xenon-135 gas, a byproduct of the fission process. The mass of uranium
was subsequently increased by 25% to boost capacity and overcome the neutrons lost to the Xe-135. On
December 25, 1944 the plant produced its first irradiated slugs containing plutonium. The reactor was shut
down after the war, but reactivated in 1948 and operated almost continually until February 1968.
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The B Reactor complex was the first constructed at Hanford, Washington, coming on-line in September 1944.
Plutonium production fell to near zero on several occasions, and Enrico Fermi and his team had to troubleshoot the
problems and develop workable protocols to maintain output during the war.
Separation and enrichment of the resulting plutonium was handled at two huge installations, called the B
and T Plants, located 3 miles apart, and about 5 miles from the B Reactor. Separation from the enriched
slugs was achieved using bismuth phosphate, an excellent carrier of plutonium. The first quantities of
enriched plutonium were shipped from Hanford at the end of January 1945. T Plant produced the
plutonium used in the Nagasaki bomb and the subsequent atomic tests carried out at Bikini Atoll in July
1946.
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The T Plant at Hanford was completed in December 1944 as the world's first large-scale plutonium separation
facility. Only about one atom in 4,000 was converted to plutonium in the three Hanford production reactors, so
these atoms had to be separated from the remaining U238 and other fission products that had been created.
Work originally centered around the idea of firing one piece of fissionable material into another, using a
sort of gun barrel. This technique was deemed workable for U-235, and the details were worked out under
the guidance of three Navy ballistics experts, CDR William S. “Deak” Parsons, CDR Fred Ashworth
and LCDR Francis Birch. Some portion of the plutonium absorbs extra neutrons, becoming P-240. P-240
undergoes spontaneous fission, which might initiate a chain reaction prior to reaching critical mass, leading
to a premature explosion of slight magnitude. By July 1944 it was evident that the P-239 core could not be
compressed fast enough to initiate a rapid chain reaction by the gun method. This was particularly
frustrating, because it was becoming more and more apparent that plutonium would be the fissionable
material most readily obtainable from the various plants at Oak Ridge and Hanford.
Left to right: Commander Fred Ashworth (1911- ), Seth Neddermeyer (1907-88), and Captain Deak Parsons (1901-
53). A weapons expert, Ashworth had commanded a carrier Air Group in the Pacific prior to his assignment at Los
Alamos. Parsons flew as weaponer aboard the Hiroshima mission, while Ashworth served as weaponer and senior
officer on the Nagasaki mission.
In July 1943 one of Project Y‟s scientists, Seth Neddermeyer (PhD physics Caltech ‟35) proposed
assembling a critical mass of P-239 through implosion, using concentrically-placed explosives, surrounding
a subcritical mass of plutonium. The idea was enthusiastically taken up by the other scientists at Los
Alamos, and Oppenheimer ordered the creation of an implosion work group that fall. An implosion bomb
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required enormous engineering and split second timing. But, by early August 1944 Neddermeyer’s
experiments reached an impasse.
A Soviet Jewish émigré, shaped charge pioneer George Kistiakowsky (1900-82) was brought in to supervise the
design of the plutonium implosion device. Kistiakowsky was a professor of chemistry at Harvard, and returned to
his position after the war, later serving as Special Assistant for Science and Technology to Presidents Eisenhower
and Kennedy, after which he came to oppose the nuclear arms race.
Kistiakowsky’s rapid reaction team employed shaped layers of slow and fast explosive lenses to concentrate the
energy on the hollow plutonium core simultaneously, a tremendous challenge. This became the model for post-war
fission atomic bombs.
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Like Groves and Oppenheimer, Kistiakowsky found himself in a do-or-die proposition. Kistiakowsky
was assigned 600 men to help him out, 400 of which were draftees with engineering and science
backgrounds, called “SED‟s” (a military acronym for Special Engineering Detachment). Another British
scientist recently attached to the implosion group was James Tuck, who had worked previously on
developing “shaped charges”, using fast and slow explosives. The infusion of Kistiakowsky and Tuck
into the group provided the necessary synergism for eventual success, though this group felt the greatest
stress of any involved in the Manhattan Project. They ended up using 5,300 pounds of Composition B and
Baritol, high grade explosives laid out as shaped charges, capable of compressing the 11 pound plutonium
core of a bomb with split second timing. The device was never successfully tested before the Trinity Test
ordered by President Truman in July 1945, because he was meeting with Soviet dictator Josef Stalin in
Potsdam, Germany. The implosion device was successful fired at the Trinity site on July 17, 1945, 2-1/2
months after the German surrender. It became the model for the post-war atomic bombs. Kistiakowsky
would move on to Harvard after the war, teaching chemistry, then serving in a variety of roles in the
Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations.
The Los Alamos scientists began looking for a remote location to test an atomic bomb. They settled on the
White Sands area south and east of Albuquerque, and west of Alamagordo. The government purchased the
taciturn McDonald Ranch and ordered boilermaker Babcock & Wilcox to fabricate a 214-ton steel
containment vessel, dubbed “jumbo”. It was 25 feet long, 12 feet in diameter, 6 inches thick, with walls 14
inches thick at both ends. The idea was to contain any unspent plutonium in attempt to detonate the first
atomic bomb. The initial batch of enriched plutonium was shipped to Los Alamos in late January 1945,
with increasing quantities coming on stream each month thereafter. By July 1945 it was decided that a
sufficient supply of plutonium was available to enable an outside test. Jumbo was suspended on a steel
frame about 800 feet from Trinity ground zero. Trial tests of the blast monitoring equipment were carried
out on May 7, 1945, using 100 tons of TNT. This test explosion was performed about 10,000 feet south of
Trinity ground zero.
Left: The original Fat Man Pu239 plutonium bomb that was detonated at the Trinity site on July 17, 1945. Right:
Schematic representation of how the implosion process was achieved using shaped lenses of slow and fast burning
explosives to bring the plutonium core to critical mass at the same instant.
The Trinity Test was carried out at 5:30 AM on Monday July 17, 1945 using a plutonium implosion bomb
mounted atop a steel tower, 100 feet high. Most of the close-in film was damaged by radiation before it
could be developed. A saucer like depression 1,200 feet in diameter and 25 feet deep identified ground
zero. There was nothing left of the supporting steel tower. A greenish colored glass was strewn about the
crater floor, dubbed “trinitite”. Windows were blown out as much as 200 miles away (to the northwest).
People up to 150 miles away reported seeing the sun come up, then going down again. A radiation band 30
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miles wide drifted northeast at 10 mph for over 120 miles. Fermi went into the crater area almost
immediately in a Sherman tank configured with lead shielding.
Added to this were the revelations in mid-1944 onward that the Japanese were systematically murdering
American prisoners-of-war in the Philippines and elsewhere, to prevent their repatriation by advancing
American forces. During the Pacific War, 40% of Allied POWs would die in Japanese POW camps, as
compared to 1% of the Allied POWs incarcerated by the Germans. For these reasons, and others discussed
below, the Japanese were not regarded with the same measure of respect as the Germans, who were
signatories to the Geneva Convention, whereas the Japanese were not.
Lt. Colonel James H. Doolittle (1896-1993) led the first American air strike on Japan on April 18, 1942, just four
months after the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. The attack was comprised of 16 Army Air Corps B-25 Mitchell
bombers launched from the American carrier Hornet, 700 miles east of Japan (shown at right). Doolittle was
promoted to brigadier general and received the Medal of Honor, the first American general officer to have an
earned PhD (aeronautical engineering from MIT, 1925). He was also the first reserve officer to achieve 3 or 4 star
rank, and received Berkeley’s first Alumnus of the Year Award, in 1943 (BS mining engineering, U.C. Berkeley,
1922).
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The Doolittle Raid was carried out on April 18, 1942, when 16 Army Air Corps B-25B Mitchell bombers
led by Reserve LCOL Jimmy Doolittle hit five Japanese cities during the lunch hour. The attack occurred
just 4 months and a week after the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor. In military terms, the raid was
modest, but its ramifications were enormous, as it shocked and embarrassed the Japanese militarists,
forcing the disastrous showdown at Midway in early June. The carriers Enterprise and Hornet
(commanded by RADM W.F. Halsey) were sighted about 18 hours before the scheduled take-off point,
500 miles from Japan. The bombers were hastily launched after learning that a Japanese picket ship had
radioed the task force‟s position to Tokyo. Although the bombers achieved complete surprise, none of
them actually landed in China, as planned (one crew was interned by the Soviets). Several of the planes
ditched in the ocean off Japanese-occupied China. Two of the 16 aircrews availed themselves to “friendly”
Nationalist Chinese forces, but were turned over to Japanese occupation forces. Approximately 250,000
Chinese civilians were executed by the Japanese for assumed complacency on the part of those American
airmen successful in evading capture.
After a highly publicized trial in Japan, three of the raiders were executed by firing squad in Peking, China
on Oct. 15, 1942, and reported in the American news media on April 22, 1943. The remaining five were
held in solitary confinement in Peking. Lt. Meder died in captivity in 1944, while Lt. Barr barely
survived. The four surviving prisoners were rescued in an audacious mission commanded by OSS Major
Ray A. Nichol on August 16, 1945, two days after the Japanese announced their surrender. The OSS
believed that the Japanese might execute the remaining Doolittle Raid prisoners, whose POW status had
never been officially acknowledged.
The high profile trial of the captured Doolittle airman in late 1942, their subsequent executions, and that of
thousands of American POWs in the Philippines inculcated a sense of rage from Air Corps planners. The
conduct of the strategic bombing campaign against Japan differed from that executed against Germany,
which concentrated on industrial targets. The campaign against Japan targeted key industries, but did not
differentiate between bombing a specific factory, as opposed to the city surrounding it. In part, this
problem was due to the inability of the faster B-29s to effectively use the Norden bombsight at such high
speed (300+ kts) and altitude (30,000 feet). Another factor was the rationalization that all Japanese
engaged in war-related work at home, such as sewing uniforms, and were, therefore, legitimate military
targets. The fact that Japanese tortured and executed military prisoners of war influenced this thinking.
Area bombing using radar became the preferred method of delivering destruction upon Japan, and it was
anything but accurate. B-29s began combat operations against Japan from bases in northern China in the
late spring of 1944. These bases were so far from fuel sources, that very few planes could be mounted on
any given mission.
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Virtually every city in Japan with more than 35,000 people was destroyed in area-wide bombing by B-29s
between November 1944 and July 1945. The tactics were changed in early March 1945, when incendiary
bombs were dropped on Tokyo. The aircraft were strung out at altitudes between 6,000 and 8,000 feet. On
the night of March 9-10, 1945, 325 B-29s hit Tokyo, each carrying 7 tons of incendiaries. The raid
destroyed 16 square miles of Tokyo and killed upwards of 115,000 Japanese in a single “fire raid”. By
war‟s end 3,895 B-29s had been built, accounting for 29,150 combat missions. The Japanese ceased
resisting American bombers with defensive fighters on July 1, 1945, hoarding these for the use as
Kamikazes in the anticipated invasion of the Japanese home islands in the fall of 1945.
The North Field complex on Tinian Island in the Mariannas. Eventually equipped with four 8,500 foot runways
and 265 hardstands, North Field was the largest airdrome constructed during World War II. The atomic missions
were flown from this base, with the 509th Group occupying the area at extreme left in this image.
The Superfortress
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The Boeing B-29 Superfortress was a quantum leap in technology as compared to other bombers used in
World War II. The first prototype flew in August 1942. Bigger, faster, 4X bomb load, 2X the effective
combat range of any other bomber in production during World War II. It was also the first aircraft to have
pressurized cabins.
Enormous armadas of B-29 Superfortress bombers equipped with incendiary bombs wrecked havoc on the Japanese
home islands during 1944-45. These aircraft were the first to employ pressurized cabins and turbo superchargers
for their engines, allowing them to fly missions up to 34,000 feet altitude, well above Japanese interceptors. They
carried four times the bomb load of the B-17 or B-24 heavy bombers used against Germany.
The biggest problem with the B-29 was its Wright Cyclone R-3350 air cooled duplex piston engines.
These were termed “3350‟s” because the piston displacement was 3,350 cubic inches, spread over 18
cylinders (186 in3 per cylinder), collected in twin banks. The banks were so tightly formed that the engine
was only 55 inches in diameter (about 4-1/2 feet). The R-3350 was intended to develop up to 2,600 HP on
takeoff, with 2,000 HP during cruise. This was more than double the horsepower of the R-1820 engines
that powered the B-17.
The engine was rushed into production before all the teething problems had been worked out. There were
chronic problems with the exhaust valves and cooling systems. Although the engines cost just over
$25,000 apiece to produce, 31% failed during 1944, necessitating over 2000 design modifications by early
1945. In 1944 B-29 maintenance personnel referred to the R-3350 as the world‟s first “disposable engine”,
because thousands were cast aside in the Mariannas. By mid-1945 engine production increased to 11,000
units per year, with a 2% failure rate (down from 31% the year previous). Many B-29s were converted to
KB-29P aerial refueling aircraft during the 1950s, and many of these aircraft were not retired till 1959-60.
In September 1944 LCOL Paul W. Tibbets, Jr. was selected to command a special Army Air Corps unit
that would be capable of dropping atomic bombs from specially configured B-29s. The 509th Composite
Group was officially activated at Wendover, Utah on December 17, 1944. It consisted of 1,800 men, split
into the 393rd Bomb Squadron (taken from the 504th BG), 320th Troop Carrier Sqn., 390th Air Service
Group, 603rd Air Engineering Sqn., 1027th Air Material Sqn. and the 1st Ordnance Sqn. At the Core of the
original unit were 15 B-29 Superfortress bombers, under command of LCOL Tom Classen (who
subsequently became Deputy Group C.O.) which arrived in November 1944. The group underwent
extensive training at Wendover, Utah, where they practiced dropping concrete-filled 8,000 pound
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“pumpkin” bombs within an area 400 feet in diameter from an altitude of 30,000 feet (a miss of no more
than 200 feet was allowed). They received about 200 of these dummy bombs to practice with.
From left: 509th Group Commander Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, Jr. (1915- ), 393rd Bomb Squadron commander Major
Charles W. Sweeney (1919-2004); and Deputy 509th Group Commander Lt. Colonel Tom Classen.
After experimenting with removing the gun turrets at a rework facility, Tibbets ordered specially-built B-
29s from the Glen L. Martin factory in Omaha, who was building the bomber under license. The new craft
were built without defensive turrets to save 7000 lbs.; pneumatically operated bomb bay doors; Curtis
Electric hydromatic propellers (capable of reversing on landing); and fuel injection for the engines. They
were the only B-29s with Curtis Electric props to see combat. They were delivered via Offutt AFB in
March and April 1945. Upon completion of their training, Tibbets was promoted to Colonel and MAJ
Charles W. Sweeney given command of the 393rd BS just before the 509th was deployed to North Field at
Tinian Island during May and June 1945. North Field was the largest combat airfield in the world, home
of the 313th Bomb Wing (Circle R tail code), under the 21st Bomber Command (consisting of five B-29
wings under the command of MGEN Curtis LeMay, spread out over Guam, Saipan and Tinian Islands).
Left: B-29A carrying two 12,000 lb British Tallboy bombs on a training mission working out the ballistics problems
with delivering such heavy ordnance. Right: Group bombardier Major Thomas W. Ferebee (1918-2000), who solved
the complex ballistics and delivery problems delivering 10,000 lb payloads. He had been Tibbet’s bombardier flying
the first B-17 combat missions of World War II out of England in the summer of 1942.
Upon their arrival, the 509th B-29s carried a distinctive tail code of a forward arrow in a circle (see picture).
On July 6th, they began flying practice missions with conventional “fat man” bombs in 3 to 5 plane
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elements to Marcus Island, Truk, Rota, and Guguan Islands. After these practice flights, they were
assigned 14 pinpoint targets in Japan (Otso, Taira, Fukashima, Nagaoka, Toyama and Tokyo). They
dropped their familiar orange-colored “pumpkins”, using the steel shell of a “fat man” plutonium bomb, but
filled with explosive torpex. They began these missions on July 21st, in groups of 8 to 10 aircraft. On July
29th the 509th flew their last “practice” missions to Japan, hitting targets in Koriyama, Osaka, Kobe,
Shimoda, Ube, Nagoya, Wakayama and Hitachi (a few more torpex missions were flown on August 14th,
after the Nagasaki mission). In all the 509 th flew 51 bombing sorties in 16 missions dropping “pumpkins”.
Tibbets was prohibited from flying any of these missions because of his intimate knowledge of the
Manhattan Project.
Shortly before the atomic missions, COL Tibbets decided to alter the B-29‟s tail codes because they had
been noticed and singled out in several radio broadcasts by Tokyo Rose. The Japanese knew the 509th
were at North Field, but not what their mission was. The tail codes were altered over the weekend of
August 4-5 to represent four different bomb groups operating in the Marianna Islands (four with Circle R;
four with Triangle N; three with Square P; and four with an un-bordered A). The circled arrows were
repainted on 509th aircraft after the cessation of hostilities. No aircraft names were carried on any of the
509th‟s B-29s during the atomic missions, with the exception of the Enola Gay.
MGEN Groves selected four potential target cities in Japan, which were taken off the B-29 target lists, and
thereby spared for the time being. The purpose of this was to provide a more reliable indicator of how
effective each atomic blast might be, if and when such attacks occurred. The four cities were: Kokura,
Niigata, Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Kyoto had been on the original list, but was removed). All contained
“legitimate” military targets, such as heavy industries or railroads.
The 509th used specially built B-29B aircraft without defensive gun turrets, which saved 7000 pounds. Only the tail
guns were retained. This shows the Enola Gay wearing the arrow-in-circle tail code that was noted by Tokyo Rose
in her radio broadcast a few days before the mission to Hiroshima. The 509 th tail codes were immediately changed
to mimic those of regular bomb groups operating out of the Mariannas, to shield their identity.
Hiroshima Mission
Seven B-29s of the 509th Group were actually involved in the world‟s first atomic mission, carried out on
Monday August 6, 1945. One was positioned at Iwo Jima as a spare aircraft, in case one of the others had
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to abort. At 1:37 AM three of the 509ths B-29s took off to scout the weather ahead of the strike force.
These included Jabitt II bound for Nagasaki; Straight Flush to Hiroshima; and Full House was sent to
Kokura. Colonel Tibbets was given aircraft Victor 82 to fly the mission, which he named the “Enola
Gay,” after his mother. This aircraft would carry the U-235 bomb, dubbed “Little Boy”. The bomb was 10
feet long, 28 inches in diameter and weighed almost 9,700 pounds.
The U235 atomic bomb Little Boy (left) and the Pu239 bomb Fat Man (right). The imploding Fat Man became the
prototype nuclear weapon after the Second World War, with all the plutonium being manufactured at Hanford, WA.
Pre-flight briefing of the Enola Gay, Straight Flush and Great Artiste aircrews on Tinian. Colonel Tibbets is sitting
in the second row smoking a pipe.
Tibbets had Enola Gay painted with Circle R tail code, simulating 6th BG 313th Bomb Wing aircraft, from
Tinian‟s North Field. The aircraft‟s pre-flight operations were well documented by Army photographers,
using klieg lights to illuminate the aircraft. Enola Gay was packed with 7,000 gallons of high octane
aviation fuel and a 9,000 lb. bomb. She lifted off from Runway A on North Field at 2:45 AM local time.
She was followed by the instrument aircraft The Great Artiste on Runway B, piloted by MAJ Sweeney,
which included Project Alberta scientists Luis Alvarez, Lawrence Johnson and Harold Agnew. Bringing
up the rear on Runway C was the photographic plane, Necessary Evil, piloted by CAPT George
Marquardt. The three aircraft were spaced about 2 minutes apart.
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Scientific observers with Project Alberta on Tinian included Luis Alvarez, Lawrence Johnson, and Harold Agnew,
shown here. Alvarez had the distinction of being the only person to fly and observe the first three atomic missions:
the Trinity Test, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki, from orbiting B-29s.
Enola Gay being backed on over arming pit at North Field on Tinian, where the U235 atomic bomb Little Boy was
hoisted into her forward bomb bay. Note the revised Circle R tail code of the 6th Bomb Group, also based at North
Field.
Since arriving on Tinian Navy CAPT Deak Parsons became increasingly concerned about the safety of the
bomb in flight. On Saturday evening August 4th four B-29s crashed while attempting takeoff from North
Field, causing Parsons to suddenly change his mind about attempting to arm the U-235 bomb after takeoff,
in order to avoid any possibility of destroying the enormous North Field B-29 base. Parsons resurrected a
2-month old plan by his assistant LCDR Birch, which used a “double plug” system of arming the bomb in
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the bomb bay, after takeoff. Parsons practiced the procedure all day long, in preparation for takeoff. Enola
Gay began the 7+ hour trip to Japan at an altitude of 4,700 feet until the bomb was armed, because the
bomb bay was unpressurized. Parsons and his assistant LT Morris Jepson managed to arm the bomb 25
minutes after takeoff, and Enola Gay gradually climbed to 8,000 feet for the lonely trip to the rendezvous
above Iwo Jima cruising at a speed of 250 mph at an altitude of 9,300 feet. The accompanying aircraft
were each two minutes behind. The three plane echelon gathered at 6 AM and departed Iwo at 6:07 AM,
and began the long climb to 30,000 feet.
The nose art of Enola Gay (left), Straight Flush (middle) and The Great Artist (right) of the 509 th Group. No
aircraft names were carried on any of the 509th’s B-29s during the atomic missions, with the exception of the Enola
Gay. The nose art shown here was added shortly after hostilities ceased. The Enola Gay is preserved at the
Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy facility at Dulles International Airport and Bock’s Car is preserved at the Air Force
Museum in Dayton, Ohio.
The reconnaissance aircraft (Straight Flush) arrived over Hiroshima around 7:07 AM local time, triggering
an air raid alarm warning at 7:09. She cleared the area by 7:31, and the alarm was terminated. Upon their
departure, Straight Flush radioed that Hiroshima had clear skies (using an encrypted code). At this time the
Enola Gay and her escorts were about 40 minutes from the Japanese coast, inbound at a speed of 328 mph.
The three plane element split up, with the photographic plane hanging back, while Enola Gay and Great
Artiste drove on to the target, with just 30 feet separating their wingtips. Enola Gay dropped her deadly
cargo at 9:15 AM (8:15 AM local time). At the same instant Great Artiste dropped instruments to record
heat, blast and radiation, which deployed parachutes at 14,000 feet (these were seen by many of
Hiroshima‟s survivors). After loosing their cargoes from an altitude of 32,700 feet, the bombers
immediately split apart, on orthogonal tracks: Great Artiste turning to starboard and Enola Gay to port, in
160-degree diving turns. By banking sharply (50 to 55 degrees) into a gradual dive (they lost 1700 feet of
altitude), the planes were 10-1/2 miles away (slant range) from ground zero by the time the bomb‟s initial
blast reached them (the blast traveled at a speed of 1100 feet per second and delivered a jolt of 2.5g‟s). It
took the bomb approximately 43 seconds to fall and another 58 seconds for the blast to reach them, after
detonation.
The radar altimeter on the bomb was set for altitude of 1,890 feet, and appears to have detonated at a height
of 1,740 feet, directly over the Shima Hospital. The precise position of ground zero was subsequently
determined to be 550 feet from the T-shaped Aioi Bridge. The bomb was loosed at an altitude of 31,600
feet at an initial forward velocity of 270 mph. Ignoring wind resistance, the time-to-detonation should have
been 43.85 seconds, while theoretical time-to-ground impact would have been 45.07 seconds. If the
bomb‟s trajectory were taken to the ground surface, it would have hit within 7 feet of the aiming point!
This was probably the most precise high altitude bombing mission of the Second World War.
The explosive energy of the U235 bomb was estimated to have been equivalent to about 12,500 tons of
TNT. Of this, 35 % was expended as thermal radiation, 17% as radioactive radiation, and 48% as blast
energy. About 40 seconds after detonation (1 minute and 23 seconds after dropping the bomb) the aircraft
received a 2g initial blast wave, which traveled outward at a speed of approximately 1,100 feet per second.
This concussion was followed by a second one, which was the reflection of the first compressive wave off
the ground (since the bomb exploded almost 2000 above ground). After several minutes Tibbets re-
assembled the three-plane element and circled Hiroshima till 8:40 AM (local time), to document the
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bomb‟s effects. Enola Gay landed at North Field at 2:58 PM, after being airborne for a little over 12 hours.
Her crew was met by every Army Air Corps dignitary in the Pacific, and Col. Tibbets was given the
Distinguished Service Cross by Gen. Carl A. Spaatz, Commander of U.S. Strategic Air Forces-Pacific
(who had only arrived on July 29th, to oversee reorganized aerial operations for the invasion of Japan).
Impacts on Hiroshima
Located 1,700 miles from Tinian, Hiroshima capital of Hiroshima prefecture in the Chugoku region of
Japan. In 1945 it was Japan‟s 7th largest city, with a pre-war population of 380,000 people. About 240,000
were residing there in early August 1945. Hiroshima was home to Japan Steel Company and the
headquarters of the Japanese 2nd Army Group, responsible for the defense of Kyushu and southern Japan,
which the Americans intended to invade in October 1945. The city was a communications center, a storage
point, and an assembly area for troops. The alternate targets of Kokura (100 nm SW) and Nagasaki (200
miles SW) were within easy flying distance of Tinian as well.
The city was located on a delta, dissected by a series of distributaries of the Ota River. Because of the low
lying topography, the blast energy was able to sweep over a broad area. The bomb killed everyone within
1 km of ground zero, destroying houses up to 2.6 km away, and inflicting severe skin burns on people up to
3.9 km away. All structures within 2 km were incinerated by the fire that followed. Flash burns were
recorded up to 3.9 km away (2-1/2 miles). . Five hours later, a 20 th AF F-13 reconnaissance aircraft (a
modified B-29) was dispatched to record the devastation. These photos revealed that 4.7 square miles of
Hiroshima was destroyed, about 68.5% of the city.
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Before and after images of Hiroshima attest to utter destruction of the Little Boy atomic bomb. This was the most
accurate bombing of mission of the Second World War, with the bomb detonating at an altitude of 1740 feet on a
precise trajectory, within 7 feet of the primary aiming point on the Aioi Bridge (a 500 foot ground separation
because of the parabolic trajectory).
At the time, 71,379 were listed as dead or missing, with 68,023 injured. The Japanese government has
monitored post-event deaths believed to be related to effects of radiation (which assume all forms of cancer
are likely attributable to radiation exposure), and the final toll was officially set at 118,661 killed with
30,524 severely injured. The Hiroshima Commercial Display Building (about 800 feet from Ground Zero)
was retained in its damaged condition as a mute monument to the attack‟s ferocity.
President Harry S. Truman (1884-1972) and the heavy cruiser USS Augusta (CA-31). The only president who
served in the First World War, Truman always maintained that the decision to drop the atomic bombs was not a
difficult one for him to make, as his primary concern was to conclude the conflict with Japan as soon as possible,
hoping to avert an Allied invasion of the Japan that would have cost 500,000 to more than 1 million American
casualties.
On Monday August 6th, President Harry S. Truman was aboard the Navy cruiser USS Augusta in the
North Atlantic, on his way home from the Potsdam Conference near Berlin. 16 hours after the Hiroshima
explosion, Truman announced via radio (from the Augusta) that the United States had dropped a new
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atomic bomb on Japan, and called for the Japanese to capitulate, or face prompt and certain annihilation.
Armed Forces Radio immediately began broadcasting to the Japanese mainland the fact that an atomic
bomb was used to destroy Hiroshima and that more would soon follow if Japan refused to capitulate. On
August 7th and 8th, 21st Bomber Command dropped 4-1/2 million leaflets on major Japanese cities, bluntly
informing the Japanese as to the destructive power of atomic bombs and encouraging them to inquire about
what had occurred at Hiroshima. It implored the Japanese people to besiege their Emperor to end the war,
and accept the 13 consequences of an honorable surrender.
One of the 4.5 million leaflets dropped by 21st Bomber Command on Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and 33 other Japanese
cities on 1 August 1945. The Japanese text on the reverse side of the leaflet carried the following warning: “Read
this carefully as it may save your life or the life of a relative or friend. In the next few days, some or all of the cities
named on the reverse side will be destroyed by American bombs.”
On Tuesday August 7th 21st Bomber Command sent 152 B-29s to Japan, hitting a variety of smaller targets.
On August 8th they sent 375 B-29s to Japan. 224 of these dropped firebombs (napalm) on the industrial
city of Yawata, the neighboring city to Kokura. The fires ignited during the evening of August 8th would
spare Kokura the following morning, when Bock’s Car would make three aborted attempts to drop the
second atomic bomb.
Nagasaki Mission
The second atomic bomb used 11 pounds of plutonium Pu239 (about the size of an orange) and was dubbed
“Fat Man”. It was painted bright yellow and was the same type of implosion device that had been
detonated July 17th in New Mexico. The bomb was 128 inches long , with a diameter of 60 inches, and
weighed 10,300 pounds. It would be fitted with four sets of redundant fuses, including barometric, timing
and radar. Each of these systems was also duplicated, to insure the bomb exploded well above ground.
Unlike the Little Boy U235 bomb, Fat Man could not be armed after takeoff, it had to be carried “live.”
The second atomic mission was carried out on Thursday August 9th, 1945. The 393 BS commanding
officer Major Charles Sweeney was selected by Tibbets to lead the mission. Sweeney’s regular aircraft
was The Great Artiste, which remained filled with monitoring equipment used on the Hiroshima mission,
so he selected Bock’s Car, normally commanded by Capt. Fred Bock, while Bock’s crew flew The Great
Artiste as the instrument plane. Bock’s Car was painted with a Triangle N tail code, simulating a 444 th BG
58th Bomb Wing aircraft from Tinian‟s West Field. The other aircraft was to be the photographic plane,
piloted by LCOL James T. Hopkins (in Big Stink). The senior officer aboard was Navy Commander
Frederick L. Ashworth, the bomb armorer (who had extensive combat experience), but Sweeney was the
aircraft commander.
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Left: Crew of Bock’s Car on the Nagasaki mission, minus Commander Ashworth. Right: Nose art on Bock’s Car.
After Bock’s Car dropped the Pu239 weapon on Nagasaki, the crew managed to make Yonton Field on Okinawa
with just one engine turning and only 35 gallons of fuel by the time the plane stopped, unable to taxi off the runway.
The probability of the crew getting the aircraft back to Okinawa safely was about 1-in-1000.
From the outset, things didn‟t go nearly as smooth on the second atomic mission. Just before take off,
Sweeney discovered that the fuel pump attached to the 640-gallon auxiliary tank in the aft bomb bay of
Bock’s Car was not operating properly (the 509th„s atomic bombers were fitted with two 640 gallon
auxiliary tanks, enabling them to carry 8,860 gallons of fuel, 1280 gallons more than other B-29s).
Scheduled for a 2:30 AM takeoff, Sweeney lost precious time trying to decide whether to scrub the
mission, eventually asking Col. Tibbets to make the call. Tibbets reminded him that the bomb bay fuel
tank was not essential, it was there as a counter weight for the heavy A- bomb in the forward bay and for
use as a back-up (mission planners had provided for 1,000 gallons of reserve fuel). He suggested going
ahead, but warned of not wasting fuel by circling at the rendezvous.
Bock’s Car finally took off at 3 AM. She was carrying 7,000 gallons of gas, of which 6,400 would be
accessible. The three plane element was diverted to a rendezvous point at Yakushima (off the southern
coast of Kyushu) because a typhoon was threatening Iwo Jima. Bock’s Car had to transit to Yakushima at
17,000 feet (instead of 8,000) to stay above the rough weather, and this expended additional fuel. Bock’s
Car and The Great Artiste rendezvoused at 30,000 feet over Yakushima at 7:45 AM, but there was no sign
of Hopkin’s photographic plane. CDR Ashworth encouraged Sweeney to remain orbiting, so that
valuable data would be recorded. Sweeney spent 45 minutes circling, waiting for Hopkins to appear, but
he never did. He was burning up about 500 gallons per hour of fuel at that altitude (it turned out Hopkins
was flying at 39,000 feet instead of the prescribed 31,000). At this juncture both weather reconnaissance
aircraft reported scattered clouds (20% cover) over Kokura and Nagasaki. Sweeney decided to press on for
Kokura, attempting three bomb runs, without gaining visual recognition required for bomb release. In part,
Kokura was obscured by smoke generated from B-29 raids on nearby Yawata the previous evening. After
55 minutes of frustration and dangerously low on fuel, Sweeney was forced to head for the divert target,
Nagasaki.
The two aircraft arrived over Nagasaki just before 11 AM, but Bock’s Car no longer had sufficient fuel to
even reach Okinawa. They encountered 9/10th cloud cover over the city, well above the 20% cover
reported several hours earlier. Sweeney decided they would have to drop the bomb using radar navigation,
despite the “visual-only” policy that had been demanded by mission planners. On the way in to the Initial
Point Sweeney asked for CDR Ashworth’s concurrence, but never got it. They opened their bomb bay
doors 30 seconds before the radar drop. At 25 seconds till drop bombardier Kermit Beahan found a small
opening in clouds, between two large Mitsubishi armaments plants along the Urakami River and the bomb
was released at 11:01 AM local time. The bomb exploded almost 1-1/2 miles wide (upstream) of the
intended target, at an altitude of 1,890 feet, but obliterated the heavy industries along the Urakami River,
sparing most of the residential district.
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With only 300 gallons of accessible fuel remaining, Bock’s Car (with Great Artiste in trail) made haste for
the nearest airfield, at Yontan on Okinawa, almost 350 miles away. There was theoretically insufficient
fuel to travel more than about 250 miles. They were going to have to ditch the aircraft somewhere 70 to 100
miles short of Okinawa. Flight engineer (Fred Kuharek) was able to transfer fuel from the 640-gallon
auxiliary tank with the errant pump, but at a slow rate. Sweeney reduced his fuel consumption by turning
the engine rpm‟s down to 1600 rpm (well below the recommended cruise setting of 2000 rpm) and “flying
on the step”, a technique developed by COL Tibbets. “Step flying” involved taking the plane into gradual
descent without increasing engine power, thereby gaining airspeed without using additional fuel. In this
way, the low power settings were supplemented, thereby conserving fuel. The method could only be used
in a downward flight profile. On the way to Okinawa, Sweeney’s crew tried raising Air-Sea rescue and
Yontan Airfield tower, but neither responded (four B-29s had been launched as “dumbo” aircraft in case of
a ditching, but had flown back to Tinian because it was believed Sweeney had aborted the mission, since
Hopkins couldn‟t find him).
Unable to raise Yontan Tower by radio, Bock‟s Car fired 22 emergency flares to get the field‟s attention.
She lost No. 4 engine on approach and hit the midpoint of the runway at 140 mph (instead of 110 mph),
losing power to the No. 1 engine on touchdown. The pilots hit the brakes hard to bring the mammoth
aircraft to a halt at the far end of the runway, when the No. 2 engine also quit! The plane had to be towed
to a ramp suitable for refueling. Afterwards, it was learned the No. 3 engine only had 35 gallons of fuel (an
insufficient amount to have kept the aircraft flying for another approach). It was one of the closest calls of
any bomber mission in World War II. Yontan was headquarters for the newly transferred 8th Air Force,
under LGEN Jimmy Doolittle. MAJ Sweeney was debriefed by Doolittle, who had flown the first
mission against Japan on April 18, 1942. After towing Bock‟s Car to the fueling stand and re-fueling the
plane, Sweeney rejoined his crew for the 5 hour flight back to Tinian. Bock’s Car landed on Runway A at
Tinian at 10:39 PM local time, and taxied into her hard stand 40 minutes later, without the fanfare or
reception accorded Enola Gay’s triumphant return a few days previous.
Impacts on Nagasaki
At that time Nagasaki had a population of approximately 212,000 people. The City was spread out along
the Urakami River Valley, and housed two of Mitsubishi‟s largest wartime manufacturing plants, including
the vast steel and armament works. The plutonium bomb exploded at an altitude of 1,650 feet, within
2000 feet of the steel and armament works. It released 22,000 tons of TNT blast energy, almost double that
of the Hiroshima bomb. The bomb‟s blast leveled an area roughly 2.3 x 1.9 miles in size, destroying 38%
of the City (1.45 mi2 of the 3.86mi2 area). The damage tapered off about 9,000 feet from ground zero.
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Many parts of Nagasaki were protected by a series of low ridges, in particular the residential downtown
area. The first undamaged buildings were noted about 4.6 km from ground zero. According to official
statistics kept at the time, 25,680 were killed or missing, with 23,345 injured. Post-war statistics
maintained by the Japanese list 73,884 deaths attributed to the bomb, with 74,900 injured. These include
all post-war deaths from cancer, of any type.
The sinister mushroom clouds of Hiroshima (left) and Nagasaki (right) were indelibly imprinted on the minds of all
Americans throughout the Cold War, especially during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.
Surprise Ending
A battle to end the war raged in the Japanese capital, with numerous mutinies and attempted coups.
Worried about public panic, the militarists panned off the Hiroshima explosion as an unusual firestorm
ascribable to unique atmospheric conditions, never mind the leaflets and radio transmissions broadcasting
to the contrary. The diplomats were becoming increasingly frustrated. In the heat of the ongoing debate,
things suddenly became even hotter.
On Thursday morning August 9th the Soviet government announced it was declaring war on Japan. At 11
AM Bock’s Car dropped a second atomic device on Nagasaki. In Tokyo it was a day of nonstop
conferences. The Supreme War Council was convened by Foreign Minister Togo Shigenori and by the
afternoon Premier Suzuki Kantaro acceded to the previously unthinkable, stating "Let us, the present
Cabinet, take the responsibility of seeing the country through the termination of the war". The Emperor
gave audiences from 9 AM till 11:30 that evening, his longest working day of the war. The War Council
had only one concern left, the preservation of the national polity - the Throne.
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Left: The difficult task of bringing the war to a close fell upon Foreign Minister Togo Shigenori, who was appointed
in April 1945 after the militarists resigned. Shigenori had served as Foreign Minister in 1941-42, but was ousted
because of his opposition to war with the United States. Middle: Emperor Hirohito inspecting bomb damage in
Tokyo in 1945. His radio broadcast on August 14 th calling for unconditional surrender was the first time Japanese
soldiers or civilians ever heard his voice. Right: Post-war occupation commander General MacArthur and Emperor
Hirohito, in early 1946. The Japanese wartime leadership never imagined that the National Polity would be
preserved when the Americans conquered their country.
One of the 5-1/2 million special leaflets dropped on Japan on August 14, 1945, announcing Japanese peace
overtures through the Swiss Embassy and the American’s reply. It urged the Japanese people to encourage their
leaders to cease hostilities to avoid unnecessary bloodshed. These revelations were an enormous embarrassment to
the Suzuki government.
The next day the foreign ministry issued a note to the Americans through the Swiss consulate asking for
peace, and dearly hoping to avert another atomic blast. At 4 AM the following day (August 11th) the
Soviet Army struck out across the Manchurian frontier. Later that day the Americans responded to the
Japanese peace overture by demanding they publicly accept the tenants of the Potsdam Declaration, which
included the wording “unconditional surrender.” Concerned about preservation of the Emperor, the
Japanese cabinet stalled, again mired in a vicious internal fight. The Americans tipped the scales by
dropping a record 5-1/2 million leaflets on the 13th spelling out the Japanese surrender overtures to the
Swiss embassy and the American reply. This exposed the cabinet's actions, and the Emperor was obliged
to intercede, calling his people to lay down their arms and accept the unconditional surrender during a
noontime radio broadcast on Tuesday August 14th, heard clearly by the allies. It was the first time the
Japanese people ever heard their Emperor‟s voice over radio. The Japanese pronouncement came just 194
hours after the Hiroshima drop. Regardless of one‟s political views, it‟s difficult to separate the atomic
bombs from the Emperor‟s sudden decision to intervene in the war and accept an unconditional surrender.
Two nuclear warheads had suddenly and irrevocably accomplished peace in a span of a week and a day.
To those who were there and lived through those toilsome hours of agonizing how to end it, the connection
between the events was as solid as an arc weld. The Japanese leadership, for their part, had reacted as the
Americans had hoped, and numerous internal memos attest to their belief that the Americans had a sizable
stockpile of nuclear bombs, and that certain and complete annihilation would ensue unless they acted
quickly. It was one of the few times where American efforts to coerce a particular Japanese reaction were
so successful. The American bombing campaign had continued nonstop through August 14 th, when 828 B-
29s were launched against targets at Hikari, Kumagaya, Isezaki and Tasuchizakiminato, while the 509 th was
even dispatched to drop seven of their 4-ton pumpkins.
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Formal surrender ceremonies between the western Allies and the Empire of Japan were carried out on the
battleship MISSOURI in Tokyo Bay on September 2, 1945, bring the Second World War to a close. The Japanese
delegates wore dress uniforms and formal attire, while the Allies, on MacArthur’s orders, wore their working khaki
uniforms.
Two months after the war with Germany concluded, ten of the most prominent German physicists were
interned for six months at Farm Hall, an estate near Cambridge, England. This group included Werner
Heisenberg, a former student of Nils Bohr thought to be the leading nuclear physicist in Germany. The
facility was bugged to record conversations between the German scientists. The purpose of this
sequestering was to ascertain how close the Germans had come to developing an atomic bomb during the
war. In early August the Germans were given newspaper announcing the detonations of atomic devices
over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which stirred considerable discussion and activity amongst the group, as
hoped.
The Germans never came close to producing an atomic bomb for a number of reasons, which included poor
leadership among the scientists, an absence of desire to take on so ambitious a project, and a number of
technical errors. Within a few days of the Hiroshima announcement, the group completed calculations
showing that an atomic bomb was possible, using a modest volume of fissionable material. But, the
Germans never had sufficient fissile materials to experiment with, having never developed a suitable
enrichment process for U235 or Pu239. Then, there were Walther Bothe‟s flubbed calculations in January
1941, when he erroneously concluded that graphite was not a suitable neutron moderator, causing their
group to pursue heavy water instead. Then, there was the explosion and fire in the Leipzig laboratory in
June 1942, from which many precious materials were lost, which took several years to recover.
The key factor that triggered America‟s efforts to produce atomic weapons
were the urgent orders to increase heavy water production at Vemork, which
came about, in large measure, from Bothe‟s erroneous calculations and the
Leipzig lab fire! In his 1997 book Blood and Water: Sabotaging Hitler’s
Bomb, author Dan Kurzman eloquently summed this up: “Fatefully, if not for a
laboratory explosion and the mistake of a lovesick scientist, Germany might
have beat the United States to a reactor and perhaps a bomb.”
Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976). After hearing of the atomic bomb being detonated
over Hiroshima at Farm Hall, he performed the necessary calculations for designing
the U235 bomb in a few days.
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Epilogue
One of the political goals of using the atomic bombs was the supposed chilling effect their employment
would supposedly have on Soviet dictator Josef Stalin. Our state department reasoned that the
technological edge of possessing such terrible destructive power would impede Soviet post-war aggression,
allowing the western powers to demobilize their military forces. Informing Stalin of America‟s successful
detonation of an atomic bomb at the Potsdam Conference was the overture to our post-war policy of
containment. The announcement was quietly made to Stalin by Truman on July 19th, 1945, but Stalin
exhibited complete ambivalence. Later we learned that his network of spies had already apprised him of
the Manhattan Project, right down to the last details of the successful Trinity Test at White Sands on July
17th.
Hungarian-émigré Leo Szilard had become concerned about using the atomic bomb once Germany
surrendered, in early May 1945. He tried to circulate a petition among the scientists working with him in
Chicago, but it never went beyond Oppenheimer. Szilard warned Oppenheimer that the military would
use the awful weapon as they saw fit, and that soon thereafter, politicians would use the A-bomb for
political coercion of the Soviets, leading inevitably to a nuclear arms race. The President‟s inner circle of
advisors asked Oppenheimer how long it might take the Soviets to develop their own A-bomb.
Oppenheimer had informed them that he thought it would take the Soviets about 10 years to “catch up”
with our nuclear weapons program. In actuality, the “nuclear edge” lasted just 4 years. No one had
imagined how much inside help the Soviets were getting out of Los Alamos. This set the stage for the
“next war.”
After the Second World War, American intelligence worked hard to decipher wartime Soviet
communications codes, so encrypted messages collected during the war and afterwards might be examined,
to see what espionage, if any, had been carried out in the United States. By 1949 the Americans succeeded
and began deciphering messages sent from the Soviet Embassy in New York to Moscow during the war.
To their horror, they discovered the Soviets had penetrated the highly secretive Manhattan Project. By the
fall of 1949, British physicist Klaus Fuchs was revealed as one of the principal agents at Los Alamos,
sending highly sensitive information to the Soviets via a small network of spies. This was especially
troubling news because Fuchs had replaced Edward Teller at Los Alamos in 1944 on the committee
working to develop the implosion device for the plutonium bomb, the standard nuclear weapon of the post-
war era. Fuchs was a German-Jewish émigré who had defected to England, and was subsequently lent to
the Manhattan Project during the war. No one seemed aware of his pro-Communist politics, and he was
promoted to the Patent Committee at Los Alamos after the war, where he was privy to the innermost secrets
about Edward Teller’s pioneering work on “The Super”, or thermonuclear (fusion) bomb, then under
development.
Klaus Fuchs (1911-88) was found guilty of communicating information to the Soviets concerning atomic research
on March 1, 1950 and sentenced to 14 years in prison. After serving nine years of his sentence, he was released
(shown at right) and he illegally relocated in East Germany, where he resumed his academic career in physics.
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At the same time we were learning about Fuchs (September 1949), American B-29 reconnaissance aircraft
overflying the Soviet Union detected radiation particles in the atmosphere, testifying to a successful Soviet
detonation of their own bomb, on August 29, 1949. If American agents arrested Fuchs, it might betray our
penetration of the Soviet codes, so the delicate job was left to Britain‟s Scotland Yard. In October 1949,
Fuchs reported to British security that his father had accepted a teaching position in communist East
Germany. Responding coyly, British counterintelligence agent W.J. Skardon gradually gained Fuchs’
confidence, informing him that he had been suspected of espionage activity for some time. Thoroughly
distracted, Fuchs pondered over how to proceed. He continued meeting with Skardon and eventually
confessed. He was formally arrested on January 27, 1950, but was repatriated to East Germany in 1959,
after serving a 9- year sentence.
The revelations about communist spies in the highest levels of atomic weapons research and development,
both during and after the war, had indescribable recriminations. The “Cold War” that developed between
the western allies and the Soviet Union represented a psychological state of affairs, fomented by a number
of key events, including: 1) The blockade of west Berlin by Stalin in 1948; 2) the detonation of an atomic
bomb by the Soviets in September 1949; 3) the Fuchs arrest and revelations, beginning in January 1950;
4) the trials of Harry Gold, David Greenglass and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in America, which came
soon thereafter; and 5) the communist invasion of South Korea in June 1950, and subsequent involvement
of American and United Nations forces in armed combat with the communists.
Teller’s thermonuclear bomb became the Cold War’s premier weapon, with a destructive power as great as 100
megatons (8000 times that of the Hiroshima bomb). The arms race Oppenheimer and Szilard had feared came to
pass, but, thankfully, were never employed in combat. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the west
learned that Josef Stalin was considering the employment of thermonuclear weapons when he suddenly died in
1953.
By 1952 these events created an atmosphere of intrigue and suspicion, the likes of which were
unprecedented in the 20th Century. The arms race with the Soviets predicted by Szilard and feared by
Oppenheimer came about faster than anyone had imagined. Each side began testing thermonuclear
(fusion) weapons. The United States detonated a heavy 10.4 megaton device on Elugelab Island at
Eniwetok Atoll on November 1, 1952. This bomb released 1000 times the destructive power of the
Hiroshima fission bomb, but was too large to be carried in an airplane. The Soviets seized the lead in the
evolving arms race on August 12, 1953 when they detonated the first air-deployable thermonuclear bomb,
which had a yield of 400 kilotons. The Russians were now ahead of the Americans in the arms race (six
months later the Americans carried out their Castle Bravo test on Bikini Atoll, which had an explosive
yield of 15 megatons, about 2.5X larger than expected. At 23,500 lbs, it was still too large to deploy
operationally in any aircraft except a B-36).
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Left: Cover of TIME magazine in late June 1954 announcing revocation of J. Robert Oppenheimer’s security
clearance by the Atomic Energy Commission’s Personnel Security Board (shown at right). This hearing was
orchestrated by AEC Chairman Lewis L. Strauss (above right foreground), shown with the AEC Commissioners
who voted to deny Oppenheimer’s security clearance (left to right) Thomas Murray, Eugene Zuckert, and Joseph
Campbell. This was the darkest postscript to the Manhattan Project, which would never have succeeded by July
1945 if not for the leadership of Oppenheimer.
The high visibility trials of communist spies and revelations about Soviet weapons development quickly
gaining par with our own created an atmosphere of paranoia, which spawned mandatory loyalty oaths and
investigations of anyone suspected of having communist sympathies. No one was immune from suspicion,
and Robert Oppenheimer soon became one of the victims. Oppenheimer had been retained as Chief
Advisor to the newly created Atomic Energy Commission after the war, but was not supportive of Edward
Teller’s bombastic demands to develop the much more destructive thermonuclear weapons, which Teller
zealously promoted as “the super.” Oppenheimer was concerned about a spiraling arms race that, in the
end, would be in the hands of mad men (like Josef Stalin) to decide, while western politicians would
respond in-kind. His counter-establishment views were publicized in prominent newspapers like the New
York Times and in journals like Foreign Affairs between 1950-54.
Left: Lewis L. Strauss (1896-1974) was a Wall Street millionaire and Naval reserve intelligence officer who rose to
the rank of Rear Admiral by the end of the war, working for Navy Secretary James Forrestal. He was a hawkish
member of the Atomic Energy Commission from 1946-50 and its Chairman from 1953-58. Middle: Upon retirement
from the Army, Major General Kenneth D. Nichols (1907-2000) served as General Manager of the AEC from 1953-
55. Right: Edward Teller (1908-2003). Teller’s dream of a fusion weapon came to pass after the Soviets detonated
their nuclear device in August 1949, years before it was expected. Believing the scientists at Los Alamos were too
ambivalent about developing thermonuclear weapons, Teller lobbied Congress to create a separate laboratory for
that research, which became the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. Teller went on to direct
research activities at Livermore between 1958-1975.
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Race to Build the Atomic Bomb
J. David Rogers
These security hearings were orchestrated by AEC Chairman Lewis L. Strauss, who felt Oppenheimer was
endangering national security because of his public opposition to thermonuclear weapons, and what he
viewed as Oppenheimer‟s lapses in judgment in regards to security precautions over the years, because he
had refrained from handing academic colleagues over to the FBI who had exposed their leftist tendencies
and philosophies (though Oppenheimer never acted upon their suggestions). Strauss was also suspicious of
Oppenheimer‟s previous flirtations with the American Communist Party on the west coast because he felt
he might have been used by subversives, unknowingly. The case against Oppenheimer emanated from
William L. Borden, the executive director of the Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy, who
took it upon himself to make a review of Oppenheimer’s security files in November 1950. Just 30 at the
time, in a report to the AEC and The FBI Borden would conclude that Oppenheimer was an “espionage
agent” and was acting under a “Soviet Directive.” Unfortunately, this radical viewpoint was supported by
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.
In late 1953 the indictment against Oppenheimer was prepared by the AEC‟s new General Manager,
retired Major General Kenneth D. Nichols, who had served as Leslie Grove’s principal subordinate during
the Manhattan Project. In the late spring of 1954, a security hearing was convened by the AEC‟s Personnel
Security Board, comprised of Gordon Gray (chairman), Thomas A. Morgan, and Dr. Ward V. Evans.
The AEC hoped to convene the hearing in secret and avoid embarrassing media coverage, but a headline
story in the New York Times sympathetic to Oppenheimer appeared after the first day of the hearings, and
this infuriated Strauss, the AEC, and the Eisenhower Administration (Gray had served as Secretary of the
Army under President Truman and President of the University of North Carolina). Most of the testimony
focusing on his communist party sympathies in California in the 1930s and early 40s, before he assumed
his important role directing the scientific activities of the Manhattan Project. General Groves and fellow
physicists Luis Alvarez and Hans Bethe provided defense testimony favorable to Oppenheimer, but this
was insufficient to counter the sheer weight of adverse testimony, which, more than anything substantial,
called Oppenheimer’s patriotism and judgment into question because his views were at variance with
those of the AEC, many in Congress, the Air Force, and the Eisenhower Administration.
The Personnel Security Board voted to strip Oppenheimer of his security clearance on June 29, 1954.
Those who led the charge against Oppenheimer paid a price for their zeal. Edward Teller tarnished
himself irrevocably by testifying against Oppenheimer, suggesting that Oppenheimer’s opposition to his
thermonuclear weapons research was probably linked to his “political views.” This played into the “once a
communist, always a communist” stereotype that Lewis Strauss, William Borden, General Nichols, and
J. Edgar Hoover seemed to believe about Oppenheimer.
The scientific community never forgave Teller, feeling his actions were prejudiced by jealousy. His
reputation suffered, and he was shunned by much of the scientific community for many years thereafter.
Lewis Strauss also suffered repercussions for his role in the Oppenheimer hearings, four years later. After
heading the AEC between 1953-58, President Eisenhower nominated Strauss to become Secretary of
Commerce in October 1958. The Senate rejected his appointment by a vote of 49 to 46 in June 1959,
making him the only cabinet appointment formally rejected by a Senate vote between 1925 and 1989! It
was an ignominious end to Strauss’ many years of public service (which began in 1918, when he
volunteered himself to become Herbert Hoover‟s personal secretary while he chaired the Allied efforts for
European Relief).
Oppenheimer inherited Einstein’s position as Director of Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Studies in
1947). He aged considerably through these proceedings, which seem shameful in retrospect.
Oppenheimer’s meteoric career in service of his country was over. Although he supervised 17 former or
future Nobel Laureates during the Manhattan Project, he never received the Nobel Prize because his
interests and contributions were spread over too wide of a spectrum to be recognized as the father or
inventor of any significant discovery. His cigarette smoking caught up with him in 1966 when he
contracted throat cancer and he died on February 18, 1967. Leslie R. Groves was promoted to Lieutenant
General just before retiring from the Army in February 1948 and he died of heart failure on July 13, 1970.
The proliferation of nuclear weapons typified the “balance of terror” between East and West during the
Cold War, or détente, that ensued between 1950-1991. This standoff ended in August 1991, with the
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Race to Build the Atomic Bomb
J. David Rogers
dissolution of communist control of the Soviet Union, but thousands of nuclear warheads remain stockpiled
in the independent Soviet states. More recently, China, India, Pakistan, and Israel have openly
acknowledged their custody of nuclear warheads (though Israel has never tested one). Other “outlaw”
nations, such as North Korea, Iraq, and Iran have been rumored to be working on developing their own
nuclear warheads. In 1981 the Israeli Air Force attacked a nuclear power plant under construction in Iraq
to curtail the possibility of uranium enrichment occurring there. As the memory of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki fades, it seems likely that the world will witness the reemergence of nuclear weapons on the
world stage, mostly likely employed by rouge nations or terrorists.
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