Today, August 6th,
marks 67 years since the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan by the
United States at the end of World War II. Targeted for military reasons
and for its terrain (flat for easier assessment of the aftermath),
Hiroshima was home to approximately 250,000 people at the time of the
bombing. The U.S. B-29 Superfortress bomber "Enola Gay" took off from
Tinian Island very early on the morning of August 6th, carrying a single
4,000 kg (8,900 lb) uranium bomb codenamed "Little Boy". At 8:15 am,
Little Boy was dropped from 9,400 m (31,000 ft) above the city,
freefalling for 57 seconds while a complicated series of fuse triggers
looked for a target height of 600 m (2,000 ft) above the ground. At the
moment of detonation, a small explosive initiated a super-critical mass
in 64 kg (141 lbs) of uranium. Of that 64 kg, only .7 kg (1.5 lbs)
underwent fission, and of that mass, only 600 milligrams was converted
into energy - an explosive energy that seared everything within a few
miles, flattened the city below with a massive shockwave, set off a
raging firestorm and bathed every living thing in deadly radiation.
Nearly 70,000 people are believed to have been killed immediately, with
possibly another 70,000 survivors dying of injuries and radiation
exposure by 1950. Today, Hiroshima houses a Hiroshima Peace Memorial
Museum near ground zero, promoting a hope to end the existence of all
nuclear weapons. (34 photos total)
A
Japanese soldier walks through a leveled area in Hiroshima, Japan in
September of 1945, one month after the detonation of a nuclear bomb
above the city. From a series of U.S. Navy photographs depicting the
suffering and ruins that resulted from the blast. (U.S. Department of
Navy)
An
aerial view of Hiroshima, viewed some time shortly before the bomb was
dropped on it in August of 1945. The scene shows a very densely built-up
area of the city on the Motoyasu River looking upstream. (Hiroshima:
The United States Strategic Bombing Survey Archive, International Center
of Photography, Purchase, with funds provided by the ICP Acquisitions
Committee, 2006) #
An
early photograph of Hiroshima, before August 1945, looking upstream on
the Motoyasu River toward what would become the most famous of all
Hiroshima landmarks - the domed Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial
Promotion Hall, immediately adjacent to ground zero. The building was
originally designed by Czech architect Jan Letzel and completed in April
1915. (Hiroshima: The United States Strategic Bombing Survey Archive,
International Center of Photography, Purchase, with funds provided by
the ICP Acquisitions Committee, 2006) #
Commander
A.F. Birch (left), shown numbering the bomb codenamed "Little Boy" unit
L-11, before loading it on trailer in Assembly Bldg. #1, prior to it
being loaded aboard the B-29 Superfortress bomber "Enola Gay", on the
base of the 509th Composite Group at Tinian Island in the Marianas
Islands in 1945. Physicist Dr. Norman Ramsey stands at right - he would
later go on to win the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1989. (U.S. National
Archives) #
"Little
Boy" unit rests on a trailer cradle in a pit below the open bomb bay
doors of the B-29 Superfortress bomber "Enola Gay" on the 509th
Composite Group base at Tinian Island in the Marianas Islands in 1945.
Little Boy was 3 m (10 ft) long, and weighed 4,000 kg (8,900 lb), but
only carried contained 64 kg (141 lbs) of uranium which would be used to
create a nuclear chain reaction, and resulting explosion. (U.S.
National Archives) #
Shortly
after 8:15 am, August 5, 1945, looking down on the rising smoke from
the atomic explosion above the city of Hiroshima from one of two U.S.
Air Force bombers from the 509th Composite Group. By the time this photo
was taken, the flash of light and intense heat from a fireball 370 m
(1,200 ft) diameter had already taken place, and an intense shockwave
radiating out faster than the speed of sound was dissipating, having
done most of its damage to ground structures and people in a circle 3.2
km (2 mi) in diameter. (U.S. National Archives) #
Shortly
after 8:15 am, August 5, 1945, looking back at the growing "mushroom"
cloud above Hiroshima. When a portion of the uranium in the bomb
underwent fission, and was transformed instantly into an energy of about
15 kilotons of TNT (about 6.3 × 1013 joules), heating a
massive fireball to a temperature of 3,980 C (7,200 F). The superheated
air and smoke rapidly rose through the atmosphere like a giant bubble,
dragging a column of smoke up with it. By the time this photo was made,
smoke had billowed 20,000 feet above Hiroshima while smoke from the
burst of the first atomic bomb had spread over 10,000 feet on the target
at the base of the column. (U.S. National Archives) #
A
view of destruction in Hiroshima, in the autumn of 1945, across one of
the branches of the river that cut across the delta the city is centered
on. (Hiroshima: The United States Strategic Bombing Survey Archive,
International Center of Photography, Purchase, with funds provided by
the ICP Acquisitions Committee, 2006) #
A
View Of ground zero in Hiroshima in the autumn of 1945, showing total
destruction resulting from dropping of the first atomic bomb. The
hypocenter (point directly below the bomb explosion) is visible in this
photograph, approximately above the Y-shaped intersection at
center-left. (U.S. National Archives) #
Click,
drag and zoom above to better view this panoramic view of a destroyed
Hiroshima, made up of five photographs taken from the roof of the
Chamber Of Commerce And Industry Building on October 6th, 1945, only 2
months after the bombing. At far left are the ruins of the Geibi Bank
Building and Shima Hospital. At center is the ruined structure of the
Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall, beyond it a bridge across the
Matoyasu River, just about at the hypocenter of the explosion. At lower
right is the still-standing structure of the Red Cross building, its
roof depressed from the shockwave. At far right is the T Bridge at the
meeting of the Matayashu River and the Ota River. To view the full
panorama image (10,000 pixels wide), click here. To see the original five component photos at 2,500px, click 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. (U.S. National Archives) #
The
Peace Flame has burned for the atomic bomb victims at the Memorial
Cenotaph at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western Japan,
Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2009. The flame has burned continuously since it was
lit on August 1, 1964. It symbolizes the anti-nuclear resolve to burn
the flame "until the day when all such weapons shall have disappeared
from the earth." (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi) #
Hiroshima today - detail from a panoramic view of Hiroshima Peace Memorial seen on April 14, 2008. Full panorama available here. (Dean S. Pemberton / CC BY-SA)#
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