Albuquerque Journal

Los Alamos app allows users to visit 1940s ‘Atomic City’

Users explore how A-bomb was made

- BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS ASSOCIATED PRESS

Los Alamos, a once secret city where scientists participat­ed in the nation’s classified World War II nuclear developmen­t program, can now be experience­d much like it was then with a new app.

The “Los Alamos: The Secret City of The Manhattan Project” iPhone app takes users through an “augmented reality” while visiting the northern New Mexico city to

This July 16, 1945, photo shows an aerial view after the first atomic explosion at the Trinity Test site in New Mexico. July marks the 71st anniversar­y of that test.

see it in its 1940s character. The app was created by Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Packed with games, historical nuggets and role playing, the app allows users to feel what it was like to join a secret project in an unknown location where the future of the world was at stake, said Jennifer Payne, resource management team leader in Los Alamos’ Environmen­tal Stewardshi­p Group. Because Los Alamos has changed since the project and is now a modern city, Payne said the app takes users on a virtual tour of a Manhattan Project world that is gone.

“It took us more than a year to create,” Payne said. “Almost all of the structures from that era don’t exist anymore.”

Once downloaded and opened, users will receive a

“recruitmen­t telegram” to begin the virtual journey from 109 E. Palace Ave. in Santa Fe. That’s the same location where the original Project Y staff members joined the team. Users will receive an initial “clearance” there, then board a bus into the mountains to explore “the Hill.”

From there, Payne said users can choose how much informatio­n they want to know while they explore Los Alamos as the bomb is developed.

Of course, no actual nuclear secrets are shared, she said.

Officials said the project is a collaborat­ion of Los Alamos National Laboratory’s VISIBLE team, the Bradbury Science Museum and staff history specialist­s. Developers also are working on an Android app. During World War II, Los Alamos scientists worked to develop the atomic bomb that was dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The secret program provided enriched uranium for the atomic bomb. It also involved facilities in Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Hanford, Wash.

July marks the 71st anniversar­y of the Trinity Test in southern New Mexico. The milestone comes amid renewed interest in the Manhattan Project thanks to new books, online video testimonie­s and the recently canceled TV drama series “Manhattan.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This October 1965 photo shows a “Fat Man” nuclear bomb of the type tested at Trinity Site, N.M., and dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945.
ASSOCIATED PRESS This October 1965 photo shows a “Fat Man” nuclear bomb of the type tested at Trinity Site, N.M., and dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945.
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