Hiroshima: in a flash, the world changed
TOKYO: The atomic bomb the United States dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, killed tens of thousands and flattened the Japanese city in an instant.
‘‘Little Boy,’’ as it was known, was the endpoint of years of research, wrangling a physics theory into a mechanism that would release the energy that binds together atoms.
The concept was simple: driving together enough uranium or plutonium at high enough speeds would create a ‘‘critical mass’’ so quickly that it would start an uncontrolled, nearly instantaneous chain reaction of neutrons knocking apart atomic nuclei.
Each atom’s lost mass is converted to energy at a staggering exchange rate. Only 1.09kg of the 64kg of uranium in Little Boy became energy, but it was the equivalent of detonating 13.6 million kg of TNT, according to Los Alamos National Laboratory calculations.
About 2.6sq km of Hiroshima was flattened, crushed by the hammer blow of Little Boy detonating about 580m overhead. Nearly everyone in that area died instantly. Further away, the bomb’s heat ignited buildings and people, and deadly radiation bloomed.
Since World War 2, no country has attacked another with a nuclear weapon. But at least eight have developed them. More than 2000 nuclear weapons have been detonated in experiments since 1945.
Thousands of nuclear weapons now sit in arsenals around the world, ready to be deployed by aircraft or missile.
Even so, 75 years have passed without a nuclear attack.
‘‘I am hopeful that we can stretch the streak for decades more — but the real question is whether nuclear deterrence will work forever,’’ head of the East Asia Nonproliferation Project at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies Jeffrey Lewis said.
‘‘I am not so sure about that. And that means, sooner or later, our luck will run out.’’
Japan will commemorate the 75th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with services today and on Sunday.
— Reuters