In 1942, U.S. President Roosevelt authorized a secret programme to create an atomic bomb. Major General Leslie R. Groves was put in charge with physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer designing and building the bomb in a Laboratory, code-named Project Y.
Project Y scientists began the development of two bombs – one using uranium and one using plutonium. In the Spring of 1944, the scientists found that a plutonium bomb would not work – it would blow itself apart before the two pieces of plutonium could fully unite to create the supercritical mass required for a successful explosion.
Confronted with this problem, Oppenheimer requested the team pursue the development of a plutonium bomb based on the concept of implosion: conventional explosives would be detonated around a sub-critical core of plutonium, compressing it into a supercritical mass.
On July 16, 1945, members of Project Y and other observers gathered at a remote location in New Mexico some 200 miles south of Los Alamos, near Alamogordo. Some three weeks later, a U.S. Army Air Force B-29 dropped a uranium bomb known as Little Boy (named after Roosevelt) over the Japanese City of Hiroshima. Three days later, another B-29 dropped a plutonium bomb know as Fat Boy (named after Winston Churchill) over Nagasaki. Detonated in the air, the bombs caused immense destruction and killed well over a hundred thousands people.
Two days after Fat Boy was detonated, Japan agreed to surrender and World War II came to an end.

A replica of the Fat Boy atomic bomb shell at the Bradbury Science Museum in Los Alamos, New Mexico.
Wow! What an excellent summary of the atomic bomb. Loved it!
LikeLike
Hi Manuel. Simply lovely to see you and the family yesterday and you all looked fantastic!
Welcome aboard to my blog-site and I look forward to having you along for our travels.
Amanda x
LikeLike