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  2. 1945–1998 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1945–1998

    The United States conducts several nuclear tests after the war. The Soviet Union and United Kingdom then gain nuclear weapons, increasing the number of explosions. [5] [6] The piece continues until it gets to Pakistan's first nuclear test in 1998. [7] The total number of weapons detonated is 2053. [8] The piece used sound and light to startle ...

  3. Operation Tumbler–Snapper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Tumbler–Snapper

    The Tumbler-Snapper detonations included some particularly fallout-heavy weapons. Of particular note is shot George, which contaminated more citizens than any other nuclear test in the United States. George alone accounted for some 7 percent of all population exposure to radiation during the 1,032 nuclear tests performed by the United States ...

  4. Project Mogul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Mogul

    Project Mogul (sometimes referred to as Operation Mogul) was a top secret project by the US Army Air Forces involving microphones flown on high-altitude balloons, whose primary purpose was long-distance detection of sound waves generated by Soviet atomic bomb tests. The project was carried out from 1947 until early 1949.

  5. Operation Crossroads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Crossroads

    First Pictures Atomic Blast!, 1946/07/08 (1946) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive; Nuclear Test Film – Project Crossroads is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive (42m32s) Atom Bomb (Joe Bonica's Movie of the Month) (ca. 1955) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet ...

  6. Upshot-Knothole Annie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upshot-Knothole_Annie

    The device used in the blast was a 16 kt Mark 5 Nuclear Bomb - a low yield fission weapon, detonated 90 meters / 300 feet above the ground. [2] The live TV coverage was recorded on a kinescope, so it is a rare record of the sound an actual atomic bomb makes. [3] One of the automobiles after the test.

  7. Operation Teapot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Teapot

    The MET was the first bomb core to include uranium-233 (a rarely used fissile isotope that is the product of thorium-232 neutron absorption), along with plutonium; this was based on the plutonium/U-235 pit from the TX-7E, a prototype Mark 7 nuclear bomb design used in the 1951 Operation Buster-Jangle Easy test.

  8. The Day After Trinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_After_Trinity

    The beginning of the nuclear age is not a single subject but a series of subjects that lead one to another in an unending chain reaction...That this is tacitly recognized is the most valuable aspect of The Day after Trinity: J. Robert Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb, Jon Else's documentary feature that opens today (January 20, 1981) at the ...

  9. Taylor–von Neumann–Sedov blast wave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taylor–von_Neumann...

    Taylor–von Neumann–Sedov blast wave (or sometimes referred to as Sedov–von Neumann–Taylor blast wave) refers to a blast wave induced by a strong explosion.The blast wave was described by a self-similar solution independently by G. I. Taylor, John von Neumann and Leonid Sedov during World War II.