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Nuclear Technology And Its Impact On The Atomic Age

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On August 6th and 9th, 1945 the first atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki Japan. With the use of these new weapons a door was opened that could never be closed, a new and uncertain era was now upon the world, and the use of atomic power could mean the betterment or destruction of a nation at a moment’s notice. Whether you like it or not, you live in the atomic age and it can have many implications that you may or may not know about. The Manhattan Project is well known to have developed the first two atomic bombs, fat man, and little boy, but nuclear technology was being researched many years before this. Uranium was first found in 1789 by Martin Klaproth, and was discovered to have ionizing radiation in 1895 by Wilhelm Rontgen (Outline History of Nuclear Energy). More and more information on uranium and other materials were being discovered, such as: radioactive materials emitting alpha particles in 1896 by Henri Becquerel, in 1902 the discovery of radiation being a spontaneous event by Ernest Rutherford, Niels Bohr and his increased understanding of the atom, in 1932 when James Chadwick discovered the neutron, etc. Other nations also spent resources on developing nuclear technology such as in Russia with their Radium Institute of Leningrad FTI, but was hampered with Stalin’s purges that eliminated prominent scientists working there; British scientists developed the concept of the atomic bomb with the MAUD committee in 1940 and continued research on the

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