They died from the radiation from the bomb getting in to their systym.
The bomb was a plutonium implosion type. The blast was large and the radiation fallout is deadly. Most of the people that died were from radiation poisoning.
100,000 people died instantly when the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. 70,000 more died later from radiation sickness, burns and cancer.
There were around 160,000 death related to Hiroshima bomb. Half of the count died instantly when the bomb went off, the other ones died withing two weeks of radiation sickness.
many people died from the atomic bomb but the radiation still lingers there and can be very bad for people (i got this info out of a book
They all died lots of people died, yes, but the radiation from the bomb also affected the survivours and gave them diseases that their decendants got. so a child years after the atomic bomb could die as like an after effect
There were around 90,000-166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000-80,000 in Nagasaki. Half of them died from radiation sickness.
See website: Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. by saying when they died
The very instant the bomb dropped 800,000 people died instantly. The ones who lived had burns and radiation poisoning. Even today there are people who are still suffering.
6 people died.
Lots.
When the bomb was originally used the scientists made educated estimations on the after effect of the atom bomb on the land and on the people. They thought people would be safe with in a 50 mile radius and thought the radiation would "die out" within 10 years. Later they concluded it could be 50-100 years before no radiation would be detected. It amazed the physicians of the gravity of the injuries and the "vaporization" of thousands of people. For the next ten years, people who had been exposed to the radiation died from radiation poisoning and cancers. If they did not die right away from radiation sickness they died within months from serious burns. Some of the burn victims survived but they suffered for the rest of their lives. A team of Japanese and American scientist are still monitoring the after effects of the radiation fallout. One of the sad things that happened was a monsoon hit Nagasaki several weeks after the bomb damaged the city. This hard rain and wind further scattered the radiation poison.