Atomic bombs don't do that.
The closest thing to what you are describing is a "laydown" bomb, a bomb designed to destroy airfield runways using a parachute to put it gently on the ground then detonate it later after a delay of seconds to days. While such atomic bombs have been built and stockpiled, none had ever been used or tested. The nonnuclear "laydown" system was tested by dropping nonnuclear dummy bombs and the atomic bomb to go inside was tested; but entirely separately.
In an attack using "laydown" bombs several would be dropped with different delays, so that some exploded very soon after landing causing destruction of the runways, then others would explode at various later times to prevent repairs and harass the repair crews.
Absolutely not, they might have attempted to shoot down the strike planes and captured a bomb.
He had just sat down on the the porch of his private hospital to read the news paper when the bomb hit
That took only one bomb. On August 6 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb over Hiroshima destroying the city.
Michael Jo was 12 when he scored his first Touch down!
While there is no perfect defense against the atomic bomb, the US has at least attempted to create antimissile defense systems that can shoot down missiles before they arrive in the US with nuclear bombs. The only real defense is to keep them from arriving.
"Yee-hah" as he rides an atomic bomb down while waving his cowboy hat .
It first touched down near Protection, Kansas.
Because it ended the war, and it caused a lot of destruction down in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. People melted in an instant. I'm Japanese.
max mcgee
Yes. Of course. However, if an atomic bomb is exploded in space, which is possible, it does not produce sound as there is no atmosphere. The energy is then dissipated into electronic energy that results in EMP (Electro-Magnetic Pulse) that is transmitted down to the earth.
It uses two sections of uranium, one shaped like a cup, and one shaped as a bullet that is fired down a gun barrel into the cup.
The first act takes place about a month before the bomb is to be tested, and the second act is set in the early morning of July 15, 1945 (the day of the test). During the second act, time frequently slows down for the characters and then snaps back into reality. The opera ends in the final, prolonged moment before the bomb is detonated