Hiroshima was considered a high priority military target. Nagasaki was bombed to follow up with the threat that no surrendering means more cities will be bombed.
The explosion in Nagasaki was bigger but the damage was less because of the terrain. Fat man, the bomb dropped over Nagasaki was a plutonium implosion type bomb compared with the uranium fission bomb dropped over Hiroshima.
During World War II, the event that served as the final catalyst for the Japanese surrender to the Allies was the dropping of a second atomic bomb upon Japan by American air forces. On August 9, 1945, the Japanese city of Nagasaki was destroyed completely by this bomb. Less than one week later, the Japanese initiated a total surrender to the Allies.
After Hiroshima was bombed, the next target was Kokura. Because it was overcast with clouds, the bomber was directed to go to the secondary target, Nagasaki.AnswerSeveral target cities were available, but none was scheduled to be bombed next that this contributor is aware of. If a third Japanese city was to be bombed, then a third bomb would have had to been prepared, as only two were sent to Tinian. The choice of a target city would have been made later, but it never came to that. Of course, Japan had to presume that Tokyo might be next.
If your question refers to the emotional character of Japan, the answer will eternally be "Yes." The events of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are so burned in the Japanese psyche and modern identity that time will not erase them. (This is similar to the effect of the Holocaust on the Jewish psyche or 9-11 on the American psyche.) If you are referring to physical effects, then the answer is different. The land itself has more or less returned to pre-bombing conditions (i.e. grass grows, the river water is as potable as it was, etc.) There are certain exceptions such as burned shadows and the like, but overall the places at the epicenter of the bombings show few lasting marks of the event. (This is from an environmental perspective. The bomb did eviscerate entire neighborhoods which no longer exist.) If you are referring to human maladies, the numbers of those who claim illnesses caused by the blast are tapering off, but only because most of those who were severely effected have already passed. There are still, however, a higher incidence of radiation-related diseases in the Hiroshima and Nagasaki areas.
Actually the Fatman bomb detonated almost 2 miles away from it intended target in Nagasaki. It was dropped by mistake over a factory complex in a valley outside Nagasaki, this valley contained much of the blast making the damage to Nagasaki itself less than the damage produced by the lower yield Little Boy bomb at Hiroshima (where the detonation was almost directly on target). Both bombs detonated about 1500 feet above the ground.
The U.S believed that by dropping the Atom bomb, less casualties would be taken rather than a full fledged invasion of the island.
It ended the war with less possible servicemembers lives lost.
The explosion in Nagasaki was bigger but the damage was less because of the terrain. Fat man, the bomb dropped over Nagasaki was a plutonium implosion type bomb compared with the uranium fission bomb dropped over Hiroshima.
Plane that dropped the bomb was called "Enola Gay" it was a B-29 that took off from the island of Tinnean. Less people died in Hiroshima than died in the campaign of Japan against China after the bombing of Tokyo. The B-29 that bombed Nagasaki was called "Box Car"
2 atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
During World War II, the event that served as the final catalyst for the Japanese surrender to the Allies was the dropping of a second atomic bomb upon Japan by American air forces. On August 9, 1945, the Japanese city of Nagasaki was destroyed completely by this bomb. Less than one week later, the Japanese initiated a total surrender to the Allies.
There was effectively no "fighting" involved in the bombings. By that point, the US had pretty much total air superiority and could bomb anywhere in Japan more or less at will.
"Fat Man" was dropped over Nagasaki from the B-29 bomber Bockscar, piloted by Major Charles Sweeney of the 393d Bombardment Squadron, Heavy, and exploded at 11:02 AM (JST), at an altitude of about 1,650 feet (500 m), with a yield of about 21 kilotons of TNT or 88 terajoules. The Mitsubishi-Urakami Ordnance Works, the factory that manufactured the type 91 torpedoes released in the attack on Pearl Harbor, was destroyed in the blast. Because of poor visibility due to cloud cover, the bomb missed its intended detonation point, and damage was somewhat less extensive than that in Hiroshima. An estimated 39,000 people were killed outright by the bombing at Nagasaki, and a further 25,000 were injured. Thousands more died later from related blast and burn injuries, and hundreds more from radiation illnesses from exposure to the bomb's initial radiation. The bombing raid on Nagasaki had the third highest fatality rate in World War IIafter the nuclear strike on Hiroshima and the March 9/10 1945 fire bombing raid on Tokyo.[
After Hiroshima was bombed, the next target was Kokura. Because it was overcast with clouds, the bomber was directed to go to the secondary target, Nagasaki.AnswerSeveral target cities were available, but none was scheduled to be bombed next that this contributor is aware of. If a third Japanese city was to be bombed, then a third bomb would have had to been prepared, as only two were sent to Tinian. The choice of a target city would have been made later, but it never came to that. Of course, Japan had to presume that Tokyo might be next.
If your question refers to the emotional character of Japan, the answer will eternally be "Yes." The events of Hiroshima and Nagasaki are so burned in the Japanese psyche and modern identity that time will not erase them. (This is similar to the effect of the Holocaust on the Jewish psyche or 9-11 on the American psyche.) If you are referring to physical effects, then the answer is different. The land itself has more or less returned to pre-bombing conditions (i.e. grass grows, the river water is as potable as it was, etc.) There are certain exceptions such as burned shadows and the like, but overall the places at the epicenter of the bombings show few lasting marks of the event. (This is from an environmental perspective. The bomb did eviscerate entire neighborhoods which no longer exist.) If you are referring to human maladies, the numbers of those who claim illnesses caused by the blast are tapering off, but only because most of those who were severely effected have already passed. There are still, however, a higher incidence of radiation-related diseases in the Hiroshima and Nagasaki areas.
Actually the Fatman bomb detonated almost 2 miles away from it intended target in Nagasaki. It was dropped by mistake over a factory complex in a valley outside Nagasaki, this valley contained much of the blast making the damage to Nagasaki itself less than the damage produced by the lower yield Little Boy bomb at Hiroshima (where the detonation was almost directly on target). Both bombs detonated about 1500 feet above the ground.
Absolutely. However they should be tested for radiological contamination before being eaten. In both Hiroshima and Nagasaki bamboo naturally sprouted from their rhizome in less than a week after the attacks.