My answer is nucleolus
Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.Splitting the atom was a great achievement. Creating an atom bomb was not such a positive outcome of that achievement.
both r useless Sometimes "atom" bomb is also used to describe a hydrogen bomb. Strictly, historically speaking, the atom bomb works via the energy released when a heavy atom nucleus such as uranium is split (called nuclear fission). This is also the energy source for nuclear power stations. A hydrogen bomb works via the energy released on fusing (called nuclear fusion) two light atoms (such as hydrogen) together - the huge pressure needed is derived from an atom bomb. This situation arises because the atoms towards in the middle of the periodic table are more stable, than those nearer the ends. A lot of electricity is derived nowadays from nuclear fission (nuclear power stations) but no significant power has yet been derived from nuclear fusion, though a lot of work is being done on it.
The atom bomb was primarily created by the Manhattan Project, a research and development project during World War II that involved scientists from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Physicists such as J. Robert Oppenheimer, Enrico Fermi, and Leo Szilard played key roles in its development.
Pure fission atom bombs contain no gas.Atom bombs using a technique called fusion boosting have a small canister of deuterium and/or tritium gas (hydrogenisotopes). Some of this gas is injected into the sealed hollow pit (core) of the bomb as the last stage of arming.
compounds
No, it is called an atom bomb because it derives its power from splitting uranium and/or plutonium atoms.
B for what? I only remembered the atom bomb test called "Trintity" or sort of.
Lysosome
It was a atom bomb. The uranium one and it was called the "little boy".
Los Almos did much work but J. Robert Oppenheimer is called the father of the atom bomb
Atom Bomb goes by Adam Bomb.
Nuclear. At the time it was called an atom bomb.
Atom Bomb is 5' 11".
No the atom bomb is not more powerful then the H-bomb
Atom Bomb = Uranium H-Bomb = Hydrogen
The two atom bombs were the plutonium bomb and the uranium bomb.
An atom bomb is huge and massive. By Gabriel WAB