The Enola Gay was escorted by two other bombers which we don't know the names.
The plane used to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima was a Boeing B-29 Superfortress nicknamed Enola Gay. The Enola Gay dropped the bomb over Hiroshima at 0815 on Monday, August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb used was nicknamed Little Boy.
The Enola Gay, the plane which dropped the bomb, was accompanied by two other planes, The Great Artiste and Necessary Evil.
No."Box Car" dropped the other one.I think it is Bockscar, and also sometimes called Bock's Car.
bock's car
The Enola Gay was escorted by two other bombers that carried cameras and a variety of measuring devices. Three other planes had left earlier in order to ascertain the weather conditions over the possible targets.
The plane used to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima was a Boeing B-29 Superfortress nicknamed Enola Gay. The Enola Gay dropped the bomb over Hiroshima at 0815 on Monday, August 6, 1945. The atomic bomb used was nicknamed Little Boy.
The Enola Gay, the plane which dropped the bomb, was accompanied by two other planes, The Great Artiste and Necessary Evil.
The bomb was. of course, carried into the country of Japan by an airplane. If you are asking about the fallout from the explosion, yes, a small amount of fallout will be carried by winds to other countries.
No."Box Car" dropped the other one.I think it is Bockscar, and also sometimes called Bock's Car.
bock's car
The bomb in Hiroshima was plutonium and the Nagasaki was uranium.
The Enola Gay was escorted by two other bombers that carried cameras and a variety of measuring devices. Three other planes had left earlier in order to ascertain the weather conditions over the possible targets.
The B-29 Superfortress bomber named "Enola Gay" dropped the atomic bomb known as "Little Boy" on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. The crew included Colonel Paul Tibbets, who was the pilot and mission commander; Lieutenant Colonel Robert A. Lewis, the copilot; and Major Thomas Ferebee, the bombardier. Other key crew members included Captain Theodore Van Kirk, the navigator, and Captain Jacob Beser, the radar operator. The mission was part of the United States' efforts to bring a swift end to World War II.
There were 2. The first one was Enola gay and the other was Bockscart.
Lost: battleships Arizona, Oklahoma; target ship Utah; destroyers Cassin, Downes Sunk or beached but savagable: battleships West Virginia, California, Nevada; minelayer Oglala Damaged: battleships Tennessee, Maryland, Pennsylvania; cruisers Helena, Honolulu, Raleigh; destroyer Shaw; seaplane tender Curtiss; repair ship Vestal
Hiroshima had a base but some other locations were desiganet but at last Hiroshima was chosen.
nagasaki