Well, if you want to know the EXACT answer, I don't have it. sorry. BUT, roughly it was about a few hundred. Mostly of radiation sickness. When they dropped the bomb, like TONS of people died. It's sad really. I wish this country had won the war another way, but it is what it is.
The Manhattan Project involved approximately 130,000 people at its peak, including scientists, engineers, military personnel, and support staff. The project was a massive collaborative effort primarily led by the United States, with contributions from the United Kingdom and Canada. Key figures included physicists like J. Robert Oppenheimer and Enrico Fermi, among many others. The scale of the project reflected the urgency of developing atomic weapons during World War II.
He killed 19 people
If you are referring to how many people were killed in the Holocaust, there were around 6 million people killed.
Over 140,00 people were killed in Heroshima, Japan
The major scientists in on the Manhattan Project were Enrico Fermi, Leo Szilard, Robert Oppenheimer, Otto Hahn, Niels Bohr, Richard Feynman, Edward Teller and more.The most important were The major scientists in on the Manhattan Project were Robert Oppenheimer, Enrico Fermi, Leo Szilard, Otto Hahn, Niels Bohr, Richard Feynman and Edward Teller.
130000 people
More than one hundred twenty thousand jobs were created from the Manhattan Project.
four
Many people that worked on the Manhattan Project eventually felt this way. One group of them started publishing the magazine "The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists".
The Manhattan Project began in 1942 and ended in August 1947, with the establishment of the Atomic Energy Commission. A rough estimate is that in this time 15 to 20 atomic bombs had been built, with 5 of those detonated, leaving a stockpile by the time the Manhattan Project ended of 10 to 15 atomic bombs.
2996 people were killed btw its how many people were killed lol
Most of them were patriots and some other was soviet spies.
none
Even though the exact number is not yet estimated it was marked in the several thousands, even people today are still dying from radiation sickness clung to the land.
There are many Ben benjamins but one is a scientist that has seen the 1st nuclear bomb in action on the Manhattan project
1,000,000
27 people were killed.