Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 30 de ene. de 2016 · VERY Interesting film about the lead up to the U.S.'s decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan. Filled with fascinating interviews both on the Japan side and the U.S. side, this leads to an impression that perhaps dropping the bomb wasn't really necessary. Oppenheimer especially looks guilt ridden about the whole thing.

  2. 21 de nov. de 2021 · The Decision to Drop the Bomb. Len Giovannitti, Fred Freed. Routledge, Nov 21, 2021 - History - 366 pages. This book, first published in 1967, examines the circumstances and events that led to the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan, devastating Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The death of President Roosevelt three weeks before the end of the ...

  3. For years debate has raged over whether the US was right to drop two atomic bombs on Japan during the final weeks of the Second World War. The first bomb, dropped on the city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945, resulted in a total death toll of around 140,000. The second, which hit Nagasaki on 9 August, killed around 50,000 people. But was the US justified? We put the question to historians and two ...

  4. 2 de feb. de 2016 · Combines historic film clips, an analysis of the facts behind the decision to drop the atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima, and personal interviews with the...

    • 35 min
    • 18.7K
    • A/V Geeks 16mm Films
  5. The Decision To Drop The Bomb by National Broadcasting Company.; Encyclopedia Britannica Films, inc.; Films Incorporated.Combines historic film clips, an ana...

    • 35 min
    • 11.4K
    • Nuclear Vault
  6. Nuclear materials were processed in reactors located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Hanford, Washington. At its peak, the Manhattan Project employed 130,000 Americans at thirty-seven facilities across the country. On July 16, 1945 the first nuclear bomb was detonated in the early morning darkness at a military test-facility at Alamogordo, New Mexico.

  7. 1 de sept. de 1995 · September/October 1995 Published on September 1, 1995. The author, a historian at Pennsylvania State University, enters the debate about the decision to drop nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. A vigorous defender of the traditional interpretation, namely, that the use of the bomb was inevitable in view of the war up to that point and ...