Difference between revisions of "Little Boy"

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'''Little Boy''' was one of the two original [[American]] designs for the [[atomic bomb]] developed at [[Los Alamos]] during [[World War II]]. The other design was called [[Fat man]].
 
'''Little Boy''' was one of the two original [[American]] designs for the [[atomic bomb]] developed at [[Los Alamos]] during [[World War II]]. The other design was called [[Fat man]].
  
Little boy consisted of two masses of [[Uranium]]-235 as [[radioactive]] material. A "[[gun]]-assembly method" ignited the bomb as follows: one subcritical mass of [[uranium]] was fired at another, and together they reached a critical mass to set off a [[nuclear]] explosion.  
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Little Boy consisted of two masses of [[Uranium]]-235 as [[radioactive]] material. A "[[gun]]-assembly method" ignited the bomb as follows: one subcritical mass of [[uranium]] was fired at another, and together they reached a critical mass to set off a [[nuclear]] explosion.  
  
Little boy was dropped on [[Hiroshima]] [[Japan]] on August 6th, 1945. It is estimated that the bomb killed 140,000 people.  
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Little Boy (or "LB") was dropped on [[Hiroshima]] [[Japan]] on August 6th, 1945 with an estimated yield of 12.5 kilotons. It is estimated that the bomb killed 140,000 people.
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Little Boy was not deployed after World War II, however U.S. Navy assembly personnel were trained on the weapon until 1950 by the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project.  
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==

Revision as of 14:04, May 9, 2009

Schematic view of the inside of Little Boy.

Little Boy was one of the two original American designs for the atomic bomb developed at Los Alamos during World War II. The other design was called Fat man.

Little Boy consisted of two masses of Uranium-235 as radioactive material. A "gun-assembly method" ignited the bomb as follows: one subcritical mass of uranium was fired at another, and together they reached a critical mass to set off a nuclear explosion.

Little Boy (or "LB") was dropped on Hiroshima Japan on August 6th, 1945 with an estimated yield of 12.5 kilotons. It is estimated that the bomb killed 140,000 people.

Little Boy was not deployed after World War II, however U.S. Navy assembly personnel were trained on the weapon until 1950 by the Armed Forces Special Weapons Project.

See Also