The dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki led to the end of World War II. It also sparked a global arms race as countries raced to develop their own nuclear weapons. Additionally, it raised ethical and moral concerns about the use of such powerful and destructive weapons.
If you mean "atomic" as in the Atomic Bomb, then the word "nuclear" could be substituted = Nuclear Bomb.
A hydrogen bomb, also known as a thermonuclear bomb, is more powerful than an atomic bomb. It relies on nuclear fusion, where atoms are combined, to release immense amounts of energy. In comparison, an atomic bomb uses nuclear fission, where atoms are split, to generate explosive energy.
The first atomic bomb, "Little Boy," contained uranium-235 as its radioactive isotope.
Uranium-235 was used in the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
While the atomic bomb was not made in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the uranium used in the bomb was enriched at the Oak Ridge facility as part of the Manhattan Project during World War II. Oak Ridge played a significant role in the development of the atomic bomb by providing the enriched uranium needed for the bomb's construction.
the atomic bomb was not discovered, it was invented then built.
it didn't
The Battle of Okinawa did not lead to the atomic bomb, this battle happened in 1945 just a couple of months before the Manhattan Project completed the atomic bomb which they had been working on since 1942. With or without the Battle of Okinawa the atomic bomb would have been finished at the same time and dropped on Japan at the same time.
If you consider the US atomic bomb is a Christian bomb, the French atomic bomb is also Christian bomb and so on, then you can name the Pakistani atomic bomb an Islamic bomb.
how was the atomic bomb repaired
FDR
18th May1998, but its not atomic bomb (its nuclear bomb)
porket may atomic , bomb agad,
the us created the atomic bomb
Germany never had an atomic bomb.
It was both: an atomic bomb using uranium as its fuel.
Yes, Albert Einstein signed a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1939 warning about the potential of atomic weapons. While he did not conduct the research himself, he was aware of the theoretical calculations and implications of nuclear fission that could lead to the development of an atomic bomb.