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K
Documenti & Materiali K
Il
16 luglio 1945, in un luogo chiamato Trinity,
una bomba al plutonio venne montata sulla parte
superiore di una torretta.La bomba venne fatta
esplodere e produsse un intenso lampo ed una
sfera di fuoco che raggiunse un diametro di 600
metri in due secondi, ed un'altezza di oltre 12
Km in forma di fungo.La potenza esplosiva fu
equivalente a 18.6 kilotons di TNT. Quaranta
secondi dopo, lo spostamento d' aria dell'
esplosione raggiunse i bunker di osservazione
con un lungo e profondo ruggito. Così ebbe
inizio l'era atomica ....
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My observations during the explosion
at Trinity
on July 16. 1945
di Enrico Fermi |
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On the morning of the 16th of July, I
was stationed at the Base Camp at
Trinity in a position about ten miles
from the site of the explosion. The
explosion took place at about 5:30 A.M.
I had my face protected by a large board
in which a piece of dark welding glass
had been inserted. My first impression
of the explosion was the very intense
flash of light, and a sensation of heat
on the parts of my body that were
exposed. Although I did not look
directly towards the object, I had the
impression that suddenly the countryside
became brighter than in full daylight. I
subsequently looked in the direction of
the explosion through the dark glass and
could see something that looked like a
conglomeration of flames that promptly
started rising.
After a few seconds the rising flames
lost their brightness and appeared as a
huge pillar of smoke with an expanded
head like a gigantic mushroom that rose
rapidly beyond the clouds probably to a
height of the order of 30,000 feet.
After reaching its full height, the
smoke stayed stationary for a while
before the wind started dispersing it.
About 40 seconds after the explosion the
air blast reached me. I tried to
estimate its strength by dropping from
about six feet small pieces of paper
before, during and after the passage of
the blast wave. Since at the time, there
was no wind I could observe very
distinctly and actually measure the
displacement of the pieces of paper that
were in the process of falling while the
blast was passing. The shift was about 2
1/2 meters, which, at the time, I
estimated to correspond to the blast
that would be produced by ten thousand
tons of T.N.T.
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