Thin_man_bomb_casings.jpg


Summary

Casings for the "Thin Man" plutonium gun weapon, developed during the Manhattan Project. The weapon shape was tested as part of Project Alberta at Wendover Field, Utah. The plutonium gun design was eventually abandoned as un-feasible, as the spontaneous fission rate of reactor-bred plutonium was much higher than expected due to unavoidably high contamination of the Plutonium 239 ( 239 Pu) with Plutonium 240 ( 240 Pu).

Licensing

  • Immediate source: John Coster-Mullen, Atom Bombs: The Top Secret Inside Story of Little Boy and Fat Man (self published, 2005). [1]
  • Ultimate source: Los Alamos/Manhattan Project
Public domain This image is a work of a United States Department of Energy (or predecessor organization) employee, taken or made as part of that person's official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government , the image is in the public domain .

Please note that national laboratories operate under varying licences and some are not free . Check the site policies of any national lab before crediting it with this tag.


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Captions

Casings of "Thin man" nuclear bombs

Items portrayed in this file

depicts