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Credit: ENERGY.GOV
Army Post Exchange

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Credit: James E. Westcott
A billboard encouraging secrecy amongst Oak Ridge workers

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Credit: United States Air Force
Casing of a "Fat Man"-style nuclear bomb, painted like the one dropped on Nagasaki.

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Credit: Ed Westcott
6994-1 DOE photo Ed Westcott 6-9-1951 Oak Ridge Tennessee

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Credit: Probably Ed Westcott
Thermal Diffusion Process Building (F01) at S-50 completed

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Credit: Eye Steel Film from Canada
General Fusion plasma injector

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Credit: Not identified.
The preparation of the Gadget for the Trinity test, July 1945

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Credit: Unknown (see OTRS)
A pressure vessel being lowered into a furnace during the Manhattan Project for reduction to uranium metal. Uranium halide and sacrificial metal are in the vessel. This is part of the Ames process.
Attribution: The Ames Laboratory, USDOE (http://www.ameslab.gov/)

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Credit: US Army Corps of Engineers
"100-B REACTOR AND WATER TREATMENT AREA." B Reactor is at center.

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Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos laboratory Water Boiler

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Pictured is an Officer of the watch aboard HMS Vanguard. The Royal Navy has operated the UK’s Continuous at Sea Deterrent since 1967 when the first SSBN – or Ship Submersible Ballistic Nuclear – HMS Resolution began patrolling armed with the Polaris missile system. In 1996 HMS Vanguard, the first submarine armed with the Trident missile system, arrived on the Clyde and took over deterrent patrol duties from the Resolution Class. The four Vanguard-class submarines form the UK's strategic nuclear deterrent force. Each of the four boats are armed with Trident 2 D5 nuclear missiles. Like all submarines the Vanguard Class are steam powered, their reactors converting water into steam to drive the engines and generate electricity.

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Credit: Ken Filar
Visualization of the proposed SPARC tokamak experiment. Using high-field magnets built with newly available, high-temperature superconductor, this experiment would be the first controlled fusion plasma to produce net energy output. (Credit: Ken Filar, PSFC Research Affiliate)"

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Credit: Unknown (see OTRS also)
Interior of an Ames Process pressure vessel with slag coating the outside and bottom (after reaction and removal of uranium metal). ~1943
Attribution: The Ames Laboratory, USDOE (http://www.ameslab.gov/)

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Animation representing how explosive lenses are used to compress a fissile core inside an implosion-type nuclear weapon.

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Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Krakatau subcritical experiment being lowered into the floor of the tunnel of the U1a Complex at the Nevada Test Site. The cables extending from the hole will carry data from the experiment to recording instruments.

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Credit: National Nuclear Security Administration / Nevada Site Office
TRINITY PHOTOGRAPH - Alamogordo, NM - Trinity Test, July 16, 1945 - Vital Components are loaded at the old McDonald Ranch for the trip to the Trinity test site.

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Credit: ArtMechanic
replica of the nuclear reactor at Haigerloch museum

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Credit: Ed Westcott
K-25 operating level. Note operator on a bicycle.

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Credit: Original svg images are made by Fastfission, and animated by User:was a bee. 元の一連のsvg画像はFastfissionさんの手によるものです。私User:was a beeがGiamというフリーウェアで、それら一連の画像をGIFアニメにしました。
Animated explanation of implosion design.GIF アニメによる爆縮レンズ構造の説明。

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Credit: style="background: #EEE; vertical-align: middle; white-space: nowrap; text-align: center; " class="table-Un­known" | author
A biscuit of uranium metal after reduction via the Ames Process. c.1943.
Attribution: The Ames Laboratory, USDOE (http://www.ameslab.gov/)

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Credit: Ed Westcott (see [1])
Security screening at the Clinton Engineer Works. Lie detector test

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Credit: Nick-D
Arming plugs for a 'Little Boy' type atomic bomb on display at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. The plugs were found in the navigator's compartment in the B-29 bomber Enola Gay. The green plug may have been used in the bomb which was dropped on Hiroshima. The plug on the right is probably a spare.

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Credit: Federal government of the United States
Castle Bravo nuclear test.

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Credit: Jack W. Aeby, July 16, 1945, Civilian worker at Los Alamos laboratory, working under the aegis of the Manhattan Project.
Famous color photograph of the "Trinity" shot, the first nuclear test explosion.

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Wendover AFB Tower & Operations Building, photo by John Stanton 15 Oct 2016

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Credit: U.S. Department of Energy
This operation conducted at the Nevada Test Site consisted of 11 atmospheric tests. There were three airdrops, seven tower tests, and one airburst. This operation involved the testing of new theories, using both fission and fusion devices

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Credit: Ed Westcott
Central control room at K-25

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Credit: Los Alamos Photo 26406
Remote handling of a kilocurie source of radiolanthanum for RaLa testing

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Credit: Federal government of the United States
Trinity Test. Norris Bradbury, group leader for bomb assembly, stands next to the partially assembled Gadget atop the test tower. Later, he became the director of Los Alamos, after the departure of Oppenheimer.

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Credit: Ed Westcott
K-25 at Oak Ridge. Welding in Prefabrication Shop.

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Credit: Ed Westcott / US Army / Manhattan Engineer District
Shift change at the Y-12 uranium enrichment facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, during the Manhattan Project. Notice the billboard: "Make CEW count — Continue to protect project information."

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Credit: ENERGY.GOV
The world's first nuclear reactor during assembly in the squash court under the West Stands of Stagg Field...

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Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory
The Krakatau subcritical experiment is being prepared to be lowered into the floor of the tunnel of the U1a Complex at the Nevada Test Site.

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Credit: Gazjo at [[wikipedia:|English Wikipedia]]
Site of first atomic test on mainland Australia, known as Totem One. Photo taken by Gazjo on 1st January 2006

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Credit: USAF
Set of four Mk-28 thermonuclear bombs in a clip-in assembly for loading into an aircraft.

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Credit: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
In September 1945, many participants returned to the Trinity Test site for news crews. Here Oppenheimer and Groves examine the remains of one the bases of the steel test tower.

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Credit: Samat Jain
Looking at the front of the McDonald-Schmidt Ranch House. The concrete box in front of the stone wall is the remnant of a time capsule buried in 1984 when the house was restored. The time capsule was opened in Oct 2009. The ranch was used for assembling Gadget's plutonium core.

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Credit: Universal International Newsreel
The Grapple-Orange Herald atmospheric nuclear test of 31 May 1957 on Malden Island, reported by Universal International Newsreel as "British H-Bomb Fired As Debate On Atom Test Ban Rages" on 3 June 1957. It was claimed at the time to be the first British test of a H-bomb. It was later revealed to be a fusion boosted fission nuclear weapon test, where the fusion boosting failed to increase the yield. It still yielding 720 kT of explosive power, probably the largest A-bomb test ever.

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The "Baker" explosion, part of Operation Crossroads, a nuclear weapon test by the United States military at Bikini Atoll, Micronesia, on 1946. The wider, exterior cloud is actually just a condensation cloud caused by the Wilson chamber effect, and was very brief. The actual mushroom cloud is inside the condensation cloud (compare with this image, a photo taken slightly later, after the condensation cloud had cleared). The water released by the explosion was highly radioactive and contaminated many of the ships that were set up near it. Some were otherwise undamaged and sent to Hunter's Point in San Francisco, California for decontamination. Those which could not be decontaminated were sunk a number of miles off the coast of San Francisco.

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Credit: Cpl. Lynn P. Walker, Jr. (Marine Corps)
Battered religious figures stand watch on a hill above a tattered valley. Nagasaki, Japan. September 24, 1945, 6 weeks after the city was destroyed by the world's second atomic bomb attack. Photo by Cpl. Lynn P. Walker, Jr. (Marine Corps) NARA FILE #: 127-N-136176

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Credit: Ed Westcott / US Army / Manhattan Engineer District

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Credit: Samat Jain
Trinity Site obelisk.

The black plaque on top reads:

Trinity Site
Where The World's First Nuclear Device Was Exploded On July 16, 1945
Erected 1965 White Sands Missile Range J. Frederick Thorlin Major General U.S. Army Commanding

The gold plaque below it declares the site a National Historic Landmark, and reads:

Trinity Site has been designated a National Historical Landmark
This Site Possesses National Significance In Commemorating The History of the United States of America
1975 National Park Service United States Department of the Interior

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Credit: Ed Westcott / US Army / Manhattan Engineering District[2]
Calutron operators at their panels, in the Y-12 plant at Oak Ridge, Tennessee during World War II. The calutrons were used to refine uranium ore into fissile material. During the Manhattan Project effort to construct an atomic explosive, workers toiled in secrecy, most having no idea to what end their labors were directed. Gladys Owens, the woman seated in the foreground, didn't understand the exact purpose of her job until seeing this photo in a public tour of the facility fifty years later.

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Credit: Federal government of the United States
"TRINITY PHOTOGRAPH - Alamogordo, NM - Trinity test, July 16, 1945 - "JUMBO," a 120-ton steel vessel, was designed to contain the explosion of the bomb's high explosive and permit recovery of the active material in case on nuclear failure." (was not used for this purpose during test)

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Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory
Los Alamos ranch house,16 October 1945. Robert Oppenheimer (left), Leslie Groves (center) and Robert Sproul (right) at the ceremony to present the Los Alamos Laboratory with the Army-Navy E Award

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Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory
This image was copied from wikipedia:en. The original description was: Recreation (simulation) of the Slotin incident of "tickling the dragon's tail" which shows the configuration of beryllium reflector shells prior to the criticality. Updated caption: Configuration of beryllium reflector shells prior to the accident 21 May 1946.

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Credit: Cherie Cullen
United Kingdom Defense Minister Des Browne addresses the audience during a reception hosted by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, left, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Mutual Defense Agreement between the United States and the U.K. at the State Department in Washington, D.C., July 9, 2008.

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Credit: LA(Phot) Will Haigh
Royal Navy submarine HMS Victorious departs HMNB Clyde under the Scottish summer sunshine to conduct continuation training. The Royal Navy has operated the UK’s Continuous at Sea Deterrent since 1967 when the first SSBN – or Ship Submersible Ballistic Nuclear – HMS Resolution began patrolling armed with the Polaris missile system.