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The metaverse.
nuclear bomb tutorial for beginners easy
Sheldon is so happy with his cats that are all named after scientists who worked on the Manhattan Project. That is all of them except for the cat he is holding who is named Zazzles because it's so zazzy!! I can totally relate to that logic!!😁🤣🤣😻😻😁
Comment from Facebook (R.G. on Radio War Nerd)
Jesus goddamn Christ.
A few weeks ago we watched the movie Oppenheimer. It was good, a nicely done biography of him. But after it was over I found myself wishing someone could do a film on the creation of the bomb. An ensemble piece that did not focus on any one person, but told the dozens of stories, the tragic accidents, the funny slip ups, the characters that took part. Yes it is easier to write a story focussing on one person. It is also easier for audiences to understand. But the Manhattan project was bigger than that and the story has never been told.
Camera bunker at Trinity Site, New Mexico, where the world's first nuclear weapon was detonated. (Library of Congress)
A detail I feel is NOT talked about enough in the BOCW fandom it's about a specific detail of Perseus
The game presents us like he was one of the Soviet spies in the Manhattan Project BUT
while the codename Perseus (and others like Mlad, Pers, Youngster, FOGEL and Mr. X) indeed was used, it wasn't the codename of a person, but of a character.
Perseus was made to protect one of their spies, Theodore Hall (who was the youngest scientist of the Manhattan Project, being only 18 years old), and probably others as well.
Chikov admitted openly in 1996 that he and other KGB officers he worked with had combined Mlad and another spy code-named “Pers” into a single spy, Perseus. “The main goal was to make the story unclear, so when the intelligence of other countries began to analyze this, it would not reveal the forms and methods of the work of Soviet intelligence”
source: Nuclear Secrets - The Perseus Papers
Theodore Hall and Perseus had some similarities like:
Both visited their parents in New York at the same time, with Perseus being recruited by the GRU there after the visit.
Same codenames (Mlad and Youngster)
And something really cool they made with Black Ops Cold War Perseus is that both the real life Perseus and the COD one aren't just one person.
The real life one was just a character made by the Soviets to spread misinformation and protect their Manhattan Project spies while the BOCW one is a whole spy network/an ideal like Viktor "Stitch" Kuzmin says in the Season 6 Outro
"Perseus was never one man, it's an ideal, bigger than any of us."
I really feel it should be talked about more often like Bell with Pavlov dogs experiment or Adler with Alfred Adler and that whole superiority/inferiority complex to be honest.
also part of the fake Perseus story is that he participated in the Spanish Civil War if anyone wants to use in their BOCW AU or something like that
Honoring Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu: The First Lady of Physics 🥼⚙🔭
As we celebrate Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, let’s take a moment to appreciate Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu, a physicist who made considerable contributions to nuclear physics and worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II.
Early Life and Education
Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu was born on May 31, 1912, in a small town near Shanghai, China. Her father was big on education, especially for girls, which was uncommon at the time. Wu went to National Central University in Nanjing to study physics and later moved to the United States for further studies. She got her Ph.D. in physics from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1940.
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/28883982
Big Contributions to Physics
During World War II, Wu joined the Manhattan Project. She helped develop the atomic bomb by figuring out how to enrich uranium and study radioactive isotopes. Her most famous work was in 1956, when she proved that the law of parity conservation doesn’t hold in weak nuclear interactions. This was an important advancement for physics and earned her colleagues, Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen-Ning Yang, the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957. Sadly, Wu didn’t get the Nobel recognition even though her experiment was crucial.
Legacy and Recognition
Dr. Wu’s work earned her the nickname "The First Lady of Physics." She received many awards, including the Comstock Prize in Physics and the National Medal of Science in 1990. Besides her scientific work, Wu was a big advocate for women in science and education, encouraging young women to pursue STEM careers. During her career Dr. Wu also taught at Princeton and Columbia Universities. She received the National Medal of Science from President Ford on October 18, 1976, “for her ingenious experiments that led to new and surprising understanding of the decay of the radioactive nucleus.“
Explore More About Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu
To learn more about Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu’s life and work, check out these resources from the National Archives:
The Manhattan Project
Women in STEM
Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month
As we celebrate Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, let’s remember Dr. Wu’s contributions and how she paved the way for future scientists. Her story is a reminder of the importance of perseverance and the pursuit of knowledge.