🇨🇿Muž u garáže je americký fyzik Harold Agnew, který drží v ruce plutoniové jádro bomby, která byla v roce 1945 svržena na Nagasaki.

V důsledku bombardování

zemřelo více než 80 tisíc civilistů.

Na druhem snímku je stín člověka, který zůstal po jaderném výbuchu v Hirošimě.

🇬🇧The man at the garage is the American physicist Harold Agnew, who holds in his hand the plutonium core of the bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki in 1945.

As a result of the bombing

more than 80 thousand civilians died.

The second picture shows the shadow of a person left after the nuclear explosion in Hiroshima.

https://nostrcheck.me/media/public/nostrcheck.me_1675287656858161581690278220.webp

https://nostrcheck.me/media/public/nostrcheck.me_3031887072119565611690278248.webp

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Well done, to nemohu říct.

During the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, on August 6, 1945, Agnew, along with Alvarez and Johnston, flew as a scientific observer in The Great Artiste, piloted by Charles Sweeney, which tailed the Enola Gay as the instrumentation aircraft. Agnew later recalled, "After we dropped our gauges I remember we made a sharp turn to the right so that we would not get caught in the blast – but we still got badly shaken up by it." He brought along a movie camera and took the only existing movies of the Hiroshima event as seen from the air.

A proponent of tactical nuclear weapons, Agnew pointed out in 1970 that the Thanh Hoa Bridge in Vietnam required hundreds of sorties to destroy with conventional weapons when a nuclear weapon could have done the job with just one.

In a 2005 BBC interview, Agnew stated, "About three-quarters of the U.S. nuclear arsenal was designed under my tutelage at Los Alamos. That is my legacy."

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Agnew