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The Atomic Bomb And Its Effects On Post-World War II

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 17.43
  Total Words: 4358
  Total Characters: 22116
  Number of Sentences: 306


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 14.24
  Characters per Words: 5.07


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 62.92
  Fog Scale Level: 11.3
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 8.02  

The Atomic Bomb and its Effects on Post-World War II

Then a tremendous flash of light cut across the sky .  Mr. Tanimoto has a distinct
recollection that it traveled from east to west, from the city toward the hills.  It seemed
like a sheet of sun.                                        ÐJohn Hersey, from Hiroshima, pp.8     On August 6, 1945, the world
changed forever.  On that day the United States of America detonated an atomic bomb over the
city of Hiroshima.  Never before had mankind seen anything like.  Here was something that
was slightly bigger than an ordinary bomb, yet could cause infinitely more destruction.  It
could rip through walls and tear down houses like the devils wrecking ball.  In Hiroshima it
killed 100,000 people, most non-military civilians.  Three days later in Nagasaki it killed
roughly 40,000 .       The immediate effects of these bombings were simple.  The Japanese
government surrendered, unconditionally, to the United States.  The rest of the world
rejoiced as the most destructive war in the history of mankind came to an end .  All  while
the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki tried to piece together what was left of their
lives, families and homes.       Over the course of the next forty years, these two bombings,
and the nuclear arms race that followed them,  would come to have a direct or indirect
effect on almost every man, woman and child on this Earth, including people in the United
States.   The atomic bomb would penetrate every fabric of American existence.  From our
politics to our educational system.    Our industry and our art.  Historians have gone so
far as to call this period in our history the Òatomic ageÓ for the way it has shaped and
guided world politics, relations and culture.          The entire history behind the bomb itself is
rooted in Twentieth Century physics.  At the time of the bombing the science of physics had
been undergoing a revolution for the past thirty-odd years.  Scientists now had a clear
picture of what the atomic world was l...

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