Japan’s Emperor Hirohito announced his country’s unconditional surrender in World War II in a radio address on August 15, citing the devastating power of “a new and most cruel bomb.” The Manhattan ProjectĮven before the outbreak of war in 1939, a group of American scientists-many of them refugees from fascist regimes in Europe-became concerned with nuclear weapons research being conducted in Nazi Germany. Three days later, a second B-29 dropped another A-bomb on Nagasaki, killing an estimated 40,000 people. The explosion immediately killed an estimated 80,000 people tens of thousands more would later die of radiation exposure.
On August 6, 1945, during World War II (1939-45), an American B-29 bomber dropped the world’s first deployed atomic bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima.