The gadget

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The "gadget", partially assembled on the shot tower for the Trinity test.
The "gadget", partially assembled on the shot tower for the Trinity test.

"The gadget" was the code-name given to the first nuclear explosive developed under the Manhattan Project during World War II which was tested at the "Trinity" test on July 16, 1945. It was so-called because it was not a deployable weapon, and because revealing words like "bomb" were not used during the project for fear of being overheard by those not aware of the project's purpose and promoting speculation or aiding in espionage. It was an implosion-type plutonium device, similar in design to the "Fat Man" bomb used three weeks later in the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan.

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[edit] Design

The "gadget", fully assembled
The "gadget", fully assembled

"The gadget" was an implosion type nuclear explosive device, using plutonium. A subcritical sphere of plutonium was placed in the center of a hollow sphere of high explosive. Numerous detonators located on the surface of the high explosive were fired simultaneously to produce a powerful inward pressure on the core, squeezing it and increasing its density, resulting in a supercritical condition and a nuclear explosion.

Schematic cross-section of the "gadget"
Schematic cross-section of the "gadget"

The initial design, based on work done on cyclotron-supplied plutonium would have envisioned a gun-type device, akin to Little Boy. However, mass-produced plutonium emitted enough neutrons to make it likely that it would pre-detonate with low yield, making this design, known as "Thin Man", unusable.

Subsequently, an implosive design was selected, resulting in the design known as Fat Man. Both Fat Man and the gadget are not strictly "Fat Man type", as the design was modified into a production design, and both were strictly one-off prototypes.

[edit] Test

The atomic fireball at the "Trinity" nuclear test
The atomic fireball at the "Trinity" nuclear test
Main article: Trinity test

The "gadget" was tested at Trinity Site, New Mexico, near Alamogordo. It was feared by some that the Trinity test might "ignite" the Earth's atmosphere, eliminating all life on the planet, although a classified report produced several years earlier had demonstrated that this was not possible (see external links, report LA-602). Less wild estimates thought that New Mexico would be incinerated. Calculations showed that the yield of the device would be between 0 (if it did not work) and 20 kilotons (metric, equivalence of TNT). In the aftermath of the test, it appeared to have been a blast equivalent to 18 kt of TNT. It was also a highly covert operation.

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