Source: euronews
Date: 8/9/2012 08:44 CET
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has joined the annual ceremony to remember the World War II bombing of Nagasaki.
As many as 80,000 people died on the August 9 1945, if not instantly, then from the effects of radiation.
The occasion, 67 years on, must have reminded Noda that the effects
of radioactivity have once again threatened the lives of tens of
thousands of Japanese.
Last February’s powerful earthquake and Tsunami led to a meltdown at
the Fukushima nuclear plant. It was the worst nuclear disaster since
Chenobyl.
Tomihisa Taue, the city’s mayor reminded the audience gathered at a
peace park close to the Nagasaki bomb’s epicentre that 19,000 nuclear
weapons still exist in the world.
“In order for ours to be the last city attacked by this technology,
the use of nuclear weapons and their development must be clearly
prohibited,” Taue said.
The bomb was code named ‘Fat Man’ and came three days after a similar attack on Hiroshima, which killed up to 140,000 people.
Nagasaki was one of the largest sea ports in southern Japan and a strategic target for the allies during World War II.
A roughly 7 square kilometre area of the city was destroyed.
The bombings were ordered by then US president Harry Truman, whose grandson Clifton Truman Daniel attended the ceremony.
Days after the bombing, Japan surrendered.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
8/9/2012 Nagasaki atomic bomb anniversary remembered
Labels:
8/9/1945,
anniversary,
atomic bomb,
Nagasaki,
Noda
8/7/2012 Curiosity takes first cosmic ray sample of surface
Source: Space.com
Date: 8/7/2012
Video Description
100 years to the day (8/7/1912) after the discovery of galactic comic rays on Earth by Victor Hess, Curiosity's Radiation Assessment Detector took its first rad-readings on the surface of another planet.
Credit: Space.com
See also: On Its Centenary, Celebrating a Ride That Advanced Physics
Date: 8/7/2012
Video Description
100 years to the day (8/7/1912) after the discovery of galactic comic rays on Earth by Victor Hess, Curiosity's Radiation Assessment Detector took its first rad-readings on the surface of another planet.
Credit: Space.com
See also: On Its Centenary, Celebrating a Ride That Advanced Physics
Labels:
8/7/1912,
cosmic rays,
Curiosity,
Mars Rover,
Mars Science Lab,
radiation dose,
Victor Hess
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
ShareThis
Radiation News Archive
- ▼ 2012 (202)