5/21/2026 at 4:05:25 PM
I used to teach a class on the history of contemporary science (WW2-present) and I started the class with Trinity. There’s no other moment better.We know how it turned out, but the people there waiting for the test did not know how it would turn out. The bomb might not have worked. Or it might have ignited a fusion reaction in the atmosphere and destroyed the world. Hans Bethe had sat down and done the calculations on that exact scenario and said it would not, but there was always the possibility of missing something. Enrico Fermi was offering bets on it on the day of the test, as a dark joke.
In the end it worked as expected; one of the most successful and horrifying experiments in the history of science.
Of all the photos from the test the one that struck me the most looking through them today was the photograph of the plutonium core being carried into the ranch house for assembly in a little heavy box. It’s a small thing, about the size of a grapefruit, although twice as dense as lead. It looked just like a sphere of any old metal, but it was something profoundly alien, made inside nuclear reactors. And it still is so strange to me that something that small has so much energy locked up inside and that, by imploding the little sphere just right, we can let the demon out.
Trinity is one of the pivotal moments in the history of our species and eighty years on we still don’t know what the eventual consequences of it will be. The bombs are still here waiting for us and they still pose all sorts of terrifying questions for the future that most people prefer not to think about.
by libraryofbabel
5/21/2026 at 7:43:58 PM
It was probably all pretty silly but there were a few probably-not-all-nutcases that were concerned about the LHC causing something horrible.by ghaff
5/21/2026 at 7:23:43 PM
Funny enough Adam Savage just posted a youtube video about building a replica of the demon core and the box to hold it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1Y4UR8xqxAby smcameron
5/21/2026 at 4:18:50 PM
Do you mind linking the photo you mentioned? I’d love to see it if you are able to find itby ronnier
5/21/2026 at 4:21:23 PM
It's in the TFA, there a photo of a fellow holding a small box thing that looks like a battery from a car or an old box torch.by marc_g
5/21/2026 at 4:35:00 PM
That’s the one I meant. It’s the core, but in a box, which makes it look even more innocuous, like he is indeed just lugging a piece of industrial equipment around. There’s lots of photos of the actual (unboxed) cores online if you search.by libraryofbabel
5/21/2026 at 4:52:15 PM
On flight WiFi so searching was a hard but I did find it. Thanks!by ronnier
5/21/2026 at 4:27:19 PM
I saw that but not a picture of the plutonium core which I thought the OP was referring toby ronnier
5/21/2026 at 4:31:28 PM
Was it a single solid core that was imploded? I thought it was at least two non-critical-mass hemispheres, or more, that were smashed together by the conventional explosives/detonators, to create a critical mass.by SoftTalker
5/21/2026 at 4:38:58 PM
You’re thinking of the other bomb, the U-235 one, which they didn’t test at Trinity and which was dropped on Hiroshima. That is two separate pieces of Uranium that are slammed together to create a critical mass. The Pu-239 core was a single sphere of metal. It was subcritical until you compress it down with a spherical implosion from explosive charges all around it (from the size of a grapefruit to the size of a lime), at which point it reaches a high enough density to go critical.by libraryofbabel
5/21/2026 at 7:24:08 PM
>(from the size of a grapefruit to the size of a lime)Whoa. Its hard to imagine you could have enough conventional explosives to compress a dense metal by ~10x (?). You'd need some serious containment to direct that energy inward rather than outward. I suppose I have some reading to do.
by hydrogen7800
5/21/2026 at 5:48:33 PM
The gun-type bomb (where a subcritical mass is shot into another subcritical mass) is very simple to build once you have the materials to do it. They didn't think it needed a test since it was pretty obvious that it would work.The implosion design is tricky. You need to arrange and detonate the explosives precisely to compress the core evenly from all sides, otherwise it shoots out the side or otherwise doesn't go bang the way you want it to. Hence the test.
That trickiness can be a good thing. Almost all modern weapons use the implosion design, partly because it's much safer. With a gun-type design, an accident could easily cause the two pieces to contact each other, resulting in an unwanted detonation. With an implosion design, accidentally setting off the explosives is very unlikely to set them off with the correct timing, so you'll probably just lose the core.
The implosion design is also a lot more efficient. Little Boy used 64kg of uranium. Fat Man used just 6.2kg of plutonium and even got a bigger bang out of it.
by wat10000
5/21/2026 at 7:24:11 PM
It is all true, but one needs to take into account that because of the different properties of the materials, the critical mass for uranium-235 is intrinsically much greater than that for plutonium-239.For a bare sphere, it is about 10 kg for plutonium and 50 kg for uranium.
by generuso