2025-08-06
34 分钟Welcome to The World, The Universe and Us, the weekly news podcast from New Scientist.
I'm Rowan Hooper.
And I'm Madeleine Cuff.
Now, we have a special episode this week,
as it's been 80 years since the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on August 6th,
1945, and that was followed three days later by the bombing of Nagasaki.
This was the first and thankfully so far the only use of nuclear weapons in war.
But after that, the world was never quite the same again.
Yeah, so on this special episode,
we're going to use the anniversary to discuss some of the wider implications of the Manhattan Project.
I mean, the focus is often quite rightly on the tens of thousands of people killed.
In Hiroshima alone, about 75,000 people were killed immediately.
Many more... after the bomb.
Although we usually concentrate on that,
the human and the environmental cost of the Manhattan Project stretches out beyond Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
In time too, it stretches out.
It had an impact before the bombings.
In many ways, we're still dealing with it today.
That's what we're going to get into.
Yeah,