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On the anniversary of Hiroshima, this graphic reveals the power of US nuclear bombs

Nagasakibomb
The mushroom cloud from the Nagasaki bombing on August 9, 1945. Wikipedia

On the morning of August 6, 1945, a lone B-29 bomber dropped a single atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima in Japan. Soldiers had nicknamed the weapon "Little Boy."

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It's estimated that 70,000 people died from the initial blast of the uranium bomb, and that the five-year death toll likely climbed over 200,000, due to the lasting health effects of the massive dose of radiation that survivors received.

Three days later, another aircraft detonated a second bomb over the city of Nagasaki. This one was called "Fat Man," since it used plutonium and would result in an explosion 40% larger than Little Boy's.

That bomb killed an estimated 40,000 in the initial blast and around 140,000 over the next five years. The lower death toll was because people had evacuated the city, including many schoolchildren.

These two atomic bombs — the only ever used in battle — caused considerable damage, but they weren't the biggest bombs the US ever made. The World War II bombings launched the nuclear arms race, as the US and Russia began building bigger and bigger bombs.

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US_nuclear_weapons_yield to weight_comparison
Bombs that the US still has in its stockpile are in yellow and red. The black dots are bombs that the US tested but has since dismantled. Wikimedia Commons

The hydrogen bomb nicknamed Castle Bravo, detonated in 1954, had the highest energy of any the US ever tested.

It exploded with the power of 15,000,000 tons of TNT.

By comparison, the Little Boy was equivalent to 18,600 tons of TNT.

Super-powerful nukes like the Castle Bravo and the B53 bunker-buster are no longer in the US arsenal — the last of the B53 bombs were dismantled in 2011, Wired reported.

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The nuclear weapons in the US stockpile these days — which still number around 7,200 — are generally smaller, typically in the 100,000-ton range.

Modern nuclear weapons are smaller and more easily aimed at strategic targets, creating less collateral damage than the mega bombs could have had.

The infographic below, designed by Maximilian Bode and posted on fastcodesign.com illustrates the relative power of American nuclear bombs.

Each pink block represents a ton of TNT, and 1,000 pink blocks represents a kiloton, which is shown as a red block:

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nuclear bomb power
fastcodesign.com

A previous version of this post was published by Ashley Lutz.

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