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    The Impossible Bomb: The Hidden History of British Scientists and the Race to Create an Atomic Weapon

    £22.50
    £25.00
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9780300284881
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorWilliams, Gareth
    Pub Date22/07/2025
    BindingHardback
    Pages480
    Publisher: YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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    The remarkable story of the forgotten British scientists who enabled the Manhattan Project to create the atomic bomb

    Atomic weaponry is widely understood as a story of American scientific achievement-but scientists working in Britain played a vital role in its development. Including Nobel Prize winners and Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany, these scientists have long since been forgotten. But without their expertise, Robert Oppenheimer's research at Los Alamos would never have succeeded.

    Gareth Williams unearths the true story of the top-secret British atomic programme, codenamed "Tube Alloys," established in 1940. These pioneering scientists struggled to convince sceptics in Britain and the USA that an atomic "super-bomb" capable of destroying entire cities was feasible, and could be built in time to influence the outcome of the Second World War. Williams shows how the British atomic programme, despite the often disruptive involvement of political leaders such as Winston Churchill, was vital to the success of the Manhattan Project.

    The Impossible Bomb sheds new light on how humanity's deadliest weapons came to exist-and the massive destruction they wrought.