Project Trinity, 1945-1946

audiobook

Project Trinity, 1945-1946

by Carl R. Maag, Steve Rohrer

EN·~1 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total
1

PROJECT TRINITY

0:19
2

PLEASE NOITIFY THE DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGENCY, ATTN: STTI, WASINGTON D.C. 20305, IF YOUR ADDRESS IS INCORRECT, IF YOU WISH TO BE DELETED FROM THE DISTRIBUTION LIST, OR IF THE ADDRESSEE IS NO LONGER EMPLOYED BY YOUR ORGANIZATION.

1:34
3

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS

0:22
4

REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE

2:20
5

FACT SHEET

4:37
6

PREFACE

15:04
7

CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION

1:51
8

CHAPTER 2 - THE ACTIVITIES AT PROJECT TRINITY

20:46
9

CHAPTER 3 - RADIATION PROTECTION AT PROJECT TRINITY

14:21
10

CHAPTER 4 - DOSIMETRY ANALYSIS OF PARTICIPANTS IN PROJECT TRINITY

4:59

Description

The narration opens with a straightforward overview of the first ever American atomic blast, detailing the remote New Mexico desert site, the towering test platform, and the assembled mix of military and civilian staff who prepared for the July 1945 explosion. It sketches the broader wartime context that drove the experiment and introduces the logistical challenges of coordinating such a massive, secretive effort. Early chapters also lay out the organizational structure that kept the project moving, from engineers to guard posts.

From there, the focus shifts to the people on the ground: how they were monitored for radiation, the protective gear they wore, and the systematic collection of dosimetry data. The report walks listeners through the meticulous recording of film badge readings and gamma exposure measurements taken before and after the detonation. By the end of this portion, listeners gain a clear picture of the scientific rigor and human concerns that shaped the pioneering test.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (69K characters)

Release date

1996-06-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

CR

Carl R. Maag

Best known for detailed government histories of U.S. nuclear testing, this writer helped document the people, operations, and aftermath surrounding some of the atomic age’s most important events. His work on Project Trinity, 1945-1946, written with Steve Rohrer, remains the title most closely associated with his name.

View all books
Steve Rohrer

Steve Rohrer

Known for detailed government-era histories of U.S. nuclear testing, this writer helped document Project Trinity and other mid-20th-century atomic test operations. The surviving public record is thin, but the work remains a useful doorway into the history of America’s early nuclear age.

View all books