"We came about this idea to try something different, try to generate talk all day long… not just once," explained Washington County Sheriff Dan Starry. "If you’re on during the day on social media, you’ll see it, if you’re on at lunchtime, you’ll see it, dinnertime, or at night." They are taking to social media to get the word out more often. The Washington County Sheriff's Office has decided to take a different approach in hopefully obtaining information about Susan's disappearance. There has been a $25,000 reward for information in locating Susan but still no clues to work on. It's been 34 years and still no sign of Susan Swedell. The sheriff's deputy continued to the Swedell home looking for any sign of Susan along the way. It was locked and the service station was closed. The sheriff's deputy retraced Susan's route from the Kmart store and found her car in the lot of Kern's North Star Station. The towing cable is disconnected.In the meantime, Susan's mother called the Washington County Sheriff's Department to seek help in locating her daughter. Parsons, USN" or Enola Gay weaponeer Deak Parsons, to the far leftįat Man is manually pushed to the bomb pitįat Man's alignment with the bomb pit is checked “A Second Kiss for Hirohito!” Signed by Rear Admiral W.R. Note the signatures on the tail assembly and the "bomb" on the worker's shirtįat Man is lowered on to a transport dolly for the trip to the airfield. The Fat Man bomb being towed toward the airfield with an escort Norman Ramsey signing his name on Fat Man The assembled implosion sphere for Fat Man ready to be placed in the casing Little Boy has been successfully lifted into the bomb bay and is being attached to sway brackets that will keep it secure Little Boy is lifted via a hydraulic lift into the Enola GayĪ view from underneath the hydraulic lift, in the bomb bay Little Boy ready to be loaded into the Enola Gay Little Boy ready to be lifted into the Enola Gay Manhattan Project scientists and military personnel gather around the bomb pit, ready to watch the Little Boy bomb being loaded into the Enola Gay Little Boy, covered by a protective tarp for security reasons Dropped on the Japanese city of Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, it was the second nuclear weapon used in a war. In the implosion-type device, a core of sub-critical plutonium is surrounded by several thousand pounds of high-explosive designed in such a way that the explosive force of the HE is directed inwards thereby crushing the plutonium core into a super-critical state. The first was the "Gadget" detonated at the Trinity site on July 16, 1945. "Fat Man" was the second plutonium, implosion-type bomb. Delivery: B-29 Enola Gay piloted by Col. The film follows Enola Holmes, Sherlock Holmes younger sister, as she embarks on a quest to find her missing mother.Use: Dropped on Japanese city of Hiroshima August 6, 1945.Explosive force: 15,000 tons of TNT equivalent.1.38% of the uranium fuel actually fissioned Uranium target component ferried to Tinian via C-54 aircraft of the 509th Composite Group.Target case, barrel, uranium projectile, and other main parts ferried to Tinian Island via USS Indianapolis.140 lbs target - 85 lbs and projectile - 55 lbs Fuel: Highly enriched uranium "Oralloy".Dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, it was the first nuclear weapon used in a war. The resulting uranium mass comprised of both projectile and target becomes critical and the chain reaction begins. In this gun-type device, the critical mass is achieved when a uranium projectile which is sub-critical is fired through a gun barrel at a uranium target which is also sub-critical. For more information, see The Science Behind the Atom Bomb. The chain reaction starts when neutrons strike the heavy uranium or plutonium nucleus which splits releasing a tremendous amount of energy along with two or more neutrons which, in turn split more nuclei, and so on. This is the minimum amount of fissionable material needed to start a chain reaction. An explosive nuclear chain reaction occurs when a sufficient quantity of nuclear fuel, such as uranium or plutonium, is brought together to form a critical mass.