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It was 8:15 a.m. Aug. 6, 1945.
Maj. Charles Sweeney was flying his plane - the Great Artiste - near Lt.
Col. Tibbets' bomber Enola Gay.
An atomic bomb - dubbed "Little Boy" and loaded with a uranium
core made in Oak Ridge, Tenn. - dropped from the Enola Gay's belly.
Three canisters dropped from the Great Artiste. Parachutes unfurled, leaving
sensors in those canisters ready to send data on the blast, heat and radiation
to scientists on the Great Artiste.
Little Boy exploded some 1,900 feet above Hiroshima.
"We saw this tremendous flash. It was the brightest thing I'd ever
seen," Sweeney recalled.
Though Sweeney's back was to the explosion, the light "just obliterated
the whole sky. We got various concussions in waves - rings of hot air whacking
against the airplane."
As the B-29s turned to head back to Tinian, the crews could not see through
the monstrous, mushrooming cloud covering the city.
"It boiled up with every color of the rainbow," Sweeney said.
Sweeney figured Tibbets would lead the second atomic raid on Japan, using
the "Fat Man" bomb with its plutonium core.
But on the evening of Aug. 6, Tibbets told Sweeney the mission was his.
Bad weather was coming in after Aug. 9, and American commanders wanted a
second bomb dropped as soon as possible to convince the Japanese the United
States had a huge arsenal of atomic bombs.
Kokura was the primary target, Nagasaki the backup.
The field order explicitly stated that while radar could be used as an aid,
the "crew was to bring the bomb back to base" if the target was
obscured and the bomb could not be dropped visually.
Sweeney's first thoughts were the Japanese would be suspicious of any trio
of B-29s flying at high altitude after Hiroshima.
But Tibbets said the same tactics would be used. "I had too much faith
in him to worry about it," Sweeney said.
Sweeney decided to swap planes with Capt. Fred Bock to avoid the time-consuming
hassle of removing the scientific measuring equipment from the Great Artiste.
That put Sweeney in command of Bock's Car.
Until the Enola Gay dropped the Hiroshima bomb, no one realized how destructive
an atomic bomb would be.
After seeing pictures from Hiroshima, the mission's weaponeer, Navy Cmdr.
Frederick Ashworth, said he and other crew members realized for the first
time they would drop a bomb that could wipe out an entire city. "We
had a different attitude from the Hiroshima guys," he said.
Fat Man almost did not make it to its Aug. 9 date, according to Richard
Rhodes' book, The Making Of The Atomic Bomb.
On the night of Aug. 7, a Navy technical officer and an Army technician
discovered to their horror they could not connect a firing unit on Fat Man's
front to a cable threaded through the bomb's innards to a radar unit on
its tail.
They found a "female" plug in the firing unit and another "female"
plug on the cable. The cable had been threaded through the bomb backward.
Disassembling the bomb to reverse the cable would take a day, and they would
miss the Aug. 9 deadline.
Without telling anyone, the two got a soldering iron and extension cords.
They secretly removed the two plugs on the cable and swapped them so everything
fit.