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What? No, the hardest thing about producing an atomic bomb is spinning up enough U235. To produce highly enriched uranium requires huge numbers of gas centrifuges. This makes your facilities very large, conspicuous targets for espionage and sabotage.

If the hardest part was knowing nuclear weapons are possible then the world would be a giant glass parking lot by now.



> the hardest thing about producing an atomic bomb is spinning up enough U235. To produce highly enriched uranium requires huge numbers of gas centrifuges.

This is true in the modern era. However it should be noted that the Manhattan Project did not use gas centrifuges to produce their enriched uranium. Centrifuges were apparently considered but ultimately gaseous diffusion was used. Gaseous diffusion requires larger facilities and more energy, but I suppose the process doesn't require such tight tolerances as modern highspeed centrifuges.


Yeah, the guy completely missed my point.


Graphite and natural uranium make it a chemistry problem to purify plutonium.




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