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With decades of experience in national security, Jill Hruby joins the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board to help confront ...
On this week’s “More To The Story,” Daniel Holz from the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists discusses why the hands of the ...
THE Doomsday Clock was moved forward by one second to 89 seconds before midnight last January, signalling that the world is ...
Tremendous progress has been made in reducing global nuclear stockpiles and nuclear risks, but we are now heading in the wrong direction. Poised at the beginning of a new, complex, and dangerous ...
The U.S. scientists who tested the first atomic bomb on July 16, 1945, took the ultimate gamble of setting the atmosphere on ...
The Doomsday Clock was moved forward by one second to 89 seconds before midnight last January, signalling that the world is getting closer to an unprecedented catastrophe. The clock, which considers ...
July 14-16 gathering to create recommendations for policymakers and leaders to reduce the threat of nuclear war ...
Scientists and military leaders proceeded with the first atomic bomb test despite acknowledging the risk of a catastrophe.
Setsuko Thurlow, who survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945, says we're walking through "a very dark time," ...
Information about Iran's nuclear programme is highly secretive, but experts say the bombings may not have been a huge setback ...
The Trinity test—the detonation of the world's first nuclear bomb—was conducted 80 years ago as part of the Manhattan Project.
Iran Conflict Has Become a Nuclear Time Bomb The morning of August 6, 1945, began like any other, sunlit, serene, suspended ...