Looks like a 190?? MUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!
Hungarian scientist working in England, Leo Szilard, first theorized that enormous amounts of energy could be released by a nuclear "chain reaction"
German scientists Otto Hahn, Fritz Strassmann, Lise Meitner, and Otto Frisch discovered nuclear fission in uranium, the heaviest natural element.
Eugene Wigner and Edward Teller, persuaded Albert Einstein, the world's most famous scientist, to write a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Dated August 2, 1939, the letter said that it was conceivable that "extremely powerful bombs of a new type might be constructed.
In June 1942, the army took over the task of organizing all chain-reaction research into a full-blown bomb program, code-named the Manhattan Engineer District. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, the man who had just built the Pentagon, was in charge of the top-secret project.
Enrico Fermi, a Nobel Prize-winning emigre from Italy, presided over the first self-sustaining manmade nuclear chain reaction, which took place December 2, 1942
The Manhatten Project, at its peak, involved about 160,000 people workin on the project in more than 25 sites across the United States.
.....The Germans did it all by themselves
