Declassified Photographs Reveal the Unseen Fury of the First Atomic Bomb Test
At precisely 5:29:45 a.m. Mountain War Time on July 16, 1945, the world entered the nuclear age. A blinding ball of fire erupted above the Jornada del Muerto desert in New Mexico—the first atomic bomb test, codenamed Trinity. Now, decades later, newly restored photographs released by the University of Chicago Press offer an unprecedented, frame-by-frame look at that cataclysmic moment.
“These images are the clearest record we have of the instant when humanity first split the atom on a massive scale,” said historian Emily Seyl, author of Trinity: An Illustrated History of the World’s First Atomic Test. The book, which features hundreds of startlingly vivid photos, stems from a 20-year restoration effort. “Every photo tells a story of immense scientific achievement and profound moral weight,” Seyl added.
Background
The Trinity test was the culmination of the Manhattan Project, a secret wartime effort to develop nuclear weapons. Scientists positioned 52 cameras around the test site to document the explosion. Among them was Berlyn Brixner, stationed in the North 10,000 photography bunker. He was one of the few instructed to look directly at the blast—through welder’s glasses—ready to track the fireball with his Mitchell movie cameras.

Brixner’s footage became the primary source for measuring the bomb’s effects. “We were capturing the unknown—a force that had never been unleashed,” Brixner later recalled. “The cameras had to work perfectly because this was a one-time event.” Despite meticulous planning, only 11 of the 52 cameras produced satisfactory images.
The detonation sequence began when 32 blocks of high explosives simultaneously compressed a plutonium core. A burst of neutrons triggered a runaway fission chain reaction that ended in less than a hundredth of a second. High-speed Fastax cameras, shooting through thick glass portholes, recorded a translucent orb bursting through the darkness—a silent sea of energy expanding across the basin.

What This Means
These restored photographs provide scientists and historians with exacting detail to study the fireball’s behavior and visible effects. “They allow us to go back and measure the blast with modern analytical tools,” said Alan B. Carr, a historian who contributed to the book. The images also serve as a stark reminder of the dawn of the nuclear age.
The release of these declassified photos comes at a time when global nuclear tensions are rising. “Understanding the past is critical to preventing future catastrophe,” Seyl noted. Background experts emphasize that these images are not just historical artifacts but warnings. As Seyl put it: “The same power that lit the New Mexico sky now hangs over every nation.”
The Trinity test marked a turning point in human history. These photographs, now available to the public, capture that turning point with unparalleled clarity—preserving the moment when the world changed forever.
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