enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. German nuclear program during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_nuclear_program...

    On 22 April 1939, after hearing a colloquium paper by his colleague Wilhelm Hanle at the University of Göttingen proposing the use of uranium fission in an Uranmaschine (uranium machine, i.e., nuclear reactor), Georg Joos, along with Hanle, notified Wilhelm Dames, at the Reichserziehungsministerium (REM, Reich Ministry of Education), of potential military and economic applications of nuclear ...

  3. Operation Barbarossa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Barbarossa

    A speech given by General Erich Hoepner demonstrates the dissemination of the Nazi racial plan, as he informed the 4th Panzer Group that the war against the Soviet Union was "an essential part of the German people's struggle for existence" (Daseinskampf), also referring to the imminent battle as the "old struggle of Germans against Slavs" and ...

  4. Hitlers Bombe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitlers_Bombe

    Hitlers Bombe (Hitler's Bomb) is a nonfiction book by the German historian Rainer Karlsch published in March 2005, which claims to have evidence concerning the development and testing of a possible "nuclear weapon" by Nazi Germany in 1945.

  5. Operation Epsilon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Epsilon

    Harteck said that he would have understood the words "uranium" or "nuclear (fission) bomb", but he had worked with atomic hydrogen and atomic oxygen and thought that American scientists might have succeeded in stabilising a high concentration of (separate) atoms; such a bomb would have had a tenfold increase over a conventional bomb. [10]

  6. Military production during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_production_during...

    America's yearly production exceeded Japan's production building more planes in 1944 than Japan built in all the war years combined. As a result, half of the world's war production came from America. The government paid for this production using techniques of selling war bonds to financial institutions, rationing household items and raising taxes.

  7. Battle of Berlin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Berlin

    Another consideration was that Berlin itself held useful post-war strategic assets, including Adolf Hitler and the German nuclear weapons program [34] (but unknown to the Soviet Union, by the time of the Battle of Berlin, the bulk of the uranium and most of the scientists had been evacuated to Haigerloch in the Black Forest). [35]

  8. Economy of Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Nazi_Germany

    Switzerland continued to trade with Germany, and was very useful as a neutral country friendly to Germany. Until the declaration of war on the Soviet Union, the Third Reich received large supplies of grain and raw materials from the USSR, which they paid for with industrial machinery, weapons, and even German designs for a battleship. In the ...

  9. German–Soviet economic relations (1934–1941) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German–Soviet_economic...

    More importantly, between July and December 1941, the Soviets had moved 2,593 enterprises—most of them iron, steel and engineering plants—and 50,000 small workshops and factories to the Ural Mountains in the Volga region, to Kazakhstan and to Eastern Siberia, away from the Nazi forces who had already occupied vast quantities of European ...