Debbie Roth

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The most dramatic confirmation of this principle is a nuclear bomb, in which a small amount of mass is converted into an enormously energetic and destructive blast. Because c2 is such a large number, a small amount of mass represents a vast amount of energy. In the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, all it took was for about half a gram of mass, less than that of a paper clip, to turn into all that destructive energy.
Einstein's Fridge: How the Difference Between Hot and Cold Explains the Universe
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