Scientists discover entirely new material created in first nuclear explosion

Researchers have identified a previously unknown material created during the very first nuclear bomb detonation in 1945.

The first ever atomic bomb was tested on July 16, 1945, in the New Mexico desert. Known as the “Trinity Test,” it was part of the Manhattan Project and involved detonating a plutonium bomb with the force of 25 kilotons of TNT.

But geologist Luca Bindi from the University of Florence co-wrote a study suggesting the explosion created a completely new material. This material has never been seen in nature or made in a lab before, and appeared on its own as a result of the event.

The discovery explained

The first explosion created a strange, glassy material made of melted sand and the remains of vaporized wires. Scientists working on the test dubbed this substance “trinitite.”

Recently, scientists discovered a new material within a droplet of metal rich in copper, found in trinitite. This material, called a “clathrate,” has a unique structure – it forms cages with 12 to 14 sides. These cages can trap atoms and molecules like silicon, calcium, copper, and iron, resulting in unusual characteristics.

According to Scientific American, Bindi described his discovery as a completely new type of clathrate crystal, something never before observed in nature or created by a nuclear explosion.

The researchers highlighted that rare, powerful events like nuclear explosions, lightning strikes, and impacts from very fast objects act as natural settings for creating unusual crystal formations.

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2026-05-17 17:48