This event is part of Newbury Spring Festival 2025 programme
The British Atom Bomb Project: What they didn’t tell you in Oppenheimer
- Corn Exchange Auditorium
- Full Price £15 (including booking fee)

Platinum priority booking goes on sale on Tuesday 11 February at 10am. Gold priority booking goes on sale on Wednesday 12 February. Friends priority booking goes on sale on Thursday 13 February. Tickets go on general sale on Tuesday 25 February at 10am.
2025 marks the 80th anniversary of the dropping of the atom bomb on Hiroshima. The movie, Oppenheimer, gives the impression that this bomb was largely an American creation, made possible by the inspired leadership of Robert Oppenheimer. But this is not accurate.
Indeed, the bomb would not have been built without crucial pioneering work in the early years of WW2, here in Britain. Sadly, our early scientific lead was squandered by administrators failing to understand the engineering challenges of building a fission bomb. Professor Tim Palmer CBE FRS is a Royal Society Research Professor Emeritus in the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford, who will discuss the British contribution to the bomb, how we failed to capitalise on our early lead and why we are still paying the price for this administrative incompetence today.
Location: Corn Exchange Newbury
Duration: 1hr 30mins (approx)
Professor Tim Palmer CBE FRS: lecturer
Sponsored by: Englefield Charitable Trust
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