KYODO NEWS IMAGELINK

報道写真の購入なら共同通信イメージリンク

お問い合わせ
03-6252-6224
平日9:30-18:00
  • 原子爆弾
  • エノラ・ゲイ
  • 軍事
  • 第二次世界大戦
  • ボーイング
  • リトルボーイ
  • 太平洋戦争
  • 指揮

「ポール・ティベッツ」の写真・グラフィックス・映像

絞り込み
  • 提供元
  • 日付
  • 種類
  • 向き
  • カテゴリ
並び順
  • 古い順
7
( 1 7 件を表示)
  • 1
7
( 1 7 件を表示)
絞り込み
並び順
  • 古い順
  •  World War II: Paul Tibbets standing in front of the B-29 Enola Gay
    1945年07月31日
    World War II: Paul Tibbets standing in front of the B-29 Enola Gay

    World War II: Paul Tibbets standing in front of the B-29 Enola Gay, the plane he piloted to Hiroshima and dropped the world痴 first atomic bomb on 5 August 1945. Warfare Aerial Nuclear、クレジット:World History Archive/ニューズコム/共同通信イメージズ※エディトリアル使用のみ。広告、プロモーション、商業目的での利用に関してはお問合せください。

    商品コード: 2019022100179

  •  Pilots of first and second atom bomb flights
    1945年08月06日
    Pilots of first and second atom bomb flights

    Pilots of the two atomic bomb missions. Colonel Paul Tibbets (centre) shakes hands with Major Charles Sweeney (left) shortly before the second atomic bomb mission. Tibbets was the pilot of the B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay which dropped the first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945. Sweeney was the pilot of the B-29 Bockscar which dropped the second atomic bomb on the city of Nagasaki on 9 August 1945. The man at right is Captain James Van Pelt, navigator for the Nagasaki mission. These two bombs resulted in over 240,000 dead in the two cities, but ended the fighting in the Far East in World War Two.、クレジット:Science Photo Library/共同通信イメージズ

    商品コード: 2022082308107

  •  The Little Boy atomic bomb
    1945年08月06日
    The Little Boy atomic bomb

    06.08.1945 On August 6, 1945, the Little Boy atomic bomb with a yield of 13-18 kilotons was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, by the crew of the Enola Gay Boeing B-29 Superfortress bomber commanded by Colonel Paul Tibbets. Photo from a book by D. Mondale. London, 1971. RIA Novosti / Sputnik、クレジット:Sputnik/共同通信イメージズ

    商品コード: 2022100609784

  •  Tibbets and aircraft which dropped first atom bomb
    1945年08月06日
    Tibbets and aircraft which dropped first atom bomb

    Pilot who dropped the first atomic bomb. Colonel Paul Tibbets standing by his B-29 Superfortress bomber Enola Gay at Tinian Field in the Marianas Islands. Tibbets piloted this aircraft on 6 August 1945 to drop the first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The bomb detonated at 8.16 am local time at an altitude of 565 metres. The explosive energy was equivalent to 12.5 kilotons (12,500 tons) of TNT. Over 155,000 people died as a result; this figure includes radiation-related deaths within one year.、クレジット:Science Photo Library/共同通信イメージズ

    商品コード: 2022082308108

  •  Hiroshima
    1945年08月06日
    Hiroshima

    06.08.1945 Hiroshima after the US atomic bombing. WWII (1938-1945). RIA Novosti / Sputnik、クレジット:Sputnik/共同通信イメージズ

    商品コード: 2023033007312

  •  Enola Gay presented to the Smithsonian
    1949年12月31日
    Enola Gay presented to the Smithsonian

    The superfortress bomber Enola Gay, the first aircraft to carry the atomic bomb in war when it dropped the bomb ‘Little Boy‘ over Hiroshima, Japan in World War Two, being presented to the Smithsonian Institution, Washington. Mr C Mittman (left) receives the log from Major-General O‘Donnell (right) with (centre, l to r) Colonel Paul Tibbets, the pilot, and Major Ferebee, the bombardier, of the mission. Date: 1949、クレジット:Illustrated London News Ltd/Mar/Mary Evans Picture Library/共同通信イメージズ ※エディトリアル使用のみ。表紙、広告、プロモーション、商業目的での利用はお問合せください。クレジットは必ず表記してください。

    商品コード: 2021052708647

  •  ‘Enola Gay‘ landing after first atom bomb mission
    1995年07月31日
    ‘Enola Gay‘ landing after first atom bomb mission

    Aircraft which dropped the first atomic bomb. The Boeing B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay landing at Tinian Field, Marianas Islands, after completing the first atom bomb raid. The aircraft, piloted by Colonel Paul Tibbets, dropped the ‘Little Boy‘ bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima at 8.16am local time, 6 August 1945. Detonating 565 metres above the city centre, the bomb had an explosive energy equivalent to 12.5 kilotons (12,500 tons) of TNT. It is estimated that over 155,000 people died in Hiroshima; this figure includes radiation- related deaths within the first year. This bomb, and a second dropped on the city of Nagasaki, resulted in the end of World War Two.、クレジット:Science Photo Library/共同通信イメージズ

    商品コード: 2022082307334

  • 1