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Enriched uranium
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====Electromagnetic isotope separation==== {{Main|Calutron}} [[File:Electromagnetic separation.svg|thumb|Schematic diagram of uranium isotope separation in a [[calutron]] shows how a strong magnetic field is used to redirect a stream of uranium ions to a target, resulting in a higher concentration of uranium-235 (represented here in dark blue) in the inner fringes of the stream.]] In the [[electromagnetic isotope separation]] process (EMIS), metallic uranium is first vaporized, and then ionized to positively charged ions. The cations are then accelerated and subsequently deflected by magnetic fields onto their respective collection targets. A production-scale [[mass spectrometer]] named the [[calutron]] was developed during World War II that provided some of the <sup>235</sup>U used for the [[Little Boy]] nuclear bomb, which was dropped over [[Hiroshima]] in 1945. Properly the term 'calutron' applies to a multistage device arranged in a large oval around a powerful electromagnet. Electromagnetic isotope separation has been largely abandoned in favour of more effective methods.
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