Dimensions
177 x 246 x 11mm
World War II began with an impressive display of technological power as German Panzer divisions swept across France, Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands, crushing the Allied defenses. By the time the war drew to an end in 1946, the killing power of existing machines such as submarines and bombers was far more devastating.
Meanwhile, the invention of completely new technologies such as radar and the atomic bomb had changed the face of international warfare and politics forever.
So how did the war force the pace of scientific advance? Why were some countries able to improve their technology during the course of the war while others lagged behind? Which inventions, if any, dictated the outcome of the war? What determined the success or failure of new technologies.
This book examines the impact of scientific progress on the course and outcome of the war, and shows how new technologies resulted in destruction on an unprecedented scale.