The Manhattan Project – Personalities and Problems

The Manhattan Project to develop the first atomic bomb was, perhaps, the greatest assemblage of scientists and engineers in history. Many of the participants had already established their places in scientific history before becoming members of the project. For the younger participants the project provided an unfettered environment for their research that shaped the remainder of their careers. This course will explore the prior work that brought great established scientists (e.g., Robert Oppenheimer, Neils Bohr, Hans Bethe, Enrico Fermi, Edward Teller, Ernest Lawrence, John von Neumann) to Los Alamos and the renowned scientists (e.g., Richard Feynman, Glenn Seaborg, Luis Alvarez, John Archibald Wheeler, Wolfgang Panofsky) whose future careers were shaped there. It will also describe the unprecedented scientific, engineering, and ethical problems the team faced in the design, testing and execution of “the gadget.” The course will present a balanced mixture of the history and science that defined the beginning of the nuclear age.

White, Bebo

Bebo White is a retired computational physicist who worked at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, the U.S. national laboratory for high-energy physics and basic energy science at Stanford University. Professor White still holds faculty appointments at several institutions, advisory positions on a variety of academic, government, and commercial committees, and is a member of the organizing committees of several major conference series. He is delighted to be a part of the Fromm community and has thoroughly enjoyed teaching several classes. Additional information can be found HERE.

Teacher
White, Bebo
Category
General
Meeting Time
Thursday AM 10:00-11:45
Meeting Rooms
Online
Per Course Price
$85.00
Seats
254 left of 400 max