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The Race for the Atomic Bomb - Scientists, Spies and Saboteurs - The Allies' and Hitler's Battle for the Ultimate Weapon (Hardcover)
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The Race for the Atomic Bomb - Scientists, Spies and Saboteurs - The Allies' and Hitler's Battle for the Ultimate Weapon (Hardcover)
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On 19 December 1938, Otto Hahn, working at the Kaiser Wilhelm
Institute for Chemistry in Berlin, conducted an experiment the
results of which baffled him. It took his migr collaborator Lise
Meitner to explain that he had split an atom of uranium, which at
the time seemed to defy all known laws of physics. When Neils Bohr
took this news to the United States it became clear to scientists
there that these results opened a completely new and, for some,
horrifying possibility of energy production that could be used for
both peaceful and military purposes. Scientists in Germany, France,
Britain and the US began to delve deeper into the implications. But
it was the British government that was the first to explicitly
describe how the splitting of the atom might be utilised to create
a practical weapon of fearsome power. France, by then, had been
occupied by the Germans and most of their nuclear scientists had
fled to Britain. For their part, the Germans, who for a time were
at the very forefront of nuclear research, had weakened their own
scientific ranks by hounding many of their best scientists who had
fled persecution under the draconian Nazi racial laws. They still
retained, however, possibly the ablest nuclear scientist of them
all in Werner Heisenberg who set about developing his own programme
for nuclear power. British scientists made extensive progress
before realising that translating their laboratory results into the
vast industrial enterprise required to build a bomb was way beyond
the nation's stretched resources. The government agreed to hand
over all the UK's research findings to America in return for a
share of the spoils. The United States, for its part, was impressed
with British results and invested enormous sums of money and
resources into what became known as the Manhattan Project in a
concerted effort to build a bomb before the end of the war. For
much of the war the Soviets showed little enthusiasm for the sort
of investment required to build their own bomb. However, with an
eye to the future they established an extensive espionage network
both in Britain and America. Following the German surrender there
was still the problem of Japan, and the race continued to develop a
working bomb to accelerate the end of the war, both to save Allied
lives and to prevent Soviet expansion into northern China and the
Japanese mainland. It was a race that the Unites States won. It was
also a race that ushered in a new Cold War.
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