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Britain was the first country to exploit atomic energy on a large
scale, and at its peak in the mid-1960s, it had generated more
electricity from nuclear power than the rest of the world combined.
The civil atomic energy programme grew out of the military
programme which produced plutonium for atomic weapons. In 1956,
Calder Hall power station was opened by the Queen. The very next
year, one of the early Windscale reactors caught fire and the
world's first major nuclear accident occurred. The civil programme
ran into further difficulty in the mid-1960s and as a consequence
of procrastination in the decision-making process, the programme
lost momentum and effectively died. No nuclear power stations have
been built since Sizewell B in the late 1980s. This book presents a
study of Government papers that have recently become available in
the public domain. For the first time in history, the research
reactor programme is presented in detail, along with a study of the
decision-making by the Government, the Atomic Energy Authority
(AEA), and the Central Electricity Board (CEGB).This book is aimed
at both specialists in nuclear power and the interested public as a
technical history on the development and ultimate failure of the
British atomic energy programme.
A Vertical Empire provides a description of the British rocketry
and space programme from the 1950s to 1970s, detailing the Medium
Range Ballistic Missile Blue Streak and its conversion to a
satellite launcher as part of the European Launcher Development
Organisation (ELDO). This extensively revised second edition
includes material only made available in the past ten years and the
text is supplemented by numerous photographs, sketches and
statistics. The all-British satellite Black Arrow is described, as
well as the research rocket Black Knight, the Blue Steel missile
and the rocket powered interceptor aircraft.
A Vertical Empire provides a description of the British rocketry
and space programme from the 1950s to 1970s, detailing the Medium
Range Ballistic Missile Blue Streak and its conversion to a
satellite launcher as part of the European Launcher Development
Organisation (ELDO). This extensively revised second edition
includes material only made available in the past ten years and the
text is supplemented by numerous photographs, sketches and
statistics. The all-British satellite Black Arrow is described, as
well as the research rocket Black Knight, the Blue Steel missile
and the rocket powered interceptor aircraft.
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