Dublin Core
Title
Producing a Chain Reaction
Creator
United States Atomic Energy Commission
Source
Extracted from "Century of the Atom" records set.
Date
1971.
Format
12-inch long play records converted to mp3.
Language
eng
Identifier
1167
Sound Item Type Metadata
Transcription
Herbert Anderson: Fermi told me at the time that the quickest way to the chain reaction and all its consequences was to make a chain reaction and that could probably be done first and most easily by the techniques most familiar to him using natural uranium.
And so we launched on a career of trying first of all to see what neutrons were emitted, and in what number. And a great deal of emphasis was placed on the quantitative aspects of the subject. The paper "The production of neutrons in uranium bombarded by neutrons" by Anderson, Fermi and Hanstein, was submitted to the Physical Review one month after that, March 16, 1939, and then appeared in the April 15th issue. And this showed that indeed neutrons were emitted and in fairly copious numbers, experiments were a little bit on the rough side, but one could conclude from that experiment that one and a half neutrons were emitted from uranium for each thermal neutron that was absorbed by uranium, and that was a very important number, and not really very far from what is now known to be the value of that number, about 1.33.
Experiments are also being done -- in fact they always seem to be about a week or so ahead of us -- by Joliot, Halban and Kowarski, working in Paris under very difficult conditions, and at the same time, and going on in the same laboratory at Columbia, Szilard had gotten together with Zinn, and they also carried out an experiment demonstrating the emission of fast neutrons when uranium absorbed a thermal neutron.
And so we launched on a career of trying first of all to see what neutrons were emitted, and in what number. And a great deal of emphasis was placed on the quantitative aspects of the subject. The paper "The production of neutrons in uranium bombarded by neutrons" by Anderson, Fermi and Hanstein, was submitted to the Physical Review one month after that, March 16, 1939, and then appeared in the April 15th issue. And this showed that indeed neutrons were emitted and in fairly copious numbers, experiments were a little bit on the rough side, but one could conclude from that experiment that one and a half neutrons were emitted from uranium for each thermal neutron that was absorbed by uranium, and that was a very important number, and not really very far from what is now known to be the value of that number, about 1.33.
Experiments are also being done -- in fact they always seem to be about a week or so ahead of us -- by Joliot, Halban and Kowarski, working in Paris under very difficult conditions, and at the same time, and going on in the same laboratory at Columbia, Szilard had gotten together with Zinn, and they also carried out an experiment demonstrating the emission of fast neutrons when uranium absorbed a thermal neutron.
Original Format
12-inch long play records.
Duration
1:43