Peace and War: Reminiscences of a Life on the Frontiers of Science

Peace and War: Reminiscences of a Life on the Frontiers of Science

ISBN-10:
0231105460
ISBN-13:
9780231105460
Pub. Date:
04/01/1998
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
ISBN-10:
0231105460
ISBN-13:
9780231105460
Pub. Date:
04/01/1998
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
Peace and War: Reminiscences of a Life on the Frontiers of Science

Peace and War: Reminiscences of a Life on the Frontiers of Science

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Overview

Peace and War is the memoir of one of the key scientists involved in the atomic bomb and the chief research assistant and intimate friend of J. Robert Oppenheimer. A prominent member of the Manhattan Project, Robert Serber was one of a team of scientists who assembled the bombs on Tinian Island for transport to Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He was also one of the first Americans to walk among the Japanese ruins after the catastrophe. Serber tells movingly of his wartime experiences at Tinian Island and in Japan, in letters to his wife, Charlotte, herself a key player at Los Alamos and the only female group leader there. These letters depict simply - almost dispassionately - what Serber saw: the rows of iron office safes protruding from the rubble of Hiroshima; the grazing horse whose hair had been scorched on one side by the fireball but was untouched on the other; the B-29s stacked on the runway "like cars coming back to a city on a Sunday night." Serber is also eloquent about the troubles he faced as a result of his refusal to take part in public debate about the morality of his wartime work; how his opposition to rapidly developing the hydrogen bomb earned him the enmity of Edward Teller and others; how he was investigated and his security clearance challenged, several years before Oppenheimer's. Serber also recounts many previously untold stories involving Oppenheimer, Murray Gell-Mann, Ernest O. Lawrence, Edward Teller, and others. This portrait of one of the most important theoretical physicists of the 20th century brings to life the excitement of Oppenheimer's close-knit circle; the controversy of the Manhattan Project; and the thrill of being present at the creation of so manypioneering discoveries, from black holes to quarks.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231105460
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 04/01/1998
Series: George B. Pegram Lecture Series
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 9.00(w) x 6.20(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

What People are Saying About This

Laurie M. Brown

Recounts Serber's fascinating wartime adventures, which included heading the group on the Pacific island of Tinian that assembled the Hiroshima bomb and landing in Japan before the occupation troops to inspect the damage. An excellent raconteur, Serber describes his personal and scientific life frankly, with dry humor and incisive wit. I found the book difficult to put down.

Laurie M. Brown, Northwestern University

Phil Morrison

Immersed in the rise of particle physics in America from lawrence's cyclotron to the Fermi Accelerator Lab, his lectures were called 'Serber Says.' An informed, candid, and telling witness to men, machines and policy, he had a keen ear and a sharp tongue for the droll, and views the decades with an insider's eye. You can hardly know American physics in W.W. II or the Cold War, nor its hopes and burdens right into the present, without weighing what Bob Serber says--not without some poignancy.

Phil Morrison, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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