Book: The First War of Physics: The Secret History of the Atom Bomb, 1939-1949
Author: Jim Baggott
Publisher: Icon Books (2 July 2015)
Language: English
Paperback: 576 pages
Item Weight: 489 g
Dimensions: 20 x 14 x 4 cm
Country of Origin: India
Price: 399/-
Little Boy plummeted approximately six miles in forty-three seconds.
It exploded 1,890 feet above Hiroshima, about 550 feet southeast of directly over the Aioi Bridge. By then, the Enola Gay was six miles away, flying as fast as her engines could take her.
The shock wave smashed into the plane nine miles east of Hiroshima. The B-29 shuddered and groaned. The crew shouted, wondering if the Enola Gay would break apart in midair…. All hell broke loose ….
The catastrophe was to repeat again ….
A seaside city, Nagasaki was home to 253,000 people.
Fat Man exploded 1,890 feet above the city. The plutonium core generated the force of 21,000 tons of TNT—one and a half times greater than Little Boy.
The weapon missed the aiming point by almost two miles, but the damage was catastrophic.
Some 40,000 people perished instantaneously. Another 70,000 would die from radiation-related injuries and infirmity. The bomb destroyed a three-mile area and more than a third of the city’s 50,000 buildings.
In a stroke of poetic justice, the munitions plant that manufactured the torpedoes used at Pearl Harbor was obliterated.
This book tells us the back story of the bomb.
Evidently, the bomb was created by some of the world’s finest physicists, many of them Nobel laureates – physicists who, only a few years before, had been leading a sequence of revolutions in theoretical science and shaking the very reinforcements of Man’s perception of physical realism.
But how did these men become such extremely significant military resources in a war that was to redefine the very meaning of barbarity, a war that was to recalibrate what it means to be heartless?
How did these other-worldly ‘eggheads’ find themselves centre-stage in such a performance of gallant enterprise, disruption, spying, counter-espionage, murder and dreadful obliteration that it now seems hardly believable as fiction?
How did they come, in the words of J. Robert Oppenheimer, to know ‘peccadillo’?
This book is the author’s effort to respond to these and many other questions through an accepted, reachable explanation of the race to build the first atomic bombs, centred on the individual stories of the physicists openly involved.
The book spans 10 momentous years, beginning with the detection of nuclear fission in early 1939 and closing shortly after ‘Joe-1’, the first Soviet atomic bomb test in August 1949.
These were men such as Niels Bohr, Albert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, Richard Feynman, Otto Frisch, Klaus Fuchs, Werner Heisenberg, Yuli Khariton, Igor Kurchatov, Oppenheimer, Edward Teller, and many, many more.
Diverted from their academic obsessions by the biggest military quarrel in human history, they became intensely embroiled in the biggest of human dramas.
They found themselves drawn inexorably into a project to build the world’s most awful weapon of war, a weapon judged to be ‘practically irresistible’ at a time when the world was threatened by the darkest evil.
The book is organised in four parts:
1) Part I covers the mobilisation of nuclear physicists around the world following the outbreak of war in September 1939 and early work on atom bomb and reactor physics.
2) Part II recounts the early frustrations and progress in weapon design, the development of bomb and reactor materials in Germany, Britain and America, the spectacular sabotage of the heavy water plant at Vemork by Norwegian commandos, and the establishment of the Soviet espionage operation codenamed ENORMOZ.
3) In Part III the book addresses the direct involvement of Allied scientists in the hunt for their German counterparts in war-torn Europe following the D-Day landings, the successful Trinity test at Alamogordo in New Mexico, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the reactions of the captured German scientists on hearing of the Allied success.
4) Finally, Part IV describes the origins of the Cold War, the acceleration of the Soviet atomic programme, proliferation of weapons technology, the Venona project, the unmasking of Soviet spies, and the first successful Soviet test in August 1949.
The book concludes with an extended epilogue which attempts to tie up many of the loose ends, describing the American and Soviet H-bomb programmes and the Cuban missile crisis which brought the world to the very perimeter of catastrophe.
Much recommended.