The Soviet atomic project: how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb
"The book describes the lives of the people who gave Stalin his weapon ... scientists, engineers, managers, and prisoners during the early post war years from 1945-1953. Many anecdotes and vicissitudes of life at that time in the Soviet Union accompany considerable technical information regardi...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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New Jersey ; London ; Singapore ; Beijing ; Shanghai ; Hong Kong ; Taipei ; Chennai ; Tokyo
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[2018]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Literaturverzeichnis Register // Gemischte Register Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "The book describes the lives of the people who gave Stalin his weapon ... scientists, engineers, managers, and prisoners during the early post war years from 1945-1953. Many anecdotes and vicissitudes of life at that time in the Soviet Union accompany considerable technical information regarding the solutions to formidable problems of nuclear weapons development. The contents should interest the reader who wants to learn more about this part of the history and politics in 20th century physics. The prevention of nuclear proliferation is a topic of current interest, and the procedure followed by the Soviet Union as described in this book will help us understand the complexities involved"... |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | xxv, 758 Seiten Illustrationen, Porträts, Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9789813235557 |
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adam_text | THE SOVIET ATOMIC PROJECT
/ PONDROM, LEE G.YYD1933-YYEAUTHOR
: 2018
TABLE OF CONTENTS / INHALTSVERZEICHNIS
WARTIME SOVIET INDUSTRY
DEVELOPMENT OF NUCLEAR PHYSICS BEFORE THE DISCOVERY OF FISSION
DISCOVERY OF FISSION OF URANIUM
SOVIET UNION AND STALIN S TERROR 1937-1939
SOVIET UNION AND NUCLEAR RESEARCH 1934-1942
THE MANHATTAN PROJECT CREATES LOS ALAMOS
SOVIET UNION CREATES LABORATORY #2
SOVIET ESPIONAGE AND THE ATOMIC PROJECT
PLAYERS IN THE DRAMA
STALIN, BERIA, AND KURCHATOV
INDUSTRIAL PLANTS MOVE TO THE URALS
SOVIET UNION CREATES ARZAMAS-16
URANIUM AND PLUTONIUM
GERMAN SCIENTISTS AND THE SOVIET PROJECT
SEMIPALATINSK NUCLEAR TEST RANGE
DIESES SCHRIFTSTUECK WURDE MASCHINELL ERZEUGT.
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WEB Sites
If a web address does not work, Google the subject and follow its lead.
738
The Soviet Atomic Project
Oral histories can be found at www.aip.org (American Institute of Physics).
Work.atomlandonmars.com has the directories for 12 pdf files of AtomnyyjproektSSSR
ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fok_Vladimir_Alexandrovich
ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulkovskoe_delo.
https://archive.org/details/sovietatomicespil951unit/ transcript of JCAE hearings
users.telenet.be/d_rijmenants/en/onetimepad.htm; description of coding from a one time
pad.
www.atomicheritage.org/profile/george-koval
www.world-nuclear.org contians much valuable information
www.nrc.gov information for radiation workers.
www.wikipedia.org/wiki.Separative_work_units. For the separative work formulas used to
compare different methods of isotope separation,
www.fas.org/man/dod- 101/navy Data for chemical explosives
www.kayelaby.npl.co.uk fission cross section data
www.nuclearweaponarchive.org useful current nuclear data for fissile materials
Index
‘A’ power reactor, 276, 406, 495, 500,
501,504, 505,513, 563, 570
Accidents at start-up, 412, 494, 496
Abakumov, Victor S. 22, 246
Abie Bikini test, 466, 542, 564, 575, 576
‘AV-1’ second power reactor at Combine
#817,406,501
Absorption of slow neutrons, 62
Academician LI, 506
Actinium 227Ac is an a emitter, 557
AFOAT-1, US Air Force remote
detection of an atomic bomb, 577, 580
Ageev, N. V., 447
Agudzery sanatorium in Sukhumi, 522,
523, 537
Akers, Wallace, 73
Akhiezer, Aleksandr, 100, 106, 133
Alamogordo Test - See Trinity, 258,309,
565, 575, 576, 580
Alamogordo, New Mexico, 74, 191
Albert Speer, 117, 184, 409, 515
Albuquerque, New Mexico, 312,313
Aleksandrov, Anatoly P., Ill, 141, 142,
272, 387, 389, 390, 395, 556, 583
Aleksandrov, S.P., 465
Alert 112, the airborne detection of Joe-1,
577
Alferov, V. I., 447
Alikhanov, Abram I., 122, 130, 208, 210,
212, 221,350,415
Allied invasion of Normandy, 377
Alliluyeva Nadezhda (Stalin’s second
wife), 362
Alma Ata capital of Kazakhstan, 540,571
Alpha (a) decay, 547, 590
Alpha (a) phase plutonium, 547, 549
Alpha calutron, 86
Alsos mission, 307,339
Soviet, 237, 241, 242, 248, 386, 395,
511,513, 521
US, 237, 247,511
Altitude pressure sensor for airborne
trigger, 557
Altshuler, LevD., 447,449,452,453, 555
Alvarez, Louis, 197, 455
Amaldi, Eduardo, 356
AMTORG, 281, 301
Anderson, Herbert L., 66, 153, 171, 194
Anderson, John, 73, 600
Annaberg, Germany town in the uranium
mining region, 487
Apin, A. Ya., 447
Argonne National Laboratory, 79, 161,
276, 607
Army Air Force (US), 552
Artsimovich, Lev A., 230, 242, 243, 335,
344,404,405,411,418,431,435^138,
460, 517, 583, 626
Arutyunov - translator, 334, 337, 338,
339, 341
Arzamas-16 (KB-11, Sarov), 273, 357,
392,459,464,467,474,476,477,479,
480,506,529,536,539,546,550,555,
678, 725, 726
Assassination attempt on Stalin?, 369
Atomic bomb, 711, 712, 722
destructive effects, 196, 225, 542,
561,680, 693
739
740
The Soviet Atomic Project
efficiency, 690
explosive yield, 696
Gun-type uranium bomb, 441, 539
implosion plutonium bomb, 258,
310, 441,717
Atomic Energy Commission AEC, 576
Attlee, Clement, 258
Aue, Germany town in the uranium
mining region, 487
Auer Company, Berlin, 240, 241, 245,
250, 251,253
B-29 Boeing heavy WWII bomber, 577
Bacher, Robert, 167
Baikal, Lake, 540
Bainbridge, Ken, 190,194
‘Baker’ Bikini test, 466,474, 545, 575
Balezin, Stepan A., 157, 206
Ballistics Experiments, 228
Baltic Region USSR uranium mines, 489
’Bananagate
Stalin’s green banana, 372
Barkovsky, Vladimir, 283, 349
Barrier used to separate isotopes by
gaseous diffusion, 525, 535, 615
Baruch, Bernard M., 317
Barwich, Elfi, 429,431, 512, 537
Barwich, Heinz, 326, 356, 413, 426, 512,
535, 537,626
aftermath, 580
Factory #813, 439
Germany, 520
Sukhumi, 429, 522
Baudino, John, 187,460
Beams, Jesse, 530, 533,627
Becquerel, Henri, 28, 482
Belgian Congo, 66,79,237,485
Belyaev, A. F., 446
Bentley, Elizabeth, 302, 316
Beria, Lavrenty, 9, 116, 123, 167, 269,
330,334,342,347,350,353,370,373,
383, 385, 393, 395-397, 403-406,
408,421,425-427,430,432,438,442,
445,453,460,465,471,480,489,490,
500,513,518,528,535,536,543,545,
551,553,562-564,567,571,580,581,
583, 710, 712, 719
Chief of NKVD, 107, 222, 238, 242,
248, 250, 252, 289, 386
Head of PGU-dispute with Kapitza,
263, 267, 269, 270, 328, 387
Head of PGU-management of
project, 256, 261, 265, 268, 386,
389, 391, 393,418
Origin, 385
Private life, 397
Successful test, 405,426
Terletsky mission, 332
Beria, Sergo, 283,290,295,369,385,397
Berlin Lichterfelde von Ardenne’s
laboratory in Germany, 513,515,519
Berlin Wall, 537
Bermuda, British island in the Atlantic,
577
Bernstein, Jeremy, 184, 511
Beryllium reactor moderator, 528
Bessarab, Maiya, 46,96,105
Beta (p) decay, 34
Bethe, Hans, 20,162,170,183,200,308,
347
Bikini Atoll Tests, 465, 540
Binding energy per nucleon, 587
Biological effects of radiation, 544, 545
Black body radiation, 685
Blackett, Patrick, 70, 73
Bletchley Park, 279, 296, 702
Blewett, John P., 644
Blokhintsev, Dmitry, 356,528, 537
Bochvar, A.A., 513,548,550
Bogolyubov, Nikolai N., 467
Bohien, Charles, 261
Bohr, Aage, 181, 183, 184,339,341
Bohr, Margrethe, 181, 184,331
Bohr, Niels, 41,48,64,93,328,331, 332,
334,337-339,341,424,654,665,666,
719, 720
60th birthday, 331
Atomic model, 30, 42
Meeting with Heisenberg in 1941,
180, 183
Index
741
Terletsky mission, 179, 266, 269,
327, 332
Theoretical physics at Copenhagen
before WWII, 42, 103
Trip to Los Alamos, 186, 331
Bohr-Wheeler model of fission, 588, 589
Bolshoi Theater, Moscow, 518
Bom, Max, 42, 101, 165, 298, 520
Boron triflouride BF3 gas for neutron
counters, 650
Bothe, Walther, 240
Bradbury, Norris, 201
Breit, Gregory, 39
Brezhnev, Leonid, 370
Bridgeman, Percy, 168
Briggs, Lyman, 68,72
Brillouin, Leon, 41
Brokhovich, B.V., 406, 500
Bronshtein, M.P., 109
Brothman, Abraham, 302,317
Budker, Gersh 1,405
Buhovo, Bulgaria — uranium mine, 486
Bukharin, Nikolai, 98, 109,443
Bulgakov, Mikhail, 115
Bulganin, Nikolai, 432,443
Bullitt, William C., 291
Burgess, Guy, 323
Bumazyan, A.I., 565, 567, 568
Bush, Vannevar, 69, 83, 164, 198, 200,
580
Byrnes, James, 197
137Cs fission fragment isotope, 509
Cadmium sheets for thermal neutron
absorption, 603-605
Caimcross, John - code name Carelian,
159,296
Calculations before computers, 170
Calutron. See also Y-12, electromagnetic
separation, 82,223,344,515,624-626
Capacitors in parallel and series, 632, 633
Cavendish laboratory
Cambridge University, 71
Central Intelligence Agency CIA, 552,
554
Centrifuges, 523,530,532,533,626,627,
629
Chadwick, James, 31,70, 71,73,74,178,
184, 185, 200, 300
Chain reacting pile, 78, 224
Chain reactions, 62, 65
Chalk River reactors Canada, 351, 352
Chelyabinsk region USSR, 406,412,427
Chelyabinsk-40. See Combine #817, 88,
490, 508
Chelyabinsk-65. See Combine #817, 508
Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering
Journal, 422
Cherenkov Pavel, 90
Cherenkov radiation, 90
Chernobyl reactor accident, 74, 509, 576
Chemyaev, 1.1., 506
Chirehiksky electrochemical combine,
227
Chou en Lai., 373
Christy, Robert, 188
Churchill, Winston, 73, 178, 186, 197,
258,259,300, 365,378,379, 552
Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford, 72
Clinton Engineering Works-Oak Ridge,
86
Cloud chamber particle detector, 649
Clusius, Klaus, 620
Cockcroft, John, 36, 70,591
Cohen, Lona. Code name Leslie, 303,312
Cohen, Morris, 312
Columbia University, 67, 68
Combine #817, 412, 427, 432, 433, 490,
500,504-507,513,551,559,561,564,
569
Compression bomb, 555
Compression to achieve a chain reaction,
539, 546,678
Compression wave technology, 555
Compressors for gaseous diffusion, 424,
425, 619
Compton, Arthur H., 74, 85, 161, 164,
722
Conant, James, 164,198,200,722
Conant, Jennet, 162
742
The Soviet Atomic Project
Condon, Edward U., 85
Control rods for a reactor, 603
Conventional explosion
baratol, 715
composition B, 201, 697
See also TNT
Conventional explosives, 441
Copenhagen, Denmark, 328, 332, 337,
340, 424
Coster-Mullen, John, 716
Coulomb barrier, 415,416, 590, 591
Coulomb repulsion, 61, 64
Coulomb’s law of electrostatics, 588
CP-1 reactor, 88,276,485,596, 598,602,
722
Crick, Francis, 400
Critical assemblies, 464, 558, 725, 728
Critical mass, 62,71,72
Cuban missile crisis, 582
Curie unit of radioactivity, 497, 658
Curie, Marie, 556,658
Curie, Pierre, 658
Curies, 35, 253, 482, 483, 499, 502, 504,
649, 713
Cyclotron, 434,608,642, 644,647,648
Berkeley, 36, 68, 129, 221
Laboratory #2, 213, 254, 653
Leningrad, 130, 221
Lichterfelde, 514, 517, 519
Cyclotron magnet, 643,645
‘D’s cyclotron acceleration chambers,
643,648
Daghlian, Harry, 190
Davidenko, V. A., 476
Davisson, C.J., 71
De Broglie wavelength, 608
De Gaulle, Charles, 17,379
Decryption — decoding secret messages,
699
deHoffinann, Frederick, 189
Delbrück, Max, 54
Delta (5) phase plutonium, 546, 549, 718
Demon core’ plutonium critical mass,
464,466
Dempster, Arthur J., 434
Density dependence of uranium under
extreme pressure, 479
Dirac, Paul A.M., 41,48
Djilas, Milovan, 376-378, 395
Djugashvili, Vissarion (Stalin’s father),
361
Djugashvili, Yakov (Stalin’s son), 362
Dokuchaev, Yakov P., 474, 563-569
Dollezhal, Nikolai A., 493
Domberger, Walter, 117,118
Double helix, 400
Douglas DC-3 (C-47), 292,294,518, 564
Dresden, Germany, 248, 326, 356, 514,
537, 538
Dubna. See JINR, 353, 354, 356, 390,
456, 582, 584
Dukhov, Nikolai L., 447, 564, 566
DuPont Chemical Co, 84, 88, 91
Dyson, Freeman, 463
Dzhelepov, Venedict P., 276
East Berlin, 261
Eastern migration of Soviet Industry, 7
Eastman Kodak Co., 84
Efficiency of a nuclear explosion, 570,
686,687
Ehrenfest, Paul, 44
Einstein, Albert, 29, 38,41, 54,112, 520
Debates with Niels Bohr on quantum
theoiy, 338
Writes a letter to Roosevelt regarding
nuclear fission, 67, 154
Eisenhower, David, 118
Eisenhower, Dwight, 243
Electromagnetic mass separation, 523
Electromagnetic method of isotope
separation, 535
Elektrosila, 215,221,231,437
Industrial plant in Leningrad, 418,
435
Elektrostal, 251, 253, 254, 396, 397,428,
554
RiehFs plant in Noginsk, 273, 418,
488, 489
Index
743
Electrostatic accelerators, 632, 638, 641,
648
Cockcroft-Waltontype, 36,131, 634,
636,637,651
Van de Graaff type, 169
Electrostatic charged particle analyzer,
652
Elementary charge on an electron, 589,
621
Encryption of information for secret
transmission, 699, 707
Enigma machine, 279,296,699,700
Eniwetoc atoll atomic tests, 577
ENORMOZ, 281
Enriched uranium, 528
Erzgebirge mountain chain, 484, 487
Espionage, Soviet, 280
Ether enterprise to purify uranium, 254
EVALUATION-Kurchatov of Bohr’s
answers, 348
Explosive layer and lenses, 715
Explosive lenses for compression, 555,
717
Exponential pile, 602
Ezhov, Nikolai, 107, 382, 386
F-l reactor, 274,275, 402,494, 600, 602
Factory ‘B’ Chemical extraction plant at
Combine #817, 492, 502, 504, 505,
507, 508, 513, 563
Factory V Plutonium refining plant at
Combine #817, 505, 506, 507, 513
Fallout radioactive debris carried by air
currents, 576, 577
Faraday cup, 651
Farm Hall England, 511
Farr, Tommy, 324
Farrell, Thomas, 192
Fast neutrons, 595
FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation, 317,
322, 720
Feklisov, Aleksandr, 3, 284, 286, 287,
313,314,582,721,723,724
England after WWII, 303, 321, 322
Journey to US in 1940, 5, 484
Klaus Fuchs, 318, 323-325
Later service-Cuban missile crisis,
326, 327
The Rosenbergs, 314
Work in New York city, 301
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory,
163,637
Fermi neutron age parameter, 605
Fermi, Enrico, 63, 74, 77, 79, 88, 162,
172,200,350,351,356,460,485,598,
600,602, 606, 720, 722
Columbia University, 64, 68
Los Alamos, 186,194,288,310,332,
392
Rome group, 35
University of Chicago, 74, 237
Fermi, Laura, 78, 186, 546
Feynman, Richard, 162, 171, 175, 200,
306, 308, 463
FIKOBYN Arzamas-16 critical
assembly, 466, 725
Filatov, V.L, 357
Finnish houses, 407, 451, 529
Fireball. Major energy channel for a
nuclear explosion, 542,544,559, 680-
682,695
Fischer, John, 233
Fission fragments, 65, 563,570,588, 589,
594,630,659
Fitin, Pavel, 160, 301, 311
Flerov, Georgy N., 8, 122, 139, 400, 404,
447,517,537,548,559,562,564, 584,
592, 593, 654,663,665,666, 691
Early life, 134
Graduate work at Leningrad, 134
Letters to Kurchatov, Kaftanov, and
Stalin, 146, 147, 153, 163
Red Army in WWII, 145
Soviet Alsos, 206, 208, 209, 239,
243, 248, 249
Soviet Atomic Project, 209
The gun type bomb, 150
Work at Dubna, 584
Foils for neutron activation, 598, 650
Fok, Vladimir A., 108, 109
744
The Soviet Atomic Project
Forrestal, James, 576
Franck, James, 520
Frank, I.M., 165,306
Frank, Oppenheimer, 165, 306
Frankel, Stanley, 171
Frank-Kamenetsky, David A., 562
Frayn, Michael, 179
Frenkel, Ya. L, 123
Frisch, Otto, 70, 74, 163, 179, 620, 655,
665
Frisch-Peierls memorandum, 70
Fritz Houtermans, 515
Fuchs, Klaus. Code names Charles, Rest,
282,298,308,316,323,348,352,420,
476, 582, 721, 723, 724
Early Life, 385
Move to America, 301, 302, 307
Move to England, 400, 723
Release and return to East Germany,
326, 537
Return to England and arrest, 179,
300,318, 323-326
Work with Peierls, 302
Fuchs, Kristel (Heinemann), 303, 308,
316
Fuel slugs from a reactor, 78, 502, 504
Fukushima reactor accident, 74, 509
fusion of light nuclei — nuclear fusion,
fusion Power, 61, 392, 400, 455, 474,
589
Gaister, Inna, 95,105
Galanin, A.D., 353
Gallium element used in plutonium alloy,
546, 549
Gamow, George, 20, 37, 48, 52, 56, 94,
114,381,527, 591
Escape to the West, 54, 55
Leningrad, 53
Problems at home, 53, 54, 112
Gaseous diffusion, 72,523,612,615,619,
621,622, 624, 626-629
Full scale plant D-l, 208, 428, 429,
431,432, 558
Geiger counter, 577, 604, 649
Geiger, Hans, 29
Georgia, Soviet Republic, 386
Gerasimovich, Boris P., 109
Gerlach, Walter, 240
German atomic bomb, 339
German POW, 380
Gestapo Nazi secret police, 515
Glaser, Alexander, 694
Gold, Harry. Code names Goose,
Raymond, 301-303, 307, 308, 316-
319.320
Goldhaber, Maurice, 132
Golovin, Igor, 239, 241, 242, 387, 405,
511
Goncharov, Vladimir, 256
Gorbachev, Mikhail, 581, 583
Goring, Hermann, 240, 514
Gorky factory for compressors, 425,443
Gorsky, Anatoly, 296, 710
Gottingen University, 519
Goudsmit, Sam, 237,485, 511
Gouzenko, Igor, 316,317
Graphite (carbon), 595, 598, 601-603,
605, 607
prisms, 256, 600
reactor grade, 74, 254
Great Britain, 70
Great Falls, Montana, 290,292
Greenewalt, Crawford, 84
Greenglass, David. Code name Caliber,
303.304.309.313.315.316.320
Greenglass, Ruth, 313,316
Greinacher, Heinrich, 636
Gromyko, Andrei, 292,465
Groves, Leslie, 73,75,82-85,88,91,118,
164,167,168,185,190,197,198,200,
208,228,237,247,293,294,307,339,
484,485,530,553,568, 575,580,721
GRU Soviet military intelligence, 317
Guam, Pacific island, 577
Gubarev, Vladimir, 254
Guderian, General Heinz, 140
GULAG prison camp system, 535
Gun type bomb, 72,228, 558
Gyth, Volmar, 184
Index
745
Hahn, Otto, 63,134,240,244,250,511
Halifax, Nova Scotia (TNT explosion ),
72
Hall, Admiral William, 700
Hall, Theodore. Code name Mlad, 282,
309,312,355, 723
Halperin, Israel, 317
Hanford, Washington plutonium reactors,
74, 85, 87,91,551
Hankey, Maurice, 296, 710
Hamack House, Berlin, 515
Harriman, Averell, 18, 261, 365
Harwell, British atomic energy
laboratory, 318, 325, 352
Heavy water, 226,244, 598,611
Heavy water reactor, 528
Hechingen, Germany, 240,244
Heifitz, Grigory, 306, 351
Heisenberg, Werner, 112, 117, 180, 183,
240, 244,327,338, 339, 511, 520
Farm Hall, 238,511
Quantum mechanics, 42
Visit to Copenhagen 1941, 181, 182
Work on Uranverein, 183, 184
Heitler, Walter, 463
Helsinki, Finland, 336
Herb, Raymond G., 39
Hertz, Gustav, 245, 413, 418, 429, 515,
519, 520, 522, 527, 532, 535, 537
Hertz, Heinrich, 519
High explosive shell, 717
Hiroshima bomb, 86, 229, 253, 259, 312,
421,439,441,450,464, 543,545,575,
576, 686, 693, 695,697, 716
Hitler, Adolph, 67, 70, 112,140
Hogerton, John, 422, 551-553
Holloway, David, 228
Honshu, Japan, 287
Hopkins, Harry, 291, 294
Horn Hardart Automat, 314
Homig, Don, 199, 200
Hot lab for handling radioactive materials,
499
House Committee on Un-American
Activities (HUAC), 293,352
Houtermans, Charlotte, 20,21
Houtermans, Fritz, 7, 20, 66, 96, 100
Hubbard, Jack, 197
Hydrogen bomb, 61,325, 581
Hyperfine structure of spectral lines, 520
Hysteresis in magnet iron, 645
IBM Machines at Los Alamos, 171
Imperial Chemical Industries, 73,297
Indium foils for neutron activation, 604
Initiator - urchin, 713,717
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton,
67, 721
Institute for Applied Mathematics (1PM)
Moscow, 469
Institute for Chemical Physics Leningrad,
417,450,539,544
Institute for Chemical Physics Moscow,
559
Institute for Physical Problems Moscow
(Kapitza’s institute), 271, 272, 469,
550, 556, 583
Institute for Theoretical and Experimental
Physics (HEP) Moscow, 469
Ioffe, Abram F., 41, 44, 45, 48, 50, 56,
108,110, 111, 112,115,122,123,125,
126,130,134,141,143,158,206,220,
350,354, 381,408,412
Ioffe, B.L., 352
Ion sources. Von Ardenne’s
‘duoplasmatron’, 439, 523, 535, 621,
623,624, 626,648
Ionization chambers for particle
detection, 649,655
Iron curtain, 552
Irtysh River, Kazakhstan, 540, 564, 568
Ismay, Hastings (Lord), 73
Isotope enrichment, 80
Measurement by a decay, 415
Measurement by 186 keV y ray line,
415
746
The Soviet Atomic Project
Isotope separation, 69, 72, 74, 80, 413,
495, 515,523,611,614,619,624,630,
668, 710
centrifuges, 82, 417, 626
Electromagnetic, 80, 81, 621
Gaseous diffusion, 80
High speed centrifuges, 80
lasers, 612
Thermal diffusion, 80, 81, 208, 620
Isotopic mass effects in chemistry, 611
Isotron, 82
Ivan IV (Tsar), 144
Ivanov, N. I., 548, 550
Jachymov Czechoslovakia uranium mine,
482,486,487
Jello box - and Ruth Greenglass, 315,316
Jensen, Hans J.D., 182
JINR Dubna, 232, 537, 538
Joe-1 detected remotely by the US Air
Force and Navy, 566, 575, 576, 580
Johanngeorgenstadt, Germany town in
uranium mining district, 487
Johnson noise in electric circuits, 657,
658, 660
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy
JCAE, 294, 309, 354
Joliot-Curie, Frederic, 37, 59, 63, 66, 134
Jordan, George R., 290, 292,294
aftermath, 68, 162, 508
Lend-Lease, 292, 294
Jungk, Robert, 182, 183
K-25 Gaseous diffusion plant at Oak
Ridge, 85,422,429,433, 551, 553
Kaftanov, Sergei V., 143, 147, 154, 156,
158,206,210
Kaiser Wilhelm II, 514
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute, 68, 240, 244,
522
Kamenev, Evgeny, 533,723
Kana, 280
Kannegeisser, Eugenia Peierls, 53, 186
Kapitza, Anna, 52, 106
Kapitza, Peter L., 8,21,45,48,52,58,59,
96, 115, 273, 331, 332, 340, 341, 387,
408,460, 583
Beria’s committee PGU, 262-264,
266, 269, 270, 328
Compared to Kurchatov, 269
Dismissal, 271
Freeing Landau, 106, 386
Letters to Stalin, 102, 270, 516, 518
Liquefying air, 267
Restoration, 272, 273
Travel permit withdrawn, 52, 56, 93
With Rutherford in Cambridge, 44,
47, 52
Work at Institute for Physical
Problems, 56, 57, 101, 102, 105
Work during WWD, 143, 146, 229
Karachai, lake at Combine #817, 508
Katyn massacre, 380
Kazakhstan, Soviet Republic, 485, 489,
540, 578
Kazan, 143,152,206, 220,417
KB-11 (Arzamas-16, Sarov), 444, 445,
448,449,453,458,469,490,555-559,
561,562,581, 583
Kefirstadf. Name for the village near
Plant #813 by Gustav Hertz, 429
Keith, P.C., 423,426
Keldysh, Mstislav, 326,358,469
Kellex Corporation, 302,421,422,551
Kemble, Edwin C, 38
Kennedy, John, 327
Kennedy, Robert, 327
Kerensky, Alexander, 281
Kerst, Don, 189
Khalatnikov, I.M., 51, 267,460,469
Khariton, Yuli B., 8, 122, 153, 224, 335,
357,405,449,453,461,476,484,485,
490, 539, 549, 558-562, 583
Early life, 41, 445
Early work on fission, 208, 445
Joins Laboratory #2, 242, 244, 246,
247,
Trips abroad for study, 245
Index
747
Scientific head of KB-11, 442, 443,
450, 564
Kharkov, 211, 233,285, 515,522, 530
Khlopin, Vitaly G., 127, 134, 220, 222,
501, 502, 504
Khokhlov, A. M, 465
Khristianovich, S. A., 416
Khrushchev, Nikita, 2, 222, 273, 326,
400,460,480, 581,582
Khurgin, Ya., 130
Kiev, 233,285
Kikoin, Abram K., 105
Kikoin, Isaak K., 122,208,247,333, 335,
344,350,411,412,415,417,420,421,
424,426,428,429,431,484,485,490,
517, 530,533, 584
Diffusion plant at Laboratory #813,
439,551
Gaseous diffusion at Laboratory #2,
230,413
Soviet Alsos, 212, 242-247
kmfneutron reproduction factor, 599, 602
King, Mackenzie, 178, 300
Kirov Factory Leningrad, 425
Kirov, Sergei, 94
Kiselev, Kuzma, 320
Klaproth, Martin, 482
Klaus Fuchs, 306
Kleenex box - and Lona Cohen, 309, 313
Klugman, James, 297
Kobulov brothers, Bogdan and Amayak,
334
Kodiak Island, Alaska, 577, 578
Kolesnikov, S.G., 565, 567
Komarov, V.L., 7
Komsomolskaya Pravda, 357
Konev, Ivan, 376
Konovalets, Evgeny, 285, 286
Korets, Moisei A., 98, 103
Komfeld, M. O., 230
Kornienko, Aleksandra, 503
Korolev, Sergei, 117,480, 580
Kostikov, P. S., 460
Kotikov, Anatoly N., 290, 292
Koval, George. Code name Delmar, 305,
421
KP1 control bunker at RDS-1 test, 562,
565
Krebs, Adolf, 554
Kroger, Peter and Helen (Morris and
Lona Cohen), 313
Kruglov, A. K., 497,498
Krupskaya, Nadezhda, 57
Krylov, Alexei, 45
Kuibyshev, 18, 364
Kumykin, Pavel N., 374
Kurchatov Institute Moscow (Laboratory
#2), 205, 208, 221,222, 387,600
Kurchatov, Boris V., 123, 208, 218, 230,
402, 504
Kurchatov, Igor V., 8,122,209,250,269,
283,325,330,335,341,347,350,353,
357,383,397,400,404,405,408,409,
411,431,433,434,436,437,442,454,
457,459,461,467,485,488-190,498,
500,508,518,549,555-557,559,561,
562,564,582,602,609,610,665,709,
710
Early life, 123, 125, 399, 412,
Elected to the Academy of Sciences,
210,221
Flerov’s letter, 152
Graduate school Leningrad, 126
Laboratory #2, 205, 206, 210, 212,
216, 218, 224, 227-230,235,244,
248, 255, 268, 273, 276, 293
Member of PGU, 262, 289, 328
Nuclear physics research, 127, 129,
130
Release to head the SAP, 158, 208,
223
WWII work for the navy, 141, 143
Work habits, 403
Peace maker, 404
Trouble shooter, 406
‘A’ Reactor at Combine #817, 490,
491,495,496, 499, 500
test of RDS-1, 563
endgame, 583
748
The Soviet Atomic Project
Kurchatova, Marina Dmitrievna, 143,
218
Kumakov, Sergei, 311
Kuznetsov, Admiral Nikolai G., 465
Kvasnikov, Leonid, 720,721
Kyshtym, village near Combine #817,
427,493, 508,513
L.P. Beria, 114
Laboratory #2 of the USSR Academy of
Sciences, 209,211,224,230,232,234,
256,319,341,344,369,389,396,400,
401,407,411,417,431,440,469,494,
498,499, 564, 583,600,602
Beginnings in Moscow, 441
F-l reactor, 485, 490
first cyclotron, 37, 59, 222
Group structure, 243
laboratory tent, 256
living conditions, 91, 116, 120, 144,
162
Site selection, 390, 540
Laboratory #4 in Moscow, 532
Laboratory A5 von Ardenne at Sinop,
426, 529, 532
Laboratory ‘G* Hertz at Agudzery, 426,
529
Laboratory V at Obninsk, 527, 528
Lamphere, Robert, 288, 309, 317, 318
Landau, Lev D., 7, 42, 43, 45, 46, 51, 58,
126,272,273,331,340,386,460,469,
470, 512, 560, 583
Arrest and release, 102, 107
Back to Leningrad, 50
Copenhagen and Cambridge, 40-42,
48
Early work, 41
Kharkov, 20, 51, 93, 96, 97, 100
The Landau School, 51, 58, 405
To Kapitza’s Institute, 102, 105,263,
387, 556
Visit with Pauli, 49
Soviet Atomic Project work, 469
Landau, Sonya, 105
Landsdale, John, 307
Lange, Fritz, 411, 530, 532
Langmuir, Irving, 39
Laurence, William, 200
Lavrentev, Oleg, 393
Lawrence, Ernest O., 59, 72, 161, 162,
164, 434,514, 642,643,645,
Cyclotron, 36,39, 68
Electromagnetic Isotope separation,
82
‘Layer cake’ hydrogen bomb design, 476
Leipunsky, Aleksandr L, 20, 96, 98, 101,
157,402, 529, 530
Leipzig, Germany, 240, 537
Lend-Lease, 227, 281, 289-291, 293,
297,485
Lenin, Vladimir, 8,94,286,361,362,370
Leningrad blockade, 211,220
Leningrad Physico-technical Institute
(LFTI), 125, 126, 141, 214, 220, 221,
412
Leningrad Radium Institute, 220, 221,
236,417, 501,504, 557, 563
Lewis, Fulton Jr., 294
Libby, Leona Marshal, 79,167,203
Chicago, 189, 224, 230
Hanford, 187, 199, 225, 407
Los Alamos, 195, 306, 315, 319
Libby, Willard, 88-91, 166, 224, 484,
654, 655, 664,665,692
Lifshitz, E.M., 58,272,469
Light water reactor, 527, 528
Lindemann, Frederick, 73
LEPAN (Laboratory #2), 206
Liquid drop model, 64
Little Boy, Hiroshima bomb, 198
Livestock for radiation effect studies, 543,
544, 545, 559
Livingston, M. Stanley, 644
Logarithmic decrement of energy loss by
collision, 596
Lomako, P.F., 254, 255
Long distance detection of an atomic
bomb, 575
Look Magazine, 551
Index
749
Los Alamos National Laboratory, 74, 82,
459,464,476, 477, 508, 577, 697
Losev, V. K., 236
Lubyanka Prison NKVD Headquarters,
105,286,289,296, 328-330,342
Lysenko, Trofim, 116, 381,401,453
McDonald ranch house, 191
Maclean, Donald S. code name Leaf, 297,
323, 710
Magadan prison camps, 448
Magnetic mines - protection of ships, 141
Magnetic susceptibility, 646
Magnetron microwave generator, 314
Magnitogorsk, 518
Makhnev, Vasily A., 226, 242, 393,
395, 438,513,517,518
NKVD, 234, 254
PGU, 256, 262, 389
RDS-1 test, 441,459
Soviet Alsos, 238, 248
Maksimov, A.A., 111, 381, 382
Malenkov, Georgy, 238, 262, 263, 269,
320,370, 374,460,581
Malik, John, 545, 697
Mally, Theodore, 297
Maltsev, A. M., 487
Manhattan Project, 70, 72, 74, 80, 253,
276,280,283,332,339,350,411,433,
439,461,464,482,505, 552,575,620,
626, 709,716,719
Beginnings, 68
Espionage of, 226
Hanford, Washington, 407
Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs,
190,194,226
Los Alamos, 70
Metallurgical Laboratory, 237
Oak Ridge, 283, 293, 302, 315
Trinity Test, 2, 164, 190
MANIAC computer, 172,469
Manley, John, 169, 170,174
Manstein, Erich, 17, 157
Mao Zedong, 373
Marconi, Guglielmo, 53
Mark, Carson, 172
Marsden, Ernest, 29
Marshall, George C., 75, 83,606
Marx high voltage generator, 635
Marxist philosophy, 381
Mass spectrograph, 81
Math Environments, 229
MAUD Committee and report, 70-73,
148,163,186,298,299
Max von Laue, 21
Maxwell’s equations for
electromagnetism, 519
May, Alan Nunn, 224,276, 317, 319
Mayak accident. See also Combine #817,
490,508, 509, 564, 576
McKibbin, Dorothy, 162,169, 185
McMillan, Edwin, 68,200
Mechanical calculators, 170
Medvedev, Zhores, 509
Meiman, Naum, 470,471
Meitner, Lise, 63,70,250
Melitopol, Ukraine, 285
Menshikov, Mikhail A., 373, 374
Merkin, Vladimir I., 229, 230
Merkulov, Vsevolod N., 224, 226, 260,
289,710,712,719
Mesheryakov, Mikhail G., 344,434, 435,
456, 465, 466,474, 542, 564, 566
Dubna, 139, 584
Work in Leningrad, 230, 336
WWII, 145
Trip to Bikini, 466, 542
RDS-1, 563
Metallurgical Laboratory, University of
Chicago, 74, 78, 161, 164, 174, 224,
411
Metric system of weights and measures,
289
Metropolis, Nick, 171
MI5/MI6, British intelligence, 322
Migdal, Arkady B, 405
Migulin, Vladimir V. radar expert at
MGU, 517
Mikoyan on Stalin, 208,222,231, 370
750
The Soviet Atomic Project
Mikoyan, Anastas, 227, 294, 334, 342,
370, 372-374, 379, 380
Mikoyan, Artem, 480
Miller, Arthur, 321
Mingrellian tribe, 385
Ministry of Defense of the USSR, 544
Mitkevich, V.F., 111
Moderators, 78, 595
Graphite (carbon), 79, 223, 597, 600
Heavy water, 79, 223, 597
Light water, 79, 223
Modem physics and Marxist theory, 381
Modin, Yuri, 159,295,296, 323
Molody, Konon (Gordon Lonsdale), 313
Molotov, Vyacheslav, 106,207,208,210,
227,260,261,263,286,295,338,340,
370, 378,464,465, 579
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, 139
Montebello Islands, 325
Montgomery, Bernard, 243
Moon, Philip, 70
Moonshine, 65
Moore, Henry, 75
mordoboy Russian disciplinary language,
396
Morrison, Philip, 192
Morse code, 278, 280
Moscow Electrode Factory, 254—257,
390,408
Moseley, Harry, 520
Mostovoy, Vladimir - description of
plutonium production at F-l, 275,276,
319,402
Mott, Neville, 298
Munroe jets, 449
Murmansk, 290
Mushroom cloud — familiar signature of
an atomic bomb, 566
Muzrukov, Boris G., 549
Mysovsky, L.V., 113,130
Nagasaki bomb, 259, 312,439,450, 464,
542, 545,575, 576, 686, 695, 697, 716
Naimark, Norman, 512
National Bureau of Standards, 68
National Defense Research Committee,
69, 83
NATO, 323
Neddermeyer, Seth, 188
Nemenov, Leonid, 211, 218-221, 230,
236, 242, 347, 501
Neptunium, 63
Neustadt, Germany, 246
Neutrinos, 64
Neutron, 726, 728
Collision energy loss in moderator,
559, 663, 664
Fast neutrons, 659, 660
Slow (thermal) neutrons, 660, 662
Neutron density in a reactor, 595
Neutron source initiator, 555, 557
Neutron time of flight, 608
Neutrons, 63, 64, 586-588, 591-596,
598-600, 602-606, 608, 609, 611,
630,649,650,670-678,680,681,688,
689, 691-693,698, 713, 714
Collision energy loss in moderator,
596
Fast neutrons, 658
Slow (thermal) neutrons, 595, 654
New Scientist article on the Mayak
accident, 509
New York Times, 317
Nicholas n, Tsar, 7
Nichols, Colonel Kenneth D., 485
Nier, Alfred O., 434
Nikitin, B.A., 564, 566
Nikitinskaya, T. L, 663, 665
NKVD. State secret police, 242,249,252,
260, 268, 269, 276, 281-288, 290,
295-297,299,301,311,320,322,323,
326-330, 332-342, 349, 352, 357,
379,380,386,387,394,396,404,421,
436,443,444,458,460,487,496,529,
532, 534, 547, 561, 582, 710, 722
Nobel Prize, 340
Noginsk, Moscow region, 251,488, 489,
513,534
Nordhausen, Germany — WWII rocket
base, 117
Index
751
North Pole, 577
Northwest Territories Canada uranium
mines, 484
Notebook of a German officer, 157
NOVA program on Norway raid, 597
Novosibirsk, 540
NP2 observation bunker at RDS-1 test,
562, 564, 565
Nuclear explosions, 710
Nuclear fission, 62,668
Nuclear masses, 586, 653
Nuclear reactions, 61, 542
Nuclear reactors, 64, 69, 74, 223
Nuclear weapons, 69, 70, 668, 680, 686
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, 74, 80,
85, 91, 305, 721
Obninsk, town SW of Moscow, 498, 527,
529, 534
Obreimov, I.B., 20, 50, 98, 101, 115
Occidental Restaurant, Washington, D.C.,
327
Office of Naval Research ONR, 577
Ohnesorge, Wilhelm Reich Postmaster
General, 514
Oleinikov, Pavel, 512, 536
Oliphant, Marcus, 70, 72, 73
One time pad, 700, 702, 707
Operation Paperclip, 238
Oppenheimer, J. Robert, 85, 161, 164,
167, 169,400,720,721
Berkeley/Cal Tech, 59, 306
Gottingen, 40, 42, 58, 101
Los Alamos, 164, 173, 196, 198,200,
307, 461
Post war, 170
Oppenheimer, Kitty, 173, 306
Orlova-Korotkevich, Nadezhda, 144
Oscilloscope, 650, 652, 658, 659
Ovakimyan, Gaik, 301, 320
Ozersk, town near ‘A* plutonium reactor,
407, 490, 495, 508, 551
Ozyora, villa in Moscow, 251
P. Popkov., 213
Pash, Boris, 125, 238, 307
Pauli, Wolfgang, 49
Paulus, Field Marshal Friedrich, 1, 251,
362
Pavlov, Vladimir N., 261
PB-8 Soviet heavy bomber, 555
Pearl Harbor attack, 74
Pegram, George B., 67
Peierls, Eugenia, 43, 66
Peierls, Rudolf, 43, 48, 50, 53, 163, 306,
308, 420, 620, 721
And Klaus Fuchs, 298, 302, 612, 615
Frisch-Peierls memorandum, 70
In England, 70, 162
In the Soviet Union, 43
To Los Alamos, 74, 179, 300
Penney, William, 545, 696
Perfect gas law, 684
Pervukhin, Mikhail, 219, 221, 222, 415,
417, 528, 562, 564,710
Early manager of SAP, 207, 211,
213, 223, 224, 227, 234-236, 293
Member of PGU, 262
Test of RDS-1, 561
Peter I, the Great, Tsar of Russia, 337
Peters, Wesley, 363
Petlyura, Symon, 285
Petrzhak, Konstantin A., 135, 139, 206,
400, 592, 593, 654, 663, 665, 666, 691
PGU — Beria’s committee, 208, 274, 411,
427,437,438,486,532, 536,547, 551,
719
Composition, 262
Disputes in meetings, 264
Philby, Harold ‘Kim’, code name Stanley,
302, 580, 724
Phillips, Eindhoven, 520
Photographic emulsions for particle
detection, 649
Physical Review, 288, 570, 649
Physikalische Zeitschrift der
Sowietunion, 132
Piezoelectricity, 126
Pitchblende UO2, 482, 489, 612
Planck’s constant, 608
752
The Soviet Atomic Project
Plant #813 Gaseous diffusion in the Urals,
412,432,433, 490, 507,535, 551
Plant #814 Electromagnetic separation
plant in the Urals, 412, 432,433, 507
Plasma physics, 523
Plutonium, 69, 88, 551, 563, 609, 630,
631,710, 714,716,718, 725
Extraction, 177, 501, 630, 631
Manufacture, 175, 231, 491, 495,
550
Metallurgy, 546
weapons grade, 717
Plutonium production
By cyclotrons, 176
By reactors, 178, 609, 610
210Po, 556
Pokrovsky, Georgy, 157
Polonium 210Po source of a particles, 556
Pomeranchuk, Isaak Ya, 101, 224, 230,
353, 462,467,512
Joins Laboratory #2, 208, 255
Member of the Landau group, 512
Visits to Pontecorvo, 352
Work at KB-11,450
Pontecorvo, Bruno, 351, 354, 356, 390,
537, 722, 723
Defection, 352
Fermi’s group in Rome, 62, 350
Harwell and Klaus Fuchs, 352
Life in Dubna, 353—355
Neutron oil well logging, 351
Reactors in Canada, 351
Visit to Paris and Joliot Curie, 351
Pontecorvo, Gil, 351
Pontecorvo, Marianne, 352
Pose, Heinz, 512, 527-529, 538
Pose, Rudolf G., 512, 529
Potsdam Conference, 197,257,260
Powers, Francis Gary, 314, 554
Pravda, 355
Predetonation, leading to a misfire, 556,
557, 565
Prince Igor opera by Aleksandr Borodin,
518
Prism test (graphite), 254
Prison camps, 457
Prison labor, 444
Prompt neutrons, 65
Protons positively charged hydrogen
nuclei, 586,587,591
Protopov, A. P., 447
Protvino High energy physics laboratory,
583
Proximity fuse, 314
Prusakov, V.N., 533
^u, 80
240Pu, 177, 555, 588, 592, 630, 693
Pulkovo Affair (astronomers under
Stalin’s terror), 108
PUREX technique for plutonium
extraction, 631
Pusher - aluminum shell for compression
shockwave, 715,717
Putin, Vladimir, 305
Pyatigorsky, Lazar M., 98, 105
Quantum mechanics, 381, 383
Quebec Agreement Roosevelt and
Churchill, 300
‘Queen Mary s’ chemical plants at
Hanford, Washington, 88,90
Rabi, LL, 162,167,355
Radar altitude sensor for airborne
detonation, 71, 557
Radiation damage, 543, 559
Radiation safety, 496-498, 506
Radioactive sources for experiments, 649
Radioactivity - discovery, 34, 59, 603,
604
Radium trace element in uranium ore,
482,483
Radon radioactive gas, 63, 483,499
Rankine-Hugoniot equations, 679
Ratner, A. P., 504
Raymond, Ellsworth, 551, 553
RDS-1,441,459,474,563,569,578
Preparation, 506
Index
753
Test, 473
yield measurements afterwards, 568,
569
RDS-2, 441,480, 558
Red Army, 378, 480, 489, 511, 516, 521,
561
Red Orchestra’, 295
Relativity theoiy, 381, 383
REM, measure of radiation dosage for
workers, 497
Repatriation of German citizens, 528, 536
Reproduction factor for neutrons in a
reactor (see kin/ )
Reshetnikov, Fedor G., 254
Residual radiation at a nuclear test site,
567
Resistivity, 647
Reynolds, George, 696
Rhodes, Richard, 65, 193, 201, 693
Richards, Hugh, 174, 276
Richards, Mildred Paddock, 176
Riehl, Nikolaus, 240, 241, 248, 250, 396,
397,428, 512, 518, 522, 535-537, 554
Interaction with Beria, 396
Interaction with Zavenyagin, 253
Move to Sungul, 498, 513
Recruited by Soviet Alsos, 251
Return to Germany, 519
Uranium plant at Noginsk, 252, 273,
498
With the Auer Company, 243
Rijmenants, Dirk, 703, 705
Robotics for manipulation of radioactive
materials, 499
Roentgen unit of ionization by
radioactivity, 497
Roentgen, Wilhelm discoverer of x-rays,
497
Rohes, firm that handled German
uranium, 245, 246
Rokossovsky, Konstantin, 1, 95
Room 40 — British Naval Intelligence,
699
Roosevelt, Franklin D., 18, 67, 68, 73,
167, 178, 186, 258, 291, 300
Rosbaud, Paul, 242, 339
Rosenberg, Ethel, 284, 288, 313, 319,
320, 352, 723
Rosenberg, Julius, Code name Liberal.
Also Julius, 284, 303, 314, 724
Rossendorf, Germany, 326, 537
Rossi, Bruno, 651
Rotterdam, 286
Royal Society, London, 71
Rutherford, Ernest, 8, 28, 42, 45, 52, 57,
65,93, 113,315, 520
Sachs, Alexander, 67, 68
Sadovsky, A., 571, 694
Sakharov, Andrei D., 271, 357, 451^4-53,
461,463,467,470,471,474,476, 581,
583, 725
Early life, 453, 456
Hydrogen bomb work, 476
Recruited by KB-11, 448
Visit with Beria, 392, 459
WWII factory work, 392, 454
Sakharova, Klava, 393, 394, 454, 467,
512
Salisbury, Harrison, 19
Samarsky, Aleksandr A., 468, 473
San Francisco, California, 287
Sarov monastery, became KB-11, 440,
443
Sax, Saville. Code name Star, 303, 312
Sazykin, A. A., 533
Scali, John, 327
Schlisselburg, 212
Schoenberg, 46
Schrodinger, Erwin, 30, 50, 520
Schutze, Wemer, 431, 535
Schwinger, Julian, 463
Scintillation counters, 651
Seaborg, Glenn, 69, 80, 161
Section S, 329, 330, 350
Segre, Emilio, 356
Seignette’s salt (Rochelle Salt), 125
Seismic waves from a nuclear explosion,
576
Seitz, Frederick, 242, 252
754
The Soviet Atomic Project
Semenov, Nikolai N., 460, 539, 559, 560
Semenov, Semen code name ‘Sam’, 301,
302, 303
Semi-empirical mass formula-Appendix
A, 586
Semipalatinsk Kazakhstan, 439,539,540,
561—564, 571,578
Sengier, Edgar, 484
Separative work units formula, 628
Serber, Charlotte, 200
Serber, Robert, 162, 164, 165, 173, 678,
688, 690, 692, 695, 696
Early work on atomic bomb, 69
Los Alamos and the Primer, 174,
671, 676, 682-684, 687, 693
To Berkeley with Oppenheimer, 164
Wisconsin PhD, 165
Serov, Ivan, 244, 427, 433
Serpukhov, town near Moscow, 583
Shalnikov, A. L, 550
Shapiro, Maurice, 578
Sharashka - NKVD technical prison, 116,
120
Shaw, George B., 321
Shchelkin, K.L, 447
Shelter Island Conference, 463
Shinkolobwe uranium mine in Belgian
Congo, 484
Shirkov, Dmitry, 468
Shiryaeva, Anna (daughter of Yakov
Zeldovich), 448
Shiryaeva, Olga, 448
Shockwave, 545, 559,575,681
compression wave for critical mass,
555, 678
Energy channel of nuclear explosion,
542, 544, 680
Shostakovich, Dmitiy, 115
Shot noise in amplifiers due to discrete
electron charge, 657,658
Shubin, S.P., 109
Shubnikov, Lev, 96, 99
Siemens Co, 240, 250, 413, 515, 520-
522,532
Silicon Valley, 390
Simferopol, Crimea, 123,125
Simon, Franz, 72
Sinelnikov, Kirill, 211
Sinelnikova, Marina, 125
Sinev, N. M., 533
Sinop sanatorium in Sukhumi, 521, 523,
525, 532, 537
Slavsky, Yefim P., 255, 256, 407, 486,
496, 549
Slotin, Louis, 190
Slow neutrons, 595
SMERSH-4 death to spies’, 246
Smith, Cyril, 176
Smith, Horace, 464
Smyth Report, 188, 226, 253, 330, 341,
344, 348,421, 552
Smyth, Hemy D, 83
Sobolev, S.L., 424
Soccer ball design of compression lenses,
555
Sokhina, Liya, 504, 505, 507, 548
Joins Combine #817, 546
Successful delivery of plutonium
metal, 506
Training, 546
Working conditions in plutonium
extraction plants, 506, 546
Sorge, Richard, 295
Soviet Alsos, 239,433
Soviet Atomic Project, 365, 384, 394,
425, 480, 482,489,507,534,552, 554
Space charge effects in electromagnetic
separation, 344, 623,624
Special Tasks memoir in English by Pavel
Sudoplatov, 284
Spontaneous fission, 592, 593, 662-665,
667,670,691,692,710
plutonium, 570
Uranium, 654, 655, 659, 660, 662
90 Sr radioactive fission fragment, 510,
553
Stalin Prize, 535
Stalin, Joseph, 1, 58, 103, 115, 153, 167,
197,207,231,256,270,290,291,332,
340,347,363,365,369,370,372-374,
Index
755
376,377,379,383-385,397,403,404,
421,460,465,466,471,480,505,558,
563, 580, 723
Death, 581
Early life, 361
Industrialization, 6
Potadam, 258-261, 267
Stalin’s reaction to the German
Invasion, 370
The SAP, 223, 261, 268, 271, 274
The Terror, 93
The war, 9, 19, 139, 364
Stalin, Vassily, 295
Stalin’s reaction to the German Invasion
The war, 371
Stalina, Svetlana (Lana Peters), 18, 362,
363, 364, 365, 385, 395
Stalingrad, 362, 365
Starinov, Ilya G., 156
Stark, Johannes, 112
Steenbeck, Max, 532, 533, 535
Stelmakhovich, Dimitiy, 452
Stetskaya, Olga, 57
Steury, Donld P., 554
Stimson, Henry, 75,197, 227, 258,259
Stockholm, Sweden, 336, 342
Stone and Webster construction firm, 84
Strassman, Friedrich W., 63,134
Strauss, Lewis, 576
STRELA computer, 469
Studebaker trucks, 227
SU-20. 20 stage test setup for
electromagnetic separation, 432, 438
Sudoplatov, Pavel, 4, 56, 264, 285, 316,
328,330,334,342,347,350,351,354,
355, 371, 396,408, 711, 720-723
arrest and reinstatement, 581
Atomic espionage, 268
Early career, 284
observations on PGU, 262, 264-266,
391
Trotsky, 329, 723
trouble with politburo, 320
Sukhoy, P. O., 481
Sukhumi, 418, 431, 514, 521, 534, 537,
554
Black sea resort, 373
site of German laboratories, 413,
425, 498
Sukhumi, Laboratory V, 529
Sungul Institute south of Sverdlovsk for
study of biological radiation effects,
498, 513
Susanin, Ivan, 403
Svanidze, Ekaterina (Stalin’s first wife)
361
Sverdlovsk (Ekaterinberg), 406,412,427,
429, 490, 513, 530, 554
Sverdlovsk-44. See Plant #813 gaseous
diffusion, 427,431
Swan Lake ballet by Tchaikovsky, 518
Szilard, Leo, 65-68, 113, 600,720
Taliesin, WI, 364
Tamm, Igor, 113,123,255,271,393,400,
454,467, 470, 471
Tamper, 725
Tamper for a fission weapon, 675, 676,
714
Tashkent, Uzbekistan, 236
TASS, Soviet news agency, 260, 281,
318, 579,580
Taylor, G.I., 179
Tbilisi, Georgia, 362
Telegdi, Valentine, 66
Teller, Edward, 66,68, 93, 162,200
Tennessee Valley Authority, 85,293, 625
Tent, 407
Terletsky, Yakov, 266, 269, 288, 327-
330,332,337-339,341,342,347,355,
361, 362, 371, 424, 562, 719, 722
Terletsky-Bohr mission Kurchatov’s
evaluation, 327, 349
Terletsky-Bohr mission questions and
answers, 343, 386
The ‘beard’- nickname for Igor
Kurchatov, 402
Thermal diffusion, 72
Thermal energy, 596
756
The Soviet Atomic Project
Thermal neutrons, 62
Thermodynamics, 612
Thiessen, Peter, 245, 418, 426, 429, 516,
525, 535
Thompson, G.P., 70
Tinian Mariana Islands, 198, 243
Tito, Joseph, 376
Tizard, Hemy, 70,314
Tkachenko, I.M., 432,496
TNT chemical explosive, 194, 668, 681,
682, 693, 697
tokomak, 205,393
Tolman, Richard, 185
Tomonaga, Shirilchiro, 463
Tracerlab, private lab to measure
radioactive fallout, 577
Trans-Siberian railroad, 540
Transuranic elements, 63
Trapesnikova, Olga, 99
Trinity Test, 200,257,258,542,569,711,
716
Trinity Test at Alamogordo, 552
Trophy brigades in the Red Army, 238
Trotsky, Leon, 94, 333, 361
Truman, Harry, 197,257-259,261, 578
Tsukerman, Venyamin, 447, 449, 478,
555, 562
Tube Alloys, 73, 185,297, 300, 709,710,
721
Tuchman, Barbara, 279, 699
Tuck, James, 179,188
Tucker, Robert, 94, 95
Tukhachevsky, Mikhail (Marshal), 95
Tunneling through a barrier, 591, 592
Tupolev, Andrei N., 116, 480
Turing, Alan, 280,702
U-2 spy plane, 575
Ukazniki — petty criminals, 451, 458
Ukranian Physico-Technical Institute in
Kharkov (UFIT , 515,530
Ulam-Teller hydrogen bomb design, 476
ULTRA British decoding operation, 702
Union Miniere Katanga Uranium mines
in the Belgian Congo, 79,237,484
UNRRA, 233
Ural Mountains, 6, 127
Uranitite or pitchblende uranium ore, 482,
612
Uranium, 4,22,28,38,60,61,62,64,66,
68,70-72,74,78,113,127,563, 587-
589, 592-595, 597^600, 602, 609-
612, 615, 619, 620, 622-624, 626-
630, 654, 655, 658-660, 663-666,
670, 671, 673, 674, 676, 678, 679,
683-686,689,691-693, 712,716,725
Isotopes, 177,206
Isotopes, 319
mining and refining, 482
purification for reactors, 253, 601
weapons grade, 177, 178
Uranium Committee (US), 68,69, 72,83
Uranium fuel rods, 88
Uranium hexafluoride, UFô. Chemical
compound used for isotope separation,
80,414,551,612, 616
Uranium ore, 236,484,488,553
Uranium ore decay chains, 483
Uranium tamper, 717,726
Uranverein. German WWII uranium
research group, 117, 180, 239, 241,
242,248,251,339,433,484,511,512,
515, 527, 552
Urchin — initiator, 305
Urey, 164
US Mint silver for the calutrons, 82, 505,
625
Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk, 133, 381
USS Indianapolis - heavy cruiser, 198,
243
Uzbekistan, 485,489
Van de Graaff, Robert I, 36, 174, 638,
641
Van Vleck, John H., 38,165,310
Vandenberg, Hoyt S., 575, 580
Vannikov, Boris, 335,376,408,427-429,
432,442-444,449,453,456,459,486,
490,500, 503,505, 549,557,562
In prison, 9, 375
Index
757
Minister before WWII, 9
PGU membership, 216, 219, 228,
256, 262
Radiation accident, 467, 558
Summonsed before Stalin, 286
Works with Kurchatov, 406, 495
Vasilev, M. Ya., 446
Vasilevsky, Lev, 333,334,336,337,339,
342, 355,722
VASKhNIL-All Union Academy of
Agricultural Sciences, 381, 383
Vavilov, Sergei L, 382, 383
Velocity Selectors, 605
VENONA, 287,289, 304, 309, 311, 317,
318,355
Vernadsky, Vladimir, 127, 236,485
Vienna Radium Institute, 239
VIET. Voprosy Istorii Estestvoznanya I
Tekhniki, 709
Vilnius, capital of Lithuania, 412
Vinogradov, A.P., 564, 566
Vishinsky, Andrei, 113
Vismut, 240,487,489
Vitt, A .A., 109
Vladivostok, 287
Vnukovo airport, Moscow, 342, 518
Von Ardenne, Manfred, 21, 240, 242,
245,413,415,418,425,435,437,512,
513,515-519,521-523,532,535-537
Von BemstorfF, Johann, 279, 699
Von Bock, Field Marshal, 140
Von Braun, Werner, 117
Von Laue, Max, 244,511,515
Von Leeb, Field Marshal, 140
Von Neumann, John, 66,172, 188
Von Rundstedt, Field Marshal, 140
Von Weizsacker, Carl Friedrich, 179,
180, 240,244,511,586
Voroshilov, Konstantin, 370, 382
Voznesensky, IvanN., 416-418, 425
Voznesensky, Nikolai, 262, 264, 370
Walton, Ernest, 36, 591
War Department, 551
War reparations Germany to USSR, 238,
536
Warner, Edith, 162,166
Water Boiler reactor, 189
Water treatment plant at Combine #817,
491,493
Watson, James, 400
Way, K., 545
We can always shoot them later, 383
Weisskopf, Victor, 162, 163
Wentzel, Gregor, 463
Werth, Alexander, 11,17, 21
West Berlin, 260
West Stands of the University of Chicago,
74
Westinghouse Electric Co., 84
Wheeler, John, 64, 654—666
Wigner disease, 89
Wigner effect in graphite moderated
reactors, 88
Wigner, Eugene, 39,66-68, 74, 88,545
Willys Jeeps, 227
Wilson, Jane, 173
Wilson, Robert R., 82,162,163,167,168,
170
Window frame magnet, 645
Windscale British reactors, 325, 407
Wirths, Gunter, 535
Woodcock, Bruce, 324
Working cycle for plutonium production,
491
Wright, Frank Lloyd, 363
Xenon poisoning in reactors, 89, 177,494
Xerox machine, 288
X-ray heating in a fusion weapon, 471,
476
X-ray high speed photography, 449
XX Party Congress, 1956, 583
Y-12 Plant for electromagnetic separation
at Oak Ridge - calutrons, 85,433-436
Yagoda, Genrich, 251
Yatskov, Anatoly. Code name Johnny, 284,
302,303,312,316,317,357,709,710
758
The Soviet Atomic Project
Yellowcake uranium compound, 482
Yezhov, Nikolai, 107, 382,
See also Ezhov
Yokohama, Japan, 287
Zarubin, Lisa, 56
Zarubin, Vasily, 260, 330, 362, 363
Zarubina, Zoya, 330
Zavenyagin, Avraami, 244, 245, 247,
248,253, 335, 396,427,428,453, 518,
549, 550, 564
At Semipalatinsk, 552
PGU member, 262
Soviet Alsos, 242
With Riehl, 519
With von Ardenne and Hertz, 519
Zavoisky, E. K., 447
‘Zeks’ short form for prisoner, 458
Zeeman Effect, 124
Zeldovich, Yakov B., 122, 153, 208, 224,
243,401,417,447,450,451,460-463,
467,470,476,512, 539, 556, 562, 564,
566, 583, 694
Early life, 445
Paper on chain reactions in 1940, 445
Broad interests in theoretical physics,
446
KB-11, 448
Zeldovicha, Varvara Pavlovna, 448
Zernov, Pavel M., 442, 445
Zero. Location of RDS-1 test, 545,
559-561, 567, 568, 570, 575
Zhdanov, A.A., 213, 220
Zhezherun, Ivan F., 600, 602
Zhukov On Stalin, 366
Zhukov, Georgy, 1, 95, 243, 249, 366,
379, 432,433,496,581
Zhumal Eksperimentalnoi I
Teoreticheskoi Fiziki (ZhETF), 133,
450
Zimmerman, Arthur (the Zimmerman
telegram), 279, 699, 700
Zippe, Gemot, 532, 533, 535, 626
T Bayerische V
I Staatsbibliothek I
V München y
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
.................................................................................
V
PREFACE
....................................................................................................
VII
INTRODUCTION
.............................................................................................
1
CHAPTER
1:
WARTIME
SOVIET
INDUSTRY
...................................................
5
1.1.
THE
AMERICAN
CHALLENGE
..........................................................
5
1.2.
SOVIET INDUSTRIALIZATION
BEFORE
THE
WAR
...................................
6
1.3.
GERMAN INVASION
CAUSES
EASTERN MIGRATION
.............................
7
1.4. RESTORATION
IN
RECAPTURED
TERRITORY
.......................................
17
CHAPTER 2: DEVELOPMENT
OF
NUCLEAR PHYSICS
BEFORE
THE
DISCOVERY
OF
FISSION
..............................................................................
28
2.1.
PHYSICS
IN
THE
EARLY 1900 S
.....................................................
28
2.2.
BOHR S
ATOMIC MODEL
..............................................................
30
2.3.
STRUCTURE
OF
THE
NUCLEUS
..........................................................
30
2.4.
NUCLEAR BINDING
ENERGIES
.......................................................
31
2.5.
CHEMICAL ELEMENTS
AND
THE
PERIODIC
TABLE
.............................
33
2.6.
ALPHA
DECAY
............................................................................
34
2.7. NUCLEAR
REACTIONS
CAUSED
BY
NEUTRONS
..................................
35
2.8.
CHARGED PARTICLE
ACCELERATORS
.................................................
36
2.9.
NUCLEAR PHYSICS
IN
THE
USA BEFORE
WWII
.............................
38
2.10.
NUCLEAR PHYSICS
IN
THE
USSR BEFORE WWII
...........................
40
2.11. PETER
KAPITZA
GOES
TO
CAMBRIDGE
...........................................
44
2.12. LANDAU
VISITS
CAMBRIDGE
........................................................
48
2.13.
LANDAU RETURNS
HOME
.............................................................
50
2.14.
THE USSR
RETAINS KAPITZA
.....................................................
52
XV
$VBLIOTHEK
DEUTSCHES
MUSEUM
HLUENCHE A
XVI
THE
SOVIET
ATOMIC
PROJECT
2.15.
GEORGE GAMOW EMIGRATES
TO THE
USA
...................................
53
2.16.
AMERICAN
LEADERS,
OPPENHEIMER
AND
LAWRENCE
....................
58
CHAPTER 3:
THE
DISCOVERY
OF
FISSION
OF
URANIUM
.............................
61
3.1. FUSION
AND
FISSION
...................................................................
61
3.2. ABSORPTION
OF
SLOW
NEUTRONS
..................................................
62
3.3. FISSION CROSSES
THE
ATLANTIC
....................................................
64
3.4.
EINSTEIN
WRITES
TO
ROOSEVELT
...................................................
67
3.5. A URANIUM
COMMITTEE
IS
CREATED
...........................................
68
3.6. ACTIVITY
IN
GREAT
BRITAIN
..........................................................
70
3.7.
MANHATTAN
PROJECT BEGINS
IN
USA
..........................................
74
3.8. CHAIN
REACTING PILE
IN CHICAGO
...............................................
77
3.9.
OAK
RIDGE
IS
BUILT
IN
TENNESSEE
.............................................
80
3.10.
PLUTONIUM REACTORS
GO
TO
HANFORD,
WASHINGTON
.....................
87
CHAPTER
4:
THE
SOVIET
UNION
AND
STALIN S
TERROR
1937-1939
..........
93
4.1. WIDESPREAD
OPPRESSION BEGINS
...............................................
93
4.2.
NO ONE
WAS
SAFE
.....................................................................
95
4.3. THE
TERROR VISITS
KHARKOV
......................................................
96
4.4. LANDAU
IS
ARRESTED
................................................................
102
4.5. TERROR SPREADS
TO
LENINGRAD
..................................................
108
4.6. MODEM
PHYSICS
IS
NOT
COMPATIBLE
WITH
MARXIST THEORY...... 111
4.7. LASTING
EFFECTS
OF
THE
TERROR
................................................
113
4.8. THE
SOVIET
PRISON
SYSTEM
AFTER
1939
....................................
116
CHAPTER
5: THE SOVIET UNION
AND
NUCLEAR
RESEARCH 1934-1942.....
122
5.1. ABRAHAM LOFFE
AND
HIS
SCHOOL
AT
LENINGRAD
.........................
122
5.2. EARLY YEARS
OF
IGOR
KURCHATOV
..............................................
123
5.3. KURCHATOV SWITCHES
TO
NUCLEAR
PHYSICS
................................
126
5.4.
EARLY PARTICLE ACCELERATORS
IN
THE
USSR
...............................
129
5.5.
SOVIET PHYSICS JOURNALS
OF
THE
PRE-WAR
PERIOD
.....................
132
5.6.
GEORGY
FLEROV
.......................................................................
134
5.7.
PETRZHAK
AND
FLEROV
DISCOVER SPONTANEOUS
FISSION
OF
URANIUM
............................................................................
135
5.8.
THE
GERMAN
INVASION
............................................................
139
CONTENTS
XVII
5.9.
KURCHATOV JOINS
NAVAL
RESEARCH
...........................................
140
5.10. LENINGRAD,
MOSCOW,
AND
KHARKOV INSTITUTES
EVACUATED
TO
KAZAN
...............................................................
143
5.11.
MILITARY SERVICE
ABSORBS YOUNGER PHYSICISTS
.......................
145
5.12. LIEUTENANT
FLEROV WROTE LETTERS
TO
MOSCOW
.........................
147
5.13.
A
NOTEBOOK IS FOUND
ON
A
DEAD GERMAN
OFFICER
.................
156
5.14. EARLY
SOVIET
ESPIONAGE
.........................................................
158
CHAPTER 6: THE
MANHATTAN
PROJECT
CREATES
LOS
ALAMOS
...............
161
6.1. NEED
FORA
WEAPONS LAB
.......................................................
161
6.2.
SELECTION
OF
THE
DIRECTOR
OF
THE
LABORATORY
...........................
164
6.3.
SELECTION
OF
THE
SITE
...............................................................
165
6.4.
LAB
STAFF
AND
FACILITIES
..........................................................
167
6.5.
CALCULATION
BEFORE COMPUTERS
..............................................
170
6.6. DAILY
LIFE
..............................................................................
173
6.7. THE
ASSIGNED TASK
................................................................
174
6.8.. THE BRITISH
GROUP
..................................................................
178
6.9. NIELS BOHR
AND
LOS ALAMOS
..................................................
179
6.10. THE FERMIS
AT
LOS ALAMOS
....................................................
186
6.11.
ORDNANCE
DIVISION
.................................................................
188
6.12. THE
TRINITY
TEST
.....................................................................
190
6.13. TRUMAN
GOES
TO
THE
POTSDAM
CONFERENCE
.............................
197
6.14.
TRINITY
TEST
WAITS
ON
THE
WEATHER
........................................
198
6.15. TRINITY
TEST PROCEEDS
SUCCESSFULLY
.......................................
200
CHAPTER
7:
THE SOVIET
UNION
CREATES
LABORATORY
#2
.....................
205
7.1.
THE KURCHATOV
INSTITUTE TODAY
..............................................
205
7.2.
BEGINNINGS
OF
THE
SOVIET ATOMIC PROJECT
..............................
206
7.3.
STATE
DEFENCE
COMMITTEE
ENDORSES
ATOMIC ENERGY
.............
207
7.4.
LABORATORY
#2 IS SITED
...........................................................
210
7.5.
NEMENOV
GOES
TO
LENINGRAD
IN
1943
....................................
211
7.6.
LENINGRAD
IS
LIBERATED
...........................................................
220
7.7.
R&D
PROGRAM
FOR
LABORATORY
#2 IN
1945
.............................
223
7.8.
REACTORS
AND
ESPIONAGE
.........................................................
224
7.9.
HEAVY WATER
..........................................................................
226
7.10.
BALLISTICS
EXPERIMENTS
...........................................................
228
XVIII
THE
SOVIET ATOMIC
PROJECT
7.11. LIFE
AT
THE
LAB
.......................................................................
229
7.12.
THE
TENT
BURNS
DOWN
...........................................................
235
7.13.
URANIUM
FROM
GERMANY-THE
SOVIET `ALSOS
..........................
237
7.14.
GERMAN SCIENTISTS JOIN
THE
ATOMIC PROJECT
...........................
250
7.15. REACTOR
GRADE GRAPHITE
.........................................................
254
7.16. POTSDAM
CONFERENCE REVISITED
.............................................
257
7.17. BERIA S
COMMITTEE
.................................................................
261
7.18.
KAPITZA
AND
BERIA S
COMMITTEE
............................................
266
7.19.
COMPONENTS
FOR
THE
REACTOR
ARRIVE
......................................
273
CHAPTER 8:
SOVIET ESPIONAGE
AND
THE
ATOMIC PROJECT
......................
278
8.1. INTRODUCTION
...........................................................................
278
8.2.
SOVIET ESPIONAGE
IN
THE
WEST
................................................
280
8.3.
THE
SOURCES
...........................................................................
284
8.4. JOB
DESCRIPTION
......................................................................
288
8.5.
MAJOR
JORDAN
AND
GREAT FALLS,
MONTANA
................................
290
8.6. THE BRITISH
GROUP
..................................................................
295
8.7. KLAUS
FUCHS
...........................................................................
298
8.8. THE AMERICAN
GROUP
.............................................................
301
8.9. HARRY
GOLD
.............................................................................
301
8.10.
GEORGE KOVAL
........................................................................
305
8.11. BERKELEY
................................................................................
306
8.12.
LOS ALAMOS
...........................................................................
306
8.13.
THEODORE
HALL
........................................................................
3
09
8.14.
LONA
COHEN
...........................................................................
312
8.15.
THE ROSENBERGS
AND
THE
GREENGLASSES
..................................
313
8.16.
THINGS FALL
APART
..................................................................
316
8.17.
SUDOPLATOV
IN
TROUBLE
...........................................................
320
8.18.
FUCHS
IN ENGLAND BEFORE
HIS ARREST
......................................
321
8.19.
ALEKSANDR FEKLISOV
IN ENGLAND
.............................................
324
8.20.
TERLETSKY
VISITS BOHR
............................................................
327
8.21.
BRUNO
PONTECORVO
..................................................................
350
8.22.
SUMMARY
...............................................................................
357
CONTENTS
XIX
CHAPTER 9:
PLAYERS
IN
THE
DRAMA
-
STALIN, BERIA,
AND
KURCHATOV
.....................................................................................
360
9.1.
JOSEPH
STALIN
........................................................................
3 60
9.1.1.
FAMILY LIFE
................................................................
361
9.1.2.
ZHUKOV
ON
STALIN
.......................................................
366
9.1.3.
MIKOYAN
ON
STALIN
.....................................................
370
9.1.4.
BORIS VANNIKOV-PRISONER
TO
MINISTER
........................
375
9.1.5.
MILOVAN DJILAS
ON
STALIN
...........................................
376
9.1.6.
MODEM
PHYSICS
VS
MARXIST PHILOSOPHY
....................
381
9.2. LAVRENTY
PAVLOVICH
BERIA
....................................................
385
9.2.1.
EARLY LIFE
...................................................................
385
9.2.2.
RECOLLECTIONS
OF
CONTEMPORARIES
..............................
387
9.2.3.
SAKHAROV
AND
BERIA
...................................................
392
9.2.4.
RIEHL
AND
BERIA
..........................................................
396
9.3. IGOR
KURCHATOV
....................................................................
399
9.3.1.
WORK HABITS
..............................................................
399
9.3.2.
KURCHATOV
AND
A
POST-DOC, MOSTOVOY
.......................
402
9.3.3.
KURCHATOV
THE
PEACE
MAKER
......................................
404
9.3.4.
KURCHATOV
THE
TROUBLE
SHOOTER
.................................
406
CHAPTER 10:
INDUSTRIAL
PLANTS
MOVE
TO
THE
URALS
............................
411
10.1.
THE
SOVIET
PROJECT
OUTGROWS
THE
MOSCOW, REGION
............
411
10.2. ISAAK
KIKOIN
AND
ISOTOPE
SEPARATION
..................................
412
10.3.
THE
WORKING
GAS
...............................................................
414
10.4.
MEASUREMENT
OF
235U
CONTENT
...........................................
415
10.5.
PLANT
DESIGN
.......................................................................
415
10.6.
THE
BARRIER
.........................................................................
416
10.7.
MANHATTAN
PROJECT
SOLUTIONS
..............................................
420
10.8.
COMPONENTS
FOR
THE
GASEOUS
DIFFUSION
PLANT
....................
424
10.9.
GERMAN
GROUP
ASSIGNMENTS
..............................................
425
10.10. MOSCOW
20
STAGE
TEST
.......................................................
426
10.11.
FULL
SCALE
GASEOUS
DIFFUSION PLANT APPROVED
...................
428
10.12.
SUKHUMI
GROUP GOES
TO
D-1
..............................................
429
10.13.
D-1
PLANT REQUIRES
NEW COMPRESSORS
...............................
430
10.14.
ELECTROMAGNETIC ISOTOPE
SEPARATION
...................................
433
XX
THE
SOVIET
ATOMIC
PROJECT
CHAPTER 11:
THE SOVIET UNION
CREATES ARZAMAS-16
.......................
441
11.1.
SITE
SELECTION
......................................................................
441
11.2. PRISON
CONSTRUCTION
CREW
..................................................
444
11.3.
YAKOV ZELDOVICH
................................................................
445
11.4. EARLY EXPERIMENTS
..............................................................
449
11.5.
ORAL INTERVIEW
WITH
LEV
ALTSHULER
....................................
449
11.6. ANDREI
SAKHAROV
AT
ARZAMAS-16
........................................
453
11.7.
CRITICAL ASSEMBLIES
............................................................
464
11.8.
THEORETICAL
WORK
...............................................................
468
11.9.
CONVENTIONAL EXPLOSIVE
TESTS
............................................
477
11.10.
LATER DEVELOPMENTS
...........................................................
480
CHAPTER
12: URANIUM
AND
PLUTONIUM
..............................................
482
12.1. THE
URANIUM PROBLEM
........................................................
482
12.2.
URANIUM
AND
THE
SOVIET PROJECT
.........................................
485
12.3.
VISMUT
................................................................................
487
12.4.
COMBINE
#817;
REACTOR
`A
...............................................
490
12.5.
COMBINE
#817;
PLUTONIUM
EXTRACTION
................................
501
12.6.
AFTERMATH
...........................................................................
508
CHAPTER 13: GERMAN
SCIENTISTS
AND
THE
SOVIET
ATOMIC PROJECT..... 511
13.1.
INTRODUCTION
........................................................................
511
13.2.
NEXT ASSIGNMENT
FOR
NIKOLAUS
RIEHL
.................................
513
13.3.
MANFRED
VON
ARDENNE
IN
GERMANY
....................................
513
13.4.
VON
ARDENNE
MOVES
TO THE
SOVIET
UNION
...........................
516
13.5.
GUSTAV HERTZ
AND
HEINZ
BARWICH
.......................................
519
13.6.
VON
ARDENNE
AND
HERTZ MOVE
TO
SUKHUMI
ON
THE
BLACK SEA
......................................................................
521
13.7.
VON
ARDENNE S
ION
SOURCE
DEVELOPMENT
...........................
523
13.8.
MINISTRY
OF
INTERNAL
AFFAIRS REPORTS
ON
GERMAN
PROGRESS
IN
1947
.................................................................
525
13.9.
HEINZ POSE
IN
OBNINSK
.......................................................
527
13.10.
THE
CENTRIFUGE
...................................................................
530
13.11.
CONTRIBUTIONS
OF
THE
GERMAN
SCIENTISTS
.............................
534
13.12.
REPATRIATION
........................................................................
536
CONTENTS
XXI
CHAPTER 14:
SEMIPALATINSK
NUCLEAR
TEST
RANGE
..............................
539
14.1.
INTRODUCTION
...........................................................................
539
14.2.
SEMIPALATINSK
........................................................................
539
14.3.
PLUTONIUM
METALLURGY
............................................................
546
14.4.
LOOK
MAGAZINE
..................................................................
551
14.5.
ARZAMAS-16,
KB-11
...............................................................
555
14.6.
TEST
OF
RDS-1
........................................................................
561
14.7.
DETECTION
OF
`JOE-1
...............................................................
575
14.8.
AFTERMATH
...............................................................................
580
APPENDIX A:
NUCLEAR MASSES
.............................................................
586
A. 1. MASS
FORMULA
........................................................................
586
A.
2.
A
DECAY
OF
HEAVY NUCLEI
......................................................
590
A.
3. SPONTANEOUS
FISSION
.............................................................
592
APPENDIX
B:
CONTROLLED NUCLEAR
CHAIN
REACTIONS
..........................
594
B. 1. INTRODUCTION
...........................................................................
594
B.
2. NEUTRON MODERATORS
..............................................................
595
B.
3.
REACTOR
TESTS
-
GRAPHITE PRISMS
...........................................
598
B.
4. FERMI S
CP-1 REACTOR
............................................................
602
B. 5.
NEUTRON
VELOCITY
SELECTORS
...................................................
605
B.
6.
PLUTONIUM
PRODUCTION
REACTORS
.............................................
609
APPENDIX
C:
ISOTOPE
SEPARATION
........................................................
611
C.
1. ISOTOPE
SEPARATION
.................................................................
611
C. 2. THERMODYNAMIC
CONSIDERATIONS
...........................................
612
C. 3.
GASEOUS
DIFFUSION
.................................................................
615
C.
4. THERMAL
DIFFUSION
.................................................................
620
C.
5. ELECTROMAGNETIC
SEPARATION
...................................................
621
C.
6. CENTRIFUGES
............................................................................
626
C.
7. PLUTONIUM
EXTRACTION
............................................................
630
APPENDIX D:
CHARGED PARTICLE ACCELERATORS
....................................
632
D.
1.
ELECTROSTATIC ACCELERATORS
.....................................................
632
D.
2. CYCLOTRONS
.............................................................................
642
D.
3. EXPERIMENTS
..........................................................................
649
XXII
THE
SOVIET
ATOMIC
PROJECT
APPENDIX
E:
SPONTANEOUS
FISSION
OF
URANIUM,
K. A. PETRZHAK
AND
G. N.
FLEROV,
JETP 10,1013,
(1940)
...........................................
654
E.
1.
INTRODUCTION
...........................................................................
654
E. 2.
EXPERIMENTAL METHOD
............................................................
655
E.
3.
EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS
AND
CONTROL EXPERIMENTS
....................
658
E.
4. DISCUSSION
OF
THE
RESULTS
.......................................................
662
APPENDIX
F:
NUCLEAR
WEAPONS
..........................................................
668
F. 1.
TNT
.......................................................................................
668
F. 2.
CHAIN
REACTION
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
.........................................
670
F.
3. THE
TAMPER
............................................................................
675
APPENDIX
G:
ENCRYPTION
AND
DECRYPTION
.........................................
699
APPENDIX
H: SOVIET
INTELLIGENCE
........................................................
709
H.
1.
DOCUMENT
#12
HIGH
EXPLOSIVE BOMB
..................................
711
H. 2. DESCRIPTION
OF
THE
SEPARATE
COMPONENTS
OF
THE
BOMB.........
713
H.
3.
ALEKSANDR
FEKLISOV
...............................................................
723
APPENDIX
J: CRITICAL
ASSEMBLIES
........................................................
725
BIBLIOGRAPHY
........................................................................................
729
INDEX
.....................................................................................................
739
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Pondrom, Lee G. 1933- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1170841473 |
author_facet | Pondrom, Lee G. 1933- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Pondrom, Lee G. 1933- |
author_variant | l g p lg lgp |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV045171383 |
callnumber-first | Q - Science |
callnumber-label | QC789 |
callnumber-raw | QC789.2.S65 |
callnumber-search | QC789.2.S65 |
callnumber-sort | QC 3789.2 S65 |
callnumber-subject | QC - Physics |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1048461209 (DE-599)BVBBV045171383 |
dewey-full | 355.8/25119094709045 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 355 - Military science |
dewey-raw | 355.8/25119094709045 |
dewey-search | 355.8/25119094709045 |
dewey-sort | 3355.8 1425119094709045 |
dewey-tens | 350 - Public administration and military science |
discipline | Militärwissenschaft |
era | Geschichte Anfänge-1949 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte Anfänge-1949 |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV045171383 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T08:10:40Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789813235557 |
language | English |
lccn | 018018462 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-030560667 |
oclc_num | 1048461209 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29 DE-12 DE-210 |
owner_facet | DE-29 DE-12 DE-210 |
physical | xxv, 758 Seiten Illustrationen, Porträts, Diagramme |
publishDate | 2018 |
publishDateSearch | 2018 |
publishDateSort | 2018 |
publisher | World Scientific |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Pondrom, Lee G. 1933- Verfasser (DE-588)1170841473 aut The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb Lee G. Pondrom, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA New Jersey ; London ; Singapore ; Beijing ; Shanghai ; Hong Kong ; Taipei ; Chennai ; Tokyo World Scientific [2018] © 2018 xxv, 758 Seiten Illustrationen, Porträts, Diagramme txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index "The book describes the lives of the people who gave Stalin his weapon ... scientists, engineers, managers, and prisoners during the early post war years from 1945-1953. Many anecdotes and vicissitudes of life at that time in the Soviet Union accompany considerable technical information regarding the solutions to formidable problems of nuclear weapons development. The contents should interest the reader who wants to learn more about this part of the history and politics in 20th century physics. The prevention of nuclear proliferation is a topic of current interest, and the procedure followed by the Soviet Union as described in this book will help us understand the complexities involved"... Geschichte Anfänge-1949 gnd rswk-swf Atomic bomb Soviet Union History Nuclear physics Research Soviet Union History Scientists Soviet Union Engineers Soviet Union Nuclear industry Soviet Union History 20th century Nuclear weapons Soviet Union 20th century Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd rswk-swf Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 gnd rswk-swf Sowjetunion (DE-588)4077548-3 g Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 s Geschichte Anfänge-1949 z DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-981-3235-57-1 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-981-3235-56-4 LoC Fremddatenuebernahme application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Literaturverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Register // Gemischte Register Digitalisierung Deutsches Museum application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000007&line_number=0004&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Pondrom, Lee G. 1933- The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb Atomic bomb Soviet Union History Nuclear physics Research Soviet Union History Scientists Soviet Union Engineers Soviet Union Nuclear industry Soviet Union History 20th century Nuclear weapons Soviet Union 20th century Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003434-3 (DE-588)4077548-3 |
title | The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb |
title_auth | The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb |
title_exact_search | The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb |
title_full | The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb Lee G. Pondrom, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA |
title_fullStr | The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb Lee G. Pondrom, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA |
title_full_unstemmed | The Soviet atomic project how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb Lee G. Pondrom, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA |
title_short | The Soviet atomic project |
title_sort | the soviet atomic project how the soviet union obtained the atomic bomb |
title_sub | how the Soviet Union obtained the atomic bomb |
topic | Atomic bomb Soviet Union History Nuclear physics Research Soviet Union History Scientists Soviet Union Engineers Soviet Union Nuclear industry Soviet Union History 20th century Nuclear weapons Soviet Union 20th century Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Atomic bomb Soviet Union History Nuclear physics Research Soviet Union History Scientists Soviet Union Engineers Soviet Union Nuclear industry Soviet Union History 20th century Nuclear weapons Soviet Union 20th century Kernwaffe Sowjetunion |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000005&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000006&line_number=0003&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030560667&sequence=000007&line_number=0004&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT pondromleeg thesovietatomicprojecthowthesovietunionobtainedtheatomicbomb |
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