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Albert Wattenberg

Albert Wattenberg (April 13, 1917 – June 27, 2007), was an American experimental physicist. During World War II, he was with the Manhattan Project's Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago. He was a member of the team that built Chicago Pile-1, the world's first artificial nuclear reactor, and was one of those present on December 2, 1942, when it achieved criticality. In July 1945, he was one of the signatories of the Szilard petition. After the war he received his doctorate, and became a researcher at the Argonne National Laboratory from 1947 to 1950, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1951 to 1958, and at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign from 1958 to 1986, where he pursued studies related to the atomic nucleus.

Albert Wattenberg
Wattenberg during the construction
of Chicago Pile-1
Born
Albert Wattenberg

(1917-04-13)April 13, 1917
New York, New York
DiedJune 27, 2007(2007-06-27) (aged 90)
CitizenshipAmerican
Alma materCity College of New York
Columbia University
University of Chicago
Scientific career
FieldsHigh-energy physics
InstitutionsMetallurgical Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
ThesisPhoto-neutron sources and the energy of the photo-neutrons (1947)
Doctoral advisorWalter Zinn

Early life Edit

Albert Wattenberg was born in New York City, New York,[1] on April 13, 1917,[2] the son of Louis and Bella Wattenberg.[3] He had an older brother William (Bill), who helped pioneer the field of educational psychology, as well as a younger brother, Lee, who became a medical researcher.[4] He grew up in New York City, and attended DeWitt Clinton High School, where he helped win the New York math championships. He entered the City College of New York, from which he received his BSc in 1938, and the Columbia University, where he earned his MA in 1939. A politically active student, he organized strikes and a boycott of his own 1938 graduation ceremony in protest against the City College president's Italian Fascist sympathies. After he left Columbia, he took a summer course in spectroscopy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).[5]

In 1939, Wattenberg joined Schenley Industries, a distiller of whiskey, where he performed spectroscopic analysis. He joined US Steel in 1940.[dubious ] The consequential increase in salary and reduction in working hours to 30 hours per week enabled him to go back to graduate school at Columbia University to get his PhD. In 1941, his studies were interrupted by World War II. Enrico Fermi asked him to join the group at Columbia working on the nuclear fission of uranium that also included Herbert L. Anderson, Bernard T. Feld, Leo Szilard and Walter Zinn. Wattenberg learned how to build and maintain the Geiger counters and photon and neutron detectors.[5]

Manhattan Project Edit

 
On 2 December 1946, the fourth anniversary CP-1 going critical, members of the team gathered at the University of Chicago. In the front row is Enrico Fermi, Walter Zinn, Albert Wattenberg and Herbert L. Anderson.

Arthur Compton concentrated the teams involved in plutonium and nuclear reactor research at Columbia University, Princeton University, the University of Chicago at the Manhattan Project's Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago in early 1942.[6] There, Wattenberg built and maintained detectors and neutron sources. Indeed, after 1943, he built and maintained all the radium and beryllium neutron sources used by the entire Manhattan Project. He assisted in the construction of Chicago Pile-1, the world's first artificial nuclear reactor, and was one of those present on December 2, 1942, when it achieved criticality.[5] Afterwards, Eugene Wigner opened a bottle of Chianti to celebrate, which those present drank from paper cups.[7][8][9] The bottle was signed by those present, and kept as a souvenir by Wattenberg.[8][10] In 1980, he donated it to the Argonne National Laboratory.[5]

In 1943, Wattenberg married Shirley Hier,[1] a graduate of Hunter College. She became an educator and social worker, working as a medical social worker at Cook County Hospital from 1945 to 1947, as an instructor and clinical researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health from 1954 to 1958, and as a caseworker, supervisor, and acting director of Family Services in Champaign, Illinois, from 1959 to 1966. She was an assistant professor at the School of Social Work at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign from 1966 to 1973, and then with its College of Medicine. They had three daughters.[citation needed]

After Fermi left the Metallurgical Laboratory for the Los Alamos Laboratory, Wattenberg worked with Leo Szilard. In July 1945, he was one of the signatories of the Szilard petition,[1] which urged that "the United States shall not, in the present phase of the war, resort to the use of atomic bombs."[11] His brother Lee aboard a ship, destined to participate in the invasion of Japan. "Maybe my brother's alive because we used the atomic bomb", he later opined, "Maybe the military was right ... I just wish we had tried a demonstration first."[12] In September 1945, soon after the war ended, he became one of the founders of the Federation of Atomic Scientists, the publishers of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.[1]

Later life Edit

 
The Chianti bottle purchased by Eugene Wigner to help celebrate the first self-sustaining, controlled chain reaction. Wattenberg donated it to the Argonne National Laboratory in 1980.

With the war over, Wattenberg returned to his studies,[2] completing his PhD at the University of Chicago under the supervision of Walter Zinn. He wrote his thesis on "Photo-neutron sources and the energy of the photo-neutrons", and earned his doctorate in 1947.[13] Rather than work in academia, he chose to join Fermi at the Argonne National Laboratory, where he helped design and build nuclear reactors. Wattenberg became director of Argonne's Physics Division in 1949.[5] He did not agree with Zinn's decision, as director of the laboratory, to concentrate on reactor design rather than basic research.[14]

By 1950, the rise of McCarthyism led to Wattenberg leaving Argonne, first to go to the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign for a year, and then to MIT, where he remained until 1958. He used MIT's synchrotron to study the properties of nucleons and K-mesons, gaining important insights that would later be incorporated into the standard model. In 1958, he was recruited by the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. Although he did do some teaching, he was largely free to work at Argonne and the Brookhaven National Laboratory on his research into K-meson decay. He published a paper with J.J. Sakurai in 1967 about his efforts to distinguish matter from antimatter. He worked on the giant scintillation counters at Fermilab, and directed searches for charm quark s there with photon and neutron beams, and at SLAC using colliding electron-positron beams. Between 1953 and 2003, he was the author of over 115 papers.[5] He retired in 1986.[1]

In retirement, Wattenberg became involved with the American Physical Society's Forum of the History of Physics, as a councillor, secretary-treasurer, and editor of the newsletter. He contributed articles to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists about the beginnings of the atomic age and his work assisting Fermi.[5] He co-edited Fermi's papers with Laura Fermi,[1] and participated in celebrations of the 100th anniversary of Enrico Fermi's birth at the University of Chicago in 2001.[5] During the 1980s he was on the executive committee of the Champaign-Urbana chapter of SANE/Nuclear Freeze. He was also a Democratic Party precinct committeeman. He made frequent appearances on Studs Terkel's radio show, and in NPR's All Things Considered, usually on the occasion of the anniversary of Chicago Pile-1 going critical, or of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[1]

Wattenberg's wife Shirley died in 1989. In 1992, he married Alice Wyers von Neumann,[1] a social worker.[15] He died at Clark-Lindsey Village in Urbana, Illinois, on June 27, 2007. He was survived by his wife Alice, daughters Beth, Jill and Nina, and his brother Lee.[1]

Notes and references Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Albert Wattenberg, 90, Pioneered Nuclear Energy". Vinyard Gazette. July 5, 2007. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Karliner, Inga; Thaler, Jon J.; Gladding, Gary E. (February 2008). "Albert Wattenberg". Physics Today. 61 (2): 74. doi:10.1063/1.2883918.
  3. ^ "Albert Wattenberg in the 1940 Census". Ancestry.com. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  4. ^ Martindec, Douglas (December 18, 2014). "Lee W. Wattenberg, Who Saw Cancer Fighters in Foods, Dies at 92". The New York Times. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Albert Wattenberg". Department of Physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  6. ^ Rhodes 1986, pp. 399–400.
  7. ^ Anderson 1975, p. 95.
  8. ^ a b Wigner, E.P.; Szanton, A. (2013). The Recollections of Eugene P. Wigner. Springer US. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-4899-6313-0.
  9. ^ Porter, J. (2007). Oppenheimer Is Watching Me: A Memoir. Sightline Books. University of Iowa Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-1-58729-750-2.
  10. ^ Wattenberg 1975, p. 118.
  11. ^ "Atomic Bomb: Decision – Szilard Petition version 1, July 3, 1945". Gene Dannen. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  12. ^ Infield, Tom (December 2, 1992). "The Chain Reaction In Chicago That Shook The World In The Race To Build The Bomb, The U.s. Had An Advantage. It Had Some Of The Best Minds From Around The World". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  13. ^ "Photo-neutron sources and the energy of the photo-neutrons". University of Chicago. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  14. ^ Holl, Hewlett & Harris 1997, p. 87.
  15. ^ "Alice von Neumann". The News Gazette. Retrieved December 4, 2015.

Bibliography Edit

  • Anderson, Herbert L. (1975). "Assisting Fermi". In Wilson, Jane (ed.). All In Our Time: The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers. Chicago: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. pp. 66–104. OCLC 1982052.
  • Holl, Jack M.; Hewlett, Richard G.; Harris, Ruth R. (1997). Argonne National Laboratory, 1946–96. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-02341-5.
  • Rhodes, Richard (1986). The Making of the Atomic Bomb. London: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-44133-7.
  • Wattenberg, Albert (1975). "Present at Creation". In Wilson, Jane (ed.). All In Our Time: The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers. Chicago: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. pp. 105–123. OCLC 1982052.

External links Edit

  • Guide to the Albert Wattenberg Papers 1939-2007 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

albert, wattenberg, april, 1917, june, 2007, american, experimental, physicist, during, world, with, manhattan, project, metallurgical, laboratory, university, chicago, member, team, that, built, chicago, pile, world, first, artificial, nuclear, reactor, those. Albert Wattenberg April 13 1917 June 27 2007 was an American experimental physicist During World War II he was with the Manhattan Project s Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago He was a member of the team that built Chicago Pile 1 the world s first artificial nuclear reactor and was one of those present on December 2 1942 when it achieved criticality In July 1945 he was one of the signatories of the Szilard petition After the war he received his doctorate and became a researcher at the Argonne National Laboratory from 1947 to 1950 at Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1951 to 1958 and at University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign from 1958 to 1986 where he pursued studies related to the atomic nucleus Albert WattenbergWattenberg during the constructionof Chicago Pile 1BornAlbert Wattenberg 1917 04 13 April 13 1917New York New YorkDiedJune 27 2007 2007 06 27 aged 90 Urbana IllinoisCitizenshipAmericanAlma materCity College of New YorkColumbia UniversityUniversity of ChicagoScientific careerFieldsHigh energy physicsInstitutionsMetallurgical LaboratoryArgonne National LaboratoryMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyUniversity of Illinois at Urbana ChampaignThesisPhoto neutron sources and the energy of the photo neutrons 1947 Doctoral advisorWalter Zinn Contents 1 Early life 2 Manhattan Project 3 Later life 4 Notes and references 5 Bibliography 6 External linksEarly life EditAlbert Wattenberg was born in New York City New York 1 on April 13 1917 2 the son of Louis and Bella Wattenberg 3 He had an older brother William Bill who helped pioneer the field of educational psychology as well as a younger brother Lee who became a medical researcher 4 He grew up in New York City and attended DeWitt Clinton High School where he helped win the New York math championships He entered the City College of New York from which he received his BSc in 1938 and the Columbia University where he earned his MA in 1939 A politically active student he organized strikes and a boycott of his own 1938 graduation ceremony in protest against the City College president s Italian Fascist sympathies After he left Columbia he took a summer course in spectroscopy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT 5 In 1939 Wattenberg joined Schenley Industries a distiller of whiskey where he performed spectroscopic analysis He joined US Steel in 1940 dubious discuss The consequential increase in salary and reduction in working hours to 30 hours per week enabled him to go back to graduate school at Columbia University to get his PhD In 1941 his studies were interrupted by World War II Enrico Fermi asked him to join the group at Columbia working on the nuclear fission of uranium that also included Herbert L Anderson Bernard T Feld Leo Szilard and Walter Zinn Wattenberg learned how to build and maintain the Geiger counters and photon and neutron detectors 5 Manhattan Project Edit On 2 December 1946 the fourth anniversary CP 1 going critical members of the team gathered at the University of Chicago In the front row is Enrico Fermi Walter Zinn Albert Wattenberg and Herbert L Anderson Arthur Compton concentrated the teams involved in plutonium and nuclear reactor research at Columbia University Princeton University the University of Chicago at the Manhattan Project s Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago in early 1942 6 There Wattenberg built and maintained detectors and neutron sources Indeed after 1943 he built and maintained all the radium and beryllium neutron sources used by the entire Manhattan Project He assisted in the construction of Chicago Pile 1 the world s first artificial nuclear reactor and was one of those present on December 2 1942 when it achieved criticality 5 Afterwards Eugene Wigner opened a bottle of Chianti to celebrate which those present drank from paper cups 7 8 9 The bottle was signed by those present and kept as a souvenir by Wattenberg 8 10 In 1980 he donated it to the Argonne National Laboratory 5 In 1943 Wattenberg married Shirley Hier 1 a graduate of Hunter College She became an educator and social worker working as a medical social worker at Cook County Hospital from 1945 to 1947 as an instructor and clinical researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health from 1954 to 1958 and as a caseworker supervisor and acting director of Family Services in Champaign Illinois from 1959 to 1966 She was an assistant professor at the School of Social Work at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign from 1966 to 1973 and then with its College of Medicine They had three daughters citation needed After Fermi left the Metallurgical Laboratory for the Los Alamos Laboratory Wattenberg worked with Leo Szilard In July 1945 he was one of the signatories of the Szilard petition 1 which urged that the United States shall not in the present phase of the war resort to the use of atomic bombs 11 His brother Lee aboard a ship destined to participate in the invasion of Japan Maybe my brother s alive because we used the atomic bomb he later opined Maybe the military was right I just wish we had tried a demonstration first 12 In September 1945 soon after the war ended he became one of the founders of the Federation of Atomic Scientists the publishers of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1 Later life Edit The Chianti bottle purchased by Eugene Wigner to help celebrate the first self sustaining controlled chain reaction Wattenberg donated it to the Argonne National Laboratory in 1980 With the war over Wattenberg returned to his studies 2 completing his PhD at the University of Chicago under the supervision of Walter Zinn He wrote his thesis on Photo neutron sources and the energy of the photo neutrons and earned his doctorate in 1947 13 Rather than work in academia he chose to join Fermi at the Argonne National Laboratory where he helped design and build nuclear reactors Wattenberg became director of Argonne s Physics Division in 1949 5 He did not agree with Zinn s decision as director of the laboratory to concentrate on reactor design rather than basic research 14 By 1950 the rise of McCarthyism led to Wattenberg leaving Argonne first to go to the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign for a year and then to MIT where he remained until 1958 He used MIT s synchrotron to study the properties of nucleons and K mesons gaining important insights that would later be incorporated into the standard model In 1958 he was recruited by the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Although he did do some teaching he was largely free to work at Argonne and the Brookhaven National Laboratory on his research into K meson decay He published a paper with J J Sakurai in 1967 about his efforts to distinguish matter from antimatter He worked on the giant scintillation counters at Fermilab and directed searches for charm quark s there with photon and neutron beams and at SLAC using colliding electron positron beams Between 1953 and 2003 he was the author of over 115 papers 5 He retired in 1986 1 In retirement Wattenberg became involved with the American Physical Society s Forum of the History of Physics as a councillor secretary treasurer and editor of the newsletter He contributed articles to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists about the beginnings of the atomic age and his work assisting Fermi 5 He co edited Fermi s papers with Laura Fermi 1 and participated in celebrations of the 100th anniversary of Enrico Fermi s birth at the University of Chicago in 2001 5 During the 1980s he was on the executive committee of the Champaign Urbana chapter of SANE Nuclear Freeze He was also a Democratic Party precinct committeeman He made frequent appearances on Studs Terkel s radio show and in NPR s All Things Considered usually on the occasion of the anniversary of Chicago Pile 1 going critical or of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1 Wattenberg s wife Shirley died in 1989 In 1992 he married Alice Wyers von Neumann 1 a social worker 15 He died at Clark Lindsey Village in Urbana Illinois on June 27 2007 He was survived by his wife Alice daughters Beth Jill and Nina and his brother Lee 1 Notes and references Edit a b c d e f g h i Albert Wattenberg 90 Pioneered Nuclear Energy Vinyard Gazette July 5 2007 Retrieved December 4 2015 a b Karliner Inga Thaler Jon J Gladding Gary E February 2008 Albert Wattenberg Physics Today 61 2 74 doi 10 1063 1 2883918 Albert Wattenberg in the 1940 Census Ancestry com Retrieved December 4 2015 Martindec Douglas December 18 2014 Lee W Wattenberg Who Saw Cancer Fighters in Foods Dies at 92 The New York Times Retrieved December 4 2015 a b c d e f g h Albert Wattenberg Department of Physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Retrieved December 4 2015 Rhodes 1986 pp 399 400 Anderson 1975 p 95 a b Wigner E P Szanton A 2013 The Recollections of Eugene P Wigner Springer US p 7 ISBN 978 1 4899 6313 0 Porter J 2007 Oppenheimer Is Watching Me A Memoir Sightline Books University of Iowa Press p 116 ISBN 978 1 58729 750 2 Wattenberg 1975 p 118 Atomic Bomb Decision Szilard Petition version 1 July 3 1945 Gene Dannen Retrieved 5 December 2015 Infield Tom December 2 1992 The Chain Reaction In Chicago That Shook The World In The Race To Build The Bomb The U s Had An Advantage It Had Some Of The Best Minds From Around The World The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 5 December 2015 Photo neutron sources and the energy of the photo neutrons University of Chicago Retrieved December 4 2015 Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 p 87 Alice von Neumann The News Gazette Retrieved December 4 2015 Bibliography EditAnderson Herbert L 1975 Assisting Fermi In Wilson Jane ed All In Our Time The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers Chicago Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists pp 66 104 OCLC 1982052 Holl Jack M Hewlett Richard G Harris Ruth R 1997 Argonne National Laboratory 1946 96 University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02341 5 Rhodes Richard 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 44133 7 Wattenberg Albert 1975 Present at Creation In Wilson Jane ed All In Our Time The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers Chicago Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists pp 105 123 OCLC 1982052 External links EditGuide to the Albert Wattenberg Papers 1939 2007 at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research CenterPortals Biography History of science Nuclear technology World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albert Wattenberg amp oldid 1122585501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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