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Auergesellschaft

The industrial firm Auergesellschaft was founded in 1892 with headquarters in Berlin. Up to the end of World War II, Auergesellschaft had manufacturing and research activities in the areas of gas mantles, luminescence, rare earths, radioactivity, and uranium and thorium compounds. In 1934, the corporation was acquired by the German corporation Degussa. In 1939, their Oranienburg plant began the development of industrial-scale, high-purity uranium oxide production. Special Soviet search teams, at the close of World War II, sent Auergesellschaft equipment, material, and staff to the Soviet Union for use in their nuclear weapon project. In 1958 Auergesellschaft merged with the Mine Safety Appliances Corporation, a multinational US corporation. Auergesellschaft became a limited corporation in 1960.

History edit

The Deutsche Gasglühlicht AG (Degea, German Gas Light Company), was founded in 1892 through the combined efforts of the Jewish entrepreneur and banker Geheimrat (Privy Councillor) Leopold Koppel and the Austrian chemist and inventor Carl Auer von Welsbach. It was the forerunner of Auergesellschaft. Their main research activities, up to the close of World War II, were on gas mantles, Luminescence, rare earths, radioactivity, and on uranium and thorium compounds.[1][2][3]

Geheimrat Koppel, who owned Auergesellschaft, was later intimately involved in the financing of and influencing the direction of scientific entities in Germany. Among them were the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft (Kaiser Wilhelm Society) and its research institutes.[4] The Third Reich forced Koppel to sell Auergesellschaft, and it was purchased in 1934 by the German corporation Degussa, a large chemical company with extensive experience in the production of metals.[1][2]

By 1901, Auergesellschaft had their first subsidiaries in Austria, the United States, and England. In 1906, the OSRAM light bulb was developed; its name was formed from the German words OSmium, for the element osmium, and WolfRAM, for the element tungsten. During the WWI the enterprise (like other mine safety companies in Europe and the US) started to manufacture gas masks for the military, and continued with industrial gas masks after that.[5] In 1920, Auergesellschaft, Siemens & Halske, and Allgemeine Elektricitäts-Gesellschaft (AEG) combined their electric lamp production with the formation of the company OSRAM. In 1935, Auergesellschaft developed the luminescent light.[1]

Their Oranienburg plant, 15 miles (24 km) northeast of Berlin, was constructed in 1926, and their Auer-Glaswerke was constructed in 1938.[1]

In 1958 Auergesellschaft merged with American Mine Safety Appliances Corporation; Auergesellschaft became a limited corporation in 1960 and is now known as MSA Auer.[1]

Nikolaus Riehl edit

Nikolaus Riehl received his doctorate in nuclear chemistry from the University of Berlin in 1927, under the guidance of the nuclear physicist Lise Meitner and the nuclear chemist Otto Hahn. He initially took a position with Auergesellschaft, where he became an authority on luminescence. While he completed his Habilitation, he continued his industrial career at Auergesellschaft, as opposed to working in academia. From 1927, he was a staff scientist in the radiology department. From 1937, he was head of the optical engineering department. From 1939 to 1945, he was the director of the scientific headquarters.[6][7]

Auergesellschaft had a substantial amount of “waste” uranium from which it had extracted radium. After reading a paper in 1939 by Siegfried Flügge, on the technical use of nuclear energy from uranium,[8][9] Riehl recognized a business opportunity for the company, and, in July of that year, he went to the Heereswaffenamt (HWA, Army Ordnance Office) to discuss the production of uranium. The HWA was interested.[10][11]

Oranienburg Plant edit

With the interest of the HWA, Riehl, and his colleague Günter Wirths, set up an industrial-scale production of high-purity uranium oxide at the Auergesellschaft plant in Oranienburg. Adding to the capabilities in the final stages of metallic uranium production were the strengths of the Degussa corporation's capabilities in metals production.[10][12]

The Auer Oranienburg plant provided the uranium sheets and cubes for the Uranmaschine (uranium machine, i.e., nuclear reactor) experiments conducted at the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft’s Institut für Physik (KWIP, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Physics) and the Versuchsstelle (testing station) of the Heereswaffenamt (Army Ordnance Office) in Gottow, under the German nuclear energy project Uranverein. The G-1 experiment performed at the HWA testing station, under the direction of Kurt Diebner, had lattices of 6,800 uranium oxide cubes (about 25 tons), in the nuclear moderator paraffin.[11][13]

Russian Alsos edit

Near the close of World War II, as American, British, and Russian military forces were closing in on Berlin, Riehl and some of his staff moved to a village west of Berlin, to try to assure occupation by British or American forces. In mid-May 1945, with the assistance of Riehl's colleague Karl Günter Zimmer, Russian nuclear physicists Georgy Flerov and Lev Artsimovich arrived one day in NKVD colonel's uniforms.[14][15] The use of Russian nuclear physicists in the wake of Soviet troop advances to identify and “requisition” equipment, materiel, intellectual property and personnel useful to the Russian atomic bomb project is similar to the American Operation Alsos. The military head of Alsos was Lt. Col. Boris Pash, former head of security on the American atomic bomb effort, the Manhattan Project, and its chief scientist was the eminent physicist Samuel Goudsmit. In early 1945, the Soviets initiated an effort similar to Alsos (Russian Alsos). Forty out of fewer than 100 Russian scientists from the Soviet atomic bomb project's Laboratory No. 2[16] went to Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia in support of acquisitions for the project.[17]

The two colonels requested that Riehl join them in Berlin for a few days, where he also met with nuclear physicist Yulii Borisovich Khariton, also in the uniform of an NKVD colonel. This sojourn in Berlin became 10 years in the Soviet Union. Riehl and his staff, including their families, were flown to Moscow on 9 July 1945. Flying Riehl and his staff to Russia demonstrates the importance the Soviets placed on the production of uranium in their atomic bomb project. Eventually, Riehl's entire laboratory was dismantled and transported to the Soviet Union. The dismantling of his laboratory began even while Riehl was being held by the Soviets in Berlin.[15][18][19][20]

Work of the American Operation Alsos teams, in November 1944, uncovered leads which took them to a company in Paris that handled rare earths and had been taken over by the Auergesellschaft. This, combined with information gathered in the same month through an Alsos team in Strasbourg, confirmed that the Auergesellschaft Oranienburg plant was involved in the production of uranium and thorium metals. Since the plant was to be in the future Soviet zone of occupation and the Russian troops would arrive there before the Allies, General Leslie Groves, commander of the Manhattan Project, recommended to General George Marshall that the plant be destroyed by aerial bombardment to deny its uranium production equipment to the Russians. On Thursday, 15 March 1945, 612 B-17 Flying Fortress bombers of the Eighth Air Force, carrying out "Mission 889", dropped 1,506 tons of high-explosive and 178 tons of incendiary bombs on the plant, apparently classified as a "German Army HQ" as the target in official USAAF records of the time.[21] Riehl visited the site with the Russians and said that the facility was mostly destroyed. Riehl also recalled long after the war that the Russians knew precisely why the Americans had bombed the facility – the attack had been directed at them rather than the Germans.[22][23][24][25][26]

When a Soviet search team arrived at the Auergesellschaft facility in Oranienburg, they found nearly 100 tons of fairly pure uranium oxide. The Soviet Union took this uranium as reparations, which amounted to between 25% and 40% of the uranium taken from Germany and Czechoslovakia at the end of the war. Khariton said the uranium found there saved the Soviet Union a year on its atomic bomb project.[27][28][29]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e . Archived from the original on 2017-08-11. Retrieved 2007-11-16.
  2. ^ a b Riel and Seitz, 1996, 10.
  3. ^ Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, Appendix D; see the entry for Auergesellschaft.
  4. ^ Macrakis, 1993, 18-20 and 22.
  5. ^ Katz, Sidney Hershberg (1929). Industrial Gas Masks Abroad. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Mines.
  6. ^ Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, Appendix F; see the entry for Riehl.
  7. ^ Riehl and Seitz, 1996, 4-5, 8, and 68.
  8. ^ Siegfried Flügge Kann der Energieinhalt der Atomkerne technisch nutzbar gemacht werden?, Die Naturwissenschaften Volume 27, Issues 23/24, 402-410 (June 1939).
  9. ^ Also see the article by Siegfried Flügge Document 74. Siegfried Flügge: Exploiting Atomic Energy. From the Laboratory Experiment to the Uranium Machine – Research Results in Dahlem [August 15, 1939] reprinted in English in Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, 197-206.
  10. ^ a b Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, 369, Appendix F (see the entry for Nikolaus Riehl), and Appendix D (see the entry for Auergesellschaft).
  11. ^ a b Riehl and Seitz, 1996, 13.
  12. ^ Riehl and Seitz, 1996, 13 and 69.
  13. ^ Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, 369 and 373, Appendix F (see the entry for Nikolaus Riehl and Kurt Diebner), and Appendix D (see the entry for Auergesellschaft).
  14. ^ Riehl and Seitz, 1996, 71-72.
  15. ^ a b Oleynikov, 2000, 7.
  16. ^ Laboratory No. 2 was in Moscow. It was later known as the Laboratory for Measuring Instruments (LIPAN) and then the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy. See Oleynikov, 2000, 4.
  17. ^ Oleynikov, 2000, 3-5.
  18. ^ Riehl and Seitz, 1996, 71-72 and 80.
  19. ^ Hentschel and Hentschel, 1996, Appendix F, see the entry for Riehl.
  20. ^ Walker, 1993, 183.
  21. ^ 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine usaaf.net. Retrieved: 3 December 2020.
  22. ^ Bernstein, 2001, 50-51.
  23. ^ Naimark, 1995, 205-207.
  24. ^ Riehl and Seitz, 1996, 77-79.
  25. ^ Walker, 1993, 156.
  26. ^ Groves, 1962, 220-222 and 230-231.
  27. ^ Naimark, 1995, 236.
  28. ^ Holloway, 1995, 111.
  29. ^ Oleynikov, 2000, 9.

Bibliography edit

  • Bernstein, Jeremy Hitler’s Uranium Club: The Secret Recordings at Farm Hall (Copernicus, 2001) ISBN 0-387-95089-3
  • Groves, Leslie M. Now it Can be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project (De Capo, 1962) ISBN 0-306-80189-2
  • Hentschel, Klaus (editor) and Ann M. Hentschel (editorial assistant and translator) Physics and National Socialism: An Anthology of Primary Sources (Birkhäuser, 1996) ISBN 0-8176-5312-0
  • Holloway, David Stalin and the Bomb: The Soviet Union and Atomic Energy 1939–1956 (Yale, 1994) ISBN 0-300-06056-4
  • Maddrell, Paul "Spying on Science: Western Intelligence in Divided Germany 1945–1961" (Oxford, 2006) ISBN 0-19-926750-2
  • Macrakis, Kristie "Surviving the Swastika: Scientific Research in Nazi Germany" (Oxford, 1993)
  • Naimark, Norman M. The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949 (Belknap, 1995)
  • Oleynikov, Pavel V. German Scientists in the Soviet Atomic Project, The Nonproliferation Review Volume 7, Number 2, 1 – 30 (2000). The author has been a group leader at the Institute of Technical Physics of the Russian Federal Nuclear Center in Snezhinsk (Chelyabinsk-70).
  • Riehl, Nikolaus and Frederick Seitz Stalin’s Captive: Nikolaus Riehl and the Soviet Race for the Bomb (American Chemical Society and the Chemical Heritage Foundations, 1996) ISBN 0-8412-3310-1.
  • Walker, Mark German National Socialism and the Quest for Nuclear Power 1939–1949 (Cambridge, 1993) ISBN 0-521-43804-7

External links edit

auergesellschaft, industrial, firm, founded, 1892, with, headquarters, berlin, world, manufacturing, research, activities, areas, mantles, luminescence, rare, earths, radioactivity, uranium, thorium, compounds, 1934, corporation, acquired, german, corporation,. The industrial firm Auergesellschaft was founded in 1892 with headquarters in Berlin Up to the end of World War II Auergesellschaft had manufacturing and research activities in the areas of gas mantles luminescence rare earths radioactivity and uranium and thorium compounds In 1934 the corporation was acquired by the German corporation Degussa In 1939 their Oranienburg plant began the development of industrial scale high purity uranium oxide production Special Soviet search teams at the close of World War II sent Auergesellschaft equipment material and staff to the Soviet Union for use in their nuclear weapon project In 1958 Auergesellschaft merged with the Mine Safety Appliances Corporation a multinational US corporation Auergesellschaft became a limited corporation in 1960 Contents 1 History 1 1 Nikolaus Riehl 1 2 Oranienburg Plant 1 3 Russian Alsos 2 Notes 3 Bibliography 4 External linksHistory editThe Deutsche Gasgluhlicht AG Degea German Gas Light Company was founded in 1892 through the combined efforts of the Jewish entrepreneur and banker Geheimrat Privy Councillor Leopold Koppel and the Austrian chemist and inventor Carl Auer von Welsbach It was the forerunner of Auergesellschaft Their main research activities up to the close of World War II were on gas mantles Luminescence rare earths radioactivity and on uranium and thorium compounds 1 2 3 Geheimrat Koppel who owned Auergesellschaft was later intimately involved in the financing of and influencing the direction of scientific entities in Germany Among them were the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft Kaiser Wilhelm Society and its research institutes 4 The Third Reich forced Koppel to sell Auergesellschaft and it was purchased in 1934 by the German corporation Degussa a large chemical company with extensive experience in the production of metals 1 2 By 1901 Auergesellschaft had their first subsidiaries in Austria the United States and England In 1906 the OSRAM light bulb was developed its name was formed from the German words OSmium for the element osmium and WolfRAM for the element tungsten During the WWI the enterprise like other mine safety companies in Europe and the US started to manufacture gas masks for the military and continued with industrial gas masks after that 5 In 1920 Auergesellschaft Siemens amp Halske and Allgemeine Elektricitats Gesellschaft AEG combined their electric lamp production with the formation of the company OSRAM In 1935 Auergesellschaft developed the luminescent light 1 Their Oranienburg plant 15 miles 24 km northeast of Berlin was constructed in 1926 and their Auer Glaswerke was constructed in 1938 1 In 1958 Auergesellschaft merged with American Mine Safety Appliances Corporation Auergesellschaft became a limited corporation in 1960 and is now known as MSA Auer 1 Nikolaus Riehl edit Nikolaus Riehl received his doctorate in nuclear chemistry from the University of Berlin in 1927 under the guidance of the nuclear physicist Lise Meitner and the nuclear chemist Otto Hahn He initially took a position with Auergesellschaft where he became an authority on luminescence While he completed his Habilitation he continued his industrial career at Auergesellschaft as opposed to working in academia From 1927 he was a staff scientist in the radiology department From 1937 he was head of the optical engineering department From 1939 to 1945 he was the director of the scientific headquarters 6 7 Auergesellschaft had a substantial amount of waste uranium from which it had extracted radium After reading a paper in 1939 by Siegfried Flugge on the technical use of nuclear energy from uranium 8 9 Riehl recognized a business opportunity for the company and in July of that year he went to the Heereswaffenamt HWA Army Ordnance Office to discuss the production of uranium The HWA was interested 10 11 Oranienburg Plant edit With the interest of the HWA Riehl and his colleague Gunter Wirths set up an industrial scale production of high purity uranium oxide at the Auergesellschaft plant in Oranienburg Adding to the capabilities in the final stages of metallic uranium production were the strengths of the Degussa corporation s capabilities in metals production 10 12 The Auer Oranienburg plant provided the uranium sheets and cubes for the Uranmaschine uranium machine i e nuclear reactor experiments conducted at the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft s Institut fur Physik KWIP Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Physics and the Versuchsstelle testing station of the Heereswaffenamt Army Ordnance Office in Gottow under the German nuclear energy project Uranverein The G 1 experiment performed at the HWA testing station under the direction of Kurt Diebner had lattices of 6 800 uranium oxide cubes about 25 tons in the nuclear moderator paraffin 11 13 Russian Alsos edit Near the close of World War II as American British and Russian military forces were closing in on Berlin Riehl and some of his staff moved to a village west of Berlin to try to assure occupation by British or American forces In mid May 1945 with the assistance of Riehl s colleague Karl Gunter Zimmer Russian nuclear physicists Georgy Flerov and Lev Artsimovich arrived one day in NKVD colonel s uniforms 14 15 The use of Russian nuclear physicists in the wake of Soviet troop advances to identify and requisition equipment materiel intellectual property and personnel useful to the Russian atomic bomb project is similar to the American Operation Alsos The military head of Alsos was Lt Col Boris Pash former head of security on the American atomic bomb effort the Manhattan Project and its chief scientist was the eminent physicist Samuel Goudsmit In early 1945 the Soviets initiated an effort similar to Alsos Russian Alsos Forty out of fewer than 100 Russian scientists from the Soviet atomic bomb project s Laboratory No 2 16 went to Germany Austria and Czechoslovakia in support of acquisitions for the project 17 The two colonels requested that Riehl join them in Berlin for a few days where he also met with nuclear physicist Yulii Borisovich Khariton also in the uniform of an NKVD colonel This sojourn in Berlin became 10 years in the Soviet Union Riehl and his staff including their families were flown to Moscow on 9 July 1945 Flying Riehl and his staff to Russia demonstrates the importance the Soviets placed on the production of uranium in their atomic bomb project Eventually Riehl s entire laboratory was dismantled and transported to the Soviet Union The dismantling of his laboratory began even while Riehl was being held by the Soviets in Berlin 15 18 19 20 Work of the American Operation Alsos teams in November 1944 uncovered leads which took them to a company in Paris that handled rare earths and had been taken over by the Auergesellschaft This combined with information gathered in the same month through an Alsos team in Strasbourg confirmed that the Auergesellschaft Oranienburg plant was involved in the production of uranium and thorium metals Since the plant was to be in the future Soviet zone of occupation and the Russian troops would arrive there before the Allies General Leslie Groves commander of the Manhattan Project recommended to General George Marshall that the plant be destroyed by aerial bombardment to deny its uranium production equipment to the Russians On Thursday 15 March 1945 612 B 17 Flying Fortress bombers of the Eighth Air Force carrying out Mission 889 dropped 1 506 tons of high explosive and 178 tons of incendiary bombs on the plant apparently classified as a German Army HQ as the target in official USAAF records of the time 21 Riehl visited the site with the Russians and said that the facility was mostly destroyed Riehl also recalled long after the war that the Russians knew precisely why the Americans had bombed the facility the attack had been directed at them rather than the Germans 22 23 24 25 26 When a Soviet search team arrived at the Auergesellschaft facility in Oranienburg they found nearly 100 tons of fairly pure uranium oxide The Soviet Union took this uranium as reparations which amounted to between 25 and 40 of the uranium taken from Germany and Czechoslovakia at the end of the war Khariton said the uranium found there saved the Soviet Union a year on its atomic bomb project 27 28 29 Notes edit a b c d e History of MSA Auer Archived from the original on 2017 08 11 Retrieved 2007 11 16 a b Riel and Seitz 1996 10 Hentschel and Hentschel 1996 Appendix D see the entry for Auergesellschaft Macrakis 1993 18 20 and 22 Katz Sidney Hershberg 1929 Industrial Gas Masks Abroad U S Department of Commerce Bureau of Mines Hentschel and Hentschel 1996 Appendix F see the entry for Riehl Riehl and Seitz 1996 4 5 8 and 68 Siegfried Flugge Kann der Energieinhalt der Atomkerne technisch nutzbar gemacht werden Die Naturwissenschaften Volume 27 Issues 23 24 402 410 June 1939 Also see the article by Siegfried Flugge Document 74 Siegfried Flugge Exploiting Atomic Energy From the Laboratory Experiment to the Uranium Machine Research Results in Dahlem August 15 1939 reprinted in English in Hentschel and Hentschel 1996 197 206 a b Hentschel and Hentschel 1996 369 Appendix F see the entry for Nikolaus Riehl and Appendix D see the entry for Auergesellschaft a b Riehl and Seitz 1996 13 Riehl and Seitz 1996 13 and 69 Hentschel and Hentschel 1996 369 and 373 Appendix F see the entry for Nikolaus Riehl and Kurt Diebner and Appendix D see the entry for Auergesellschaft Riehl and Seitz 1996 71 72 a b Oleynikov 2000 7 Laboratory No 2 was in Moscow It was later known as the Laboratory for Measuring Instruments LIPAN and then the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy See Oleynikov 2000 4 Oleynikov 2000 3 5 Riehl and Seitz 1996 71 72 and 80 Hentschel and Hentschel 1996 Appendix F see the entry for Riehl Walker 1993 183 Archived Combat Chronology of the US Army Air Forces March 1945 Archived 2013 09 27 at the Wayback Machine usaaf net Retrieved 3 December 2020 Bernstein 2001 50 51 Naimark 1995 205 207 Riehl and Seitz 1996 77 79 Walker 1993 156 Groves 1962 220 222 and 230 231 Naimark 1995 236 Holloway 1995 111 Oleynikov 2000 9 Bibliography editBernstein Jeremy Hitler s Uranium Club The Secret Recordings at Farm Hall Copernicus 2001 ISBN 0 387 95089 3 Groves Leslie M Now it Can be Told The Story of the Manhattan Project De Capo 1962 ISBN 0 306 80189 2 Hentschel Klaus editor and Ann M Hentschel editorial assistant and translator Physics and National Socialism An Anthology of Primary Sources Birkhauser 1996 ISBN 0 8176 5312 0 Holloway David Stalin and the Bomb The Soviet Union and Atomic Energy 1939 1956 Yale 1994 ISBN 0 300 06056 4 Maddrell Paul Spying on Science Western Intelligence in Divided Germany 1945 1961 Oxford 2006 ISBN 0 19 926750 2 Macrakis Kristie Surviving the Swastika Scientific Research in Nazi Germany Oxford 1993 Naimark Norman M The Russians in Germany A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation 1945 1949 Belknap 1995 Oleynikov Pavel V German Scientists in the Soviet Atomic Project The Nonproliferation Review Volume 7 Number 2 1 30 2000 The author has been a group leader at the Institute of Technical Physics of the Russian Federal Nuclear Center in Snezhinsk Chelyabinsk 70 Riehl Nikolaus and Frederick Seitz Stalin s Captive Nikolaus Riehl and the Soviet Race for the Bomb American Chemical Society and the Chemical Heritage Foundations 1996 ISBN 0 8412 3310 1 Walker Mark German National Socialism and the Quest for Nuclear Power 1939 1949 Cambridge 1993 ISBN 0 521 43804 7External links edit nbsp Germany portal nbsp Nuclear technology portalMSA History of MSA Auer Clippings about Auergesellschaft in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Auergesellschaft amp oldid 1181808854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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