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Enrico Fermi

Enrico Fermi (Italian: [enˈriːko ˈfermi]; 29 September 1901 – 28 November 1954) was an Italian and later naturalized American physicist and the creator of the world's first nuclear reactor, the Chicago Pile-1. He has been called the "architect of the nuclear age"[1] and the "architect of the atomic bomb".[2] He was one of very few physicists to excel in both theoretical physics and experimental physics. Fermi was awarded the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on induced radioactivity by neutron bombardment and for the discovery of transuranium elements. With his colleagues, Fermi filed several patents related to the use of nuclear power, all of which were taken over by the US government. He made significant contributions to the development of statistical mechanics, quantum theory, and nuclear and particle physics.

Enrico Fermi
Fermi in 1943
Born(1901-09-29)29 September 1901
Rome, Italy
Died28 November 1954(1954-11-28) (aged 53)
Chicago, Illinois, US
Citizenship
  • Italian (1901–1944)
  • United States (1944–1954)
Alma materScuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Italy (laurea)
Known for
SpouseLaura Capon Fermi
Children2
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
Institutions
Academic advisors
Doctoral students
Other notable students
Signature

Fermi's first major contribution involved the field of statistical mechanics. After Wolfgang Pauli formulated his exclusion principle in 1925, Fermi followed with a paper in which he applied the principle to an ideal gas, employing a statistical formulation now known as Fermi–Dirac statistics. Today, particles that obey the exclusion principle are called "fermions". Pauli later postulated the existence of an uncharged invisible particle emitted along with an electron during beta decay, to satisfy the law of conservation of energy. Fermi took up this idea, developing a model that incorporated the postulated particle, which he named the "neutrino". His theory, later referred to as Fermi's interaction and now called weak interaction, described one of the four fundamental interactions in nature. Through experiments inducing radioactivity with the recently discovered neutron, Fermi discovered that slow neutrons were more easily captured by atomic nuclei than fast ones, and he developed the Fermi age equation to describe this. After bombarding thorium and uranium with slow neutrons, he concluded that he had created new elements. Although he was awarded the Nobel Prize for this discovery, the new elements were later revealed to be nuclear fission products.

Fermi left Italy in 1938 to escape new Italian racial laws that affected his Jewish wife, Laura Capon. He emigrated to the United States, where he worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II. Fermi led the team at the University of Chicago that designed and built Chicago Pile-1, which went critical on 2 December 1942, demonstrating the first human-created, self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction. He was on hand when the X-10 Graphite Reactor at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, went critical in 1943, and when the B Reactor at the Hanford Site did so the next year. At Los Alamos, he headed F Division, part of which worked on Edward Teller's thermonuclear "Super" bomb. He was present at the Trinity test on 16 July 1945, where he used his Fermi method to estimate the bomb's yield.

After the war, Fermi served under J. Robert Oppenheimer on the General Advisory Committee, which advised the Atomic Energy Commission on nuclear matters. After the detonation of the first Soviet fission bomb in August 1949, he strongly opposed the development of a hydrogen bomb on both moral and technical grounds. He was among the scientists who testified on Oppenheimer's behalf at the 1954 hearing that resulted in the denial of Oppenheimer's security clearance. Fermi did important work in particle physics, especially related to pions and muons, and he speculated that cosmic rays arose when material was accelerated by magnetic fields in interstellar space. Many awards, concepts, and institutions are named after Fermi, including the Enrico Fermi Award, the Enrico Fermi Institute, the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, and the synthetic element fermium, making him one of 16 scientists who have elements named after them. Fermi tutored or directly influenced no fewer than eight young researchers who went on to win Nobel Prizes.[3][4]

Early life

 
Fermi was born in Rome at Via Gaeta 19.
 
Plaque at Fermi's birthplace

Enrico Fermi was born in Rome, Italy, on 29 September 1901. He was the third child of Alberto Fermi, a division head in the Ministry of Railways, and Ida de Gattis, an elementary school teacher.[5][6] His sister, Maria, was two years older, his brother Giulio a year older. After the two boys were sent to a rural community to be wet nursed, Enrico rejoined his family in Rome when he was two and a half.[7] Although he was baptized a Roman Catholic in accordance with his grandparents' wishes, his family was not particularly religious; Enrico was an agnostic throughout his adult life. As a young boy, he shared the same interests as his brother Giulio, building electric motors and playing with electrical and mechanical toys.[8] Giulio died during an operation on a throat abscess in 1915[9] and Maria died in an airplane crash near Milan in 1959.[10]

At a local market in Campo de' Fiori Fermi found a physics book, the 900-page Elementorum physicae mathematicae. Written in Latin by Jesuit Father Andrea Caraffa [it], a professor at the Collegio Romano, it presented mathematics, classical mechanics, astronomy, optics, and acoustics as they were understood at the time of its 1840 publication.[11][12] With a scientifically inclined friend, Enrico Persico,[13] Fermi pursued projects such as building gyroscopes and measuring the acceleration of Earth's gravity.[14]

In 1914, Fermi, who used to often meet with his father in front of the office after work, met a colleague of his father called Adolfo Amidei, who would walk part of the way home with Alberto. Enrico had learned that Adolfo was interested in mathematics and physics and took the opportunity to ask Adolfo a question about geometry. Adolfo understood that the young Fermi was referring to projective geometry and then proceeded to give him a book on the subject written by Theodor Reye. Two months later, Fermi returned the book, having solved all the problems proposed at the end of the book, some of which Adolfo considered difficult. Upon verifying this, Adolfo felt that Fermi was "a prodigy, at least with respect to geometry", and further mentored the boy, providing him with more books on physics and mathematics. Adolfo noted that Fermi had a very good memory and thus could return the books after having read them because he could remember their content very well.[15]

Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa

 
Enrico Fermi as a student in Pisa

Fermi graduated from high school in July 1918, having skipped the third year entirely. At Amidei's urging, Fermi learned German to be able to read the many scientific papers that were published in that language at the time, and he applied to the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa. Amidei felt that the Scuola would provide better conditions for Fermi's development than the Sapienza University of Rome could at the time. Having lost one son, Fermi's parents only reluctantly allowed him to live in the school's lodgings away from Rome for four years.[16][17] Fermi took first place in the difficult entrance exam, which included an essay on the theme of "Specific characteristics of Sounds"; the 17-year-old Fermi chose to use Fourier analysis to derive and solve the partial differential equation for a vibrating rod, and after interviewing Fermi the examiner declared he would become an outstanding physicist.[16][18]

At the Scuola Normale Superiore, Fermi played pranks with fellow student Franco Rasetti; the two became close friends and collaborators. Fermi was advised by Luigi Puccianti, director of the physics laboratory, who said there was little he could teach Fermi and often asked Fermi to teach him something instead. Fermi's knowledge of quantum physics was such that Puccianti asked him to organize seminars on the topic.[19] During this time Fermi learned tensor calculus, a technique key to general relativity.[20] Fermi initially chose mathematics as his major, but soon switched to physics. He remained largely self-taught, studying general relativity, quantum mechanics, and atomic physics.[21]

In September 1920, Fermi was admitted to the Physics department. Since there were only three students in the department—Fermi, Rasetti, and Nello Carrara—Puccianti let them freely use the laboratory for whatever purposes they chose. Fermi decided that they should research X-ray crystallography, and the three worked to produce a Laue photograph—an X-ray photograph of a crystal.[22] During 1921, his third year at the university, Fermi published his first scientific works in the Italian journal Nuovo Cimento. The first was entitled "On the dynamics of a rigid system of electrical charges in translational motion" (Sulla dinamica di un sistema rigido di cariche elettriche in moto traslatorio). A sign of things to come was that the mass was expressed as a tensor—a mathematical construct commonly used to describe something moving and changing in three-dimensional space. In classical mechanics, mass is a scalar quantity, but in relativity, it changes with velocity. The second paper was "On the electrostatics of a uniform gravitational field of electromagnetic charges and on the weight of electromagnetic charges" (Sull'elettrostatica di un campo gravitazionale uniforme e sul peso delle masse elettromagnetiche). Using general relativity, Fermi showed that a charge has a weight equal to U/c2, where U was the electrostatic energy of the system, and c is the speed of light.[21]

The first paper seemed to point out a contradiction between the electrodynamic theory and the relativistic one concerning the calculation of the electromagnetic masses, as the former predicted a value of 4/3 U/c2. Fermi addressed this the next year in a paper "Concerning a contradiction between electrodynamic and the relativistic theory of electromagnetic mass" in which he showed that the apparent contradiction was a consequence of relativity. This paper was sufficiently well-regarded that it was translated into German and published in the German scientific journal Physikalische Zeitschrift in 1922.[23] That year, Fermi submitted his article "On the phenomena occurring near a world line" (Sopra i fenomeni che avvengono in vicinanza di una linea oraria) to the Italian journal I Rendiconti dell'Accademia dei Lincei [it]. In this article he examined the Principle of Equivalence, and introduced the so-called "Fermi coordinates". He proved that on a world line close to the timeline, space behaves as if it were a Euclidean space.[24][25]

 
A light cone is a three-dimensional surface of all possible light rays arriving at and departing from a point in spacetime. Here, it is depicted with one spatial dimension suppressed. The timeline is the vertical axis.

Fermi submitted his thesis, "A theorem on probability and some of its applications" (Un teorema di calcolo delle probabilità ed alcune sue applicazioni), to the Scuola Normale Superiore in July 1922, and received his laurea at the unusually young age of 20. The thesis was on X-ray diffraction images. Theoretical physics was not yet considered a discipline in Italy, and the only thesis that would have been accepted was experimental physics. For this reason, Italian physicists were slow in embracing the new ideas like relativity coming from Germany. Since Fermi was quite at home in the lab doing experimental work, this did not pose insurmountable problems for him.[25]

While writing the appendix for the Italian edition of the book Fundamentals of Einstein Relativity by August Kopff in 1923, Fermi was the first to point out that hidden inside the Einstein equation (E = mc2) was an enormous amount of nuclear potential energy to be exploited. "It does not seem possible, at least in the near future", he wrote, "to find a way to release these dreadful amounts of energy—which is all to the good because the first effect of an explosion of such a dreadful amount of energy would be to smash into smithereens the physicist who had the misfortune to find a way to do it."[25]

In 1924, Fermi was initiated into the Masonic Lodge "Adriano Lemmi" of the Grand Orient of Italy.[26]

In 1923–1924, Fermi spent a semester studying under Max Born at the University of Göttingen, where he met Werner Heisenberg and Pascual Jordan. Fermi then studied in Leiden with Paul Ehrenfest from September to December 1924 on a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation obtained through the intercession of the mathematician Vito Volterra. Here Fermi met Hendrik Lorentz and Albert Einstein, and became friends with Samuel Goudsmit and Jan Tinbergen. From January 1925 to late 1926, Fermi taught mathematical physics and theoretical mechanics at the University of Florence, where he teamed up with Rasetti to conduct a series of experiments on the effects of magnetic fields on mercury vapor. He also participated in seminars at the Sapienza University of Rome, giving lectures on quantum mechanics and solid state physics.[27] While giving lectures on the new quantum mechanics based on the remarkable accuracy of predictions of the Schrödinger equation, Fermi would often say, "It has no business to fit so well!"[28]

After Wolfgang Pauli announced his exclusion principle in 1925, Fermi responded with a paper "On the quantization of the perfect monoatomic gas" (Sulla quantizzazione del gas perfetto monoatomico), in which he applied the exclusion principle to an ideal gas. The paper was especially notable for Fermi's statistical formulation, which describes the distribution of particles in systems of many identical particles that obey the exclusion principle. This was independently developed soon after by the British physicist Paul Dirac, who also showed how it was related to the Bose–Einstein statistics. Accordingly, it is now known as Fermi–Dirac statistics.[29] After Dirac, particles that obey the exclusion principle are today called "fermions", while those that do not are called "bosons".[30]

Professor in Rome

 
Fermi and his research group (the Via Panisperna boys) in the courtyard of Rome University's Physics Institute in Via Panisperna, c. 1934. From left to right: Oscar D'Agostino, Emilio Segrè, Edoardo Amaldi, Franco Rasetti and Fermi

Professorships in Italy were granted by competition (concorso) for a vacant chair, the applicants being rated on their publications by a committee of professors. Fermi applied for a chair of mathematical physics at the University of Cagliari on Sardinia, but was narrowly passed over in favor of Giovanni Giorgi.[31] In 1926, at the age of 24, he applied for a professorship at the Sapienza University of Rome. This was a new chair, one of the first three in theoretical physics in Italy, that had been created by the Minister of Education at the urging of Professor Orso Mario Corbino, who was the university's professor of experimental physics, the Director of the Institute of Physics, and a member of Benito Mussolini's cabinet. Corbino, who also chaired the selection committee, hoped that the new chair would raise the standard and reputation of physics in Italy.[32] The committee chose Fermi ahead of Enrico Persico and Aldo Pontremoli,[33] and Corbino helped Fermi recruit his team, which was soon joined by notable students such as Edoardo Amaldi, Bruno Pontecorvo, Ettore Majorana and Emilio Segrè, and by Franco Rasetti, whom Fermi had appointed as his assistant.[34] They soon nicknamed the "Via Panisperna boys" after the street where the Institute of Physics was located.[35]

Fermi married Laura Capon, a science student at the university, on 19 July 1928.[36] They had two children: Nella, born in January 1931, and Giulio, born in February 1936.[37] On 18 March 1929, Fermi was appointed a member of the Royal Academy of Italy by Mussolini, and on 27 April he joined the Fascist Party. He later opposed Fascism when the 1938 racial laws were promulgated by Mussolini in order to bring Italian Fascism ideologically closer to German Nazism. These laws threatened Laura, who was Jewish, and put many of Fermi's research assistants out of work.[38][39][40][41][42]

During their time in Rome, Fermi and his group made important contributions to many practical and theoretical aspects of physics. In 1928, he published his Introduction to Atomic Physics (Introduzione alla fisica atomica), which provided Italian university students with an up-to-date and accessible text. Fermi also conducted public lectures and wrote popular articles for scientists and teachers in order to spread knowledge of the new physics as widely as possible.[43] Part of his teaching method was to gather his colleagues and graduate students together at the end of the day and go over a problem, often from his own research.[43][44] A sign of success was that foreign students now began to come to Italy. The most notable of these was the German physicist Hans Bethe,[45] who came to Rome as a Rockefeller Foundation fellow, and collaborated with Fermi on a 1932 paper "On the Interaction between Two Electrons" (German: Über die Wechselwirkung von Zwei Elektronen).[43]

At this time, physicists were puzzled by beta decay, in which an electron was emitted from the atomic nucleus. To satisfy the law of conservation of energy, Pauli postulated the existence of an invisible particle with no charge and little or no mass that was also emitted at the same time. Fermi took up this idea, which he developed in a tentative paper in 1933, and then a longer paper the next year that incorporated the postulated particle, which Fermi called a "neutrino".[46][47][48] His theory, later referred to as Fermi's interaction, and still later as the theory of the weak interaction, described one of the four fundamental forces of nature. The neutrino was detected after his death, and his interaction theory showed why it was so difficult to detect. When he submitted his paper to the British journal Nature, that journal's editor turned it down because it contained speculations which were "too remote from physical reality to be of interest to readers".[47] Thus Fermi saw the theory published in Italian and German before it was published in English.[34]

In the introduction to the 1968 English translation, physicist Fred L. Wilson noted that:

Fermi's theory, aside from bolstering Pauli's proposal of the neutrino, has a special significance in the history of modern physics. One must remember that only the naturally occurring β emitters were known at the time the theory was proposed. Later when positron decay was discovered, the process was easily incorporated within Fermi's original framework. On the basis of his theory, the capture of an orbital electron by a nucleus was predicted and eventually observed. With time, experimental data accumulated significantly. Although peculiarities have been observed many times in β decay, Fermi's theory always has been equal to the challenge.
The consequences of the Fermi theory are vast. For example, β spectroscopy was established as a powerful tool for the study of nuclear structure. But perhaps the most influential aspect of this work of Fermi is that his particular form of the β interaction established a pattern that has been appropriate for the study of other types of interactions. It was the first successful theory of the creation and annihilation of material particles. Previously, only photons had been known to be created and destroyed.[48]

In January 1934, Irène Joliot-Curie and Frédéric Joliot announced that they had bombarded elements with alpha particles and induced radioactivity in them.[49][50] By March, Fermi's assistant Gian-Carlo Wick had provided a theoretical explanation using Fermi's theory of beta decay. Fermi decided to switch to experimental physics, using the neutron, which James Chadwick had discovered in 1932.[51] In March 1934, Fermi wanted to see if he could induce radioactivity with Rasetti's polonium-beryllium neutron source. Neutrons had no electric charge, and so would not be deflected by the positively charged nucleus. This meant that they needed much less energy to penetrate the nucleus than charged particles, and so would not require a particle accelerator, which the Via Panisperna boys did not have.[52][53]

 
Enrico Fermi between Franco Rasetti (left) and Emilio Segrè in academic dress

Fermi had the idea to resort to replacing the polonium-beryllium neutron source with a radon-beryllium one, which he created by filling a glass bulb with beryllium powder, evacuating the air, and then adding 50 mCi of radon gas, supplied by Giulio Cesare Trabacchi.[54][55] This created a much stronger neutron source, the effectiveness of which declined with the 3.8-day half-life of radon. He knew that this source would also emit gamma rays, but, on the basis of his theory, he believed that this would not affect the results of the experiment. He started by bombarding platinum, an element with a high atomic number that was readily available, without success. He turned to aluminium, which emitted an alpha particle and produced sodium, which then decayed into magnesium by beta particle emission. He tried lead, without success, and then fluorine in the form of calcium fluoride, which emitted an alpha particle and produced nitrogen, decaying into oxygen by beta particle emission. In all, he induced radioactivity in 22 different elements.[56] Fermi rapidly reported the discovery of neutron-induced radioactivity in the Italian journal La Ricerca Scientifica on 25 March 1934.[55][57][58]

The natural radioactivity of thorium and uranium made it hard to determine what was happening when these elements were bombarded with neutrons but, after correctly eliminating the presence of elements lighter than uranium but heavier than lead, Fermi concluded that they had created new elements, which he called hesperium and ausonium.[59][53] The chemist Ida Noddack suggested that some of the experiments could have produced lighter elements than lead rather than new, heavier elements. Her suggestion was not taken seriously at the time because her team had not carried out any experiments with uranium or built the theoretical basis for this possibility. At that time, fission was thought to be improbable if not impossible on theoretical grounds. While physicists expected elements with higher atomic numbers to form from neutron bombardment of lighter elements, nobody expected neutrons to have enough energy to split a heavier atom into two light element fragments in the manner that Noddack suggested.[60][59]

 
Beta decay. A neutron decays into a proton, and an electron is emitted. In order for the total energy in the system to remain the same, Pauli and Fermi postulated that a neutrino ( ) was also emitted.

The Via Panisperna boys also noticed some unexplained effects. The experiment seemed to work better on a wooden table than a marble tabletop. Fermi remembered that Joliot-Curie and Chadwick had noted that paraffin wax was effective at slowing neutrons, so he decided to try that. When neutrons were passed through paraffin wax, they induced a hundred times as much radioactivity in silver compared with when it was bombarded without the paraffin. Fermi guessed that this was due to the hydrogen atoms in the paraffin. Those in wood similarly explained the difference between the wooden and the marble tabletops. This was confirmed by repeating the effect with water. He concluded that collisions with hydrogen atoms slowed the neutrons.[61][53] The lower the atomic number of the nucleus it collides with, the more energy a neutron loses per collision, and therefore the fewer collisions that are required to slow a neutron down by a given amount.[62] Fermi realised that this induced more radioactivity because slow neutrons were more easily captured than fast ones. He developed a diffusion equation to describe this, which became known as the Fermi age equation.[61][53]

In 1938, Fermi received the Nobel Prize in Physics at the age of 37 for his "demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons".[63] After Fermi received the prize in Stockholm, he did not return home to Italy but rather continued to New York City with his family in December 1938, where they applied for permanent residency. The decision to move to America and become US citizens was due primarily to the racial laws in Italy.[38][64]

Manhattan Project

Fermi arrived in New York City on 2 January 1939.[65] He was immediately offered positions at five universities, and accepted one at Columbia University,[66] where he had already given summer lectures in 1936.[67] He received the news that in December 1938, the German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann had detected the element barium after bombarding uranium with neutrons,[68] which Lise Meitner and her nephew Otto Frisch correctly interpreted as the result of nuclear fission. Frisch confirmed this experimentally on 13 January 1939.[69][70] The news of Meitner and Frisch's interpretation of Hahn and Strassmann's discovery crossed the Atlantic with Niels Bohr, who was to lecture at Princeton University. Isidor Isaac Rabi and Willis Lamb, two Columbia University physicists working at Princeton, found out about it and carried it back to Columbia. Rabi said he told Enrico Fermi, but Fermi later gave the credit to Lamb:[71]

I remember very vividly the first month, January, 1939, that I started working at the Pupin Laboratories because things began happening very fast. In that period, Niels Bohr was on a lecture engagement at the Princeton University and I remember one afternoon Willis Lamb came back very excited and said that Bohr had leaked out great news. The great news that had leaked out was the discovery of fission and at least the outline of its interpretation. Then, somewhat later that same month, there was a meeting in Washington where the possible importance of the newly discovered phenomenon of fission was first discussed in semi-jocular earnest as a possible source of nuclear power.[72]

Noddack was proven right after all. Fermi had dismissed the possibility of fission on the basis of his calculations, but he had not taken into account the binding energy that would appear when a nuclide with an odd number of neutrons absorbed an extra neutron.[60] For Fermi, the news came as a profound embarrassment, as the transuranic elements that he had partly been awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering had not been transuranic elements at all, but fission products. He added a footnote to this effect to his Nobel Prize acceptance speech.[71][73]

 
Diagram of Chicago Pile-1, the first nuclear reactor to achieve a self-sustaining chain reaction. Designed by Fermi, it consisted of uranium and uranium oxide in a cubic lattice embedded in graphite.

The scientists at Columbia decided that they should try to detect the energy released in the nuclear fission of uranium when bombarded by neutrons. On 25 January 1939, in the basement of Pupin Hall at Columbia, an experimental team including Fermi conducted the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States. The other members of the team were Herbert L. Anderson, Eugene T. Booth, John R. Dunning, G. Norris Glasoe, and Francis G. Slack.[74] The next day, the Fifth Washington Conference on Theoretical Physics began in Washington, D.C. under the joint auspices of George Washington University and the Carnegie Institution of Washington. There, the news on nuclear fission was spread even further, fostering many more experimental demonstrations.[75]

French scientists Hans von Halban, Lew Kowarski, and Frédéric Joliot-Curie had demonstrated that uranium bombarded by neutrons emitted more neutrons than it absorbed, suggesting the possibility of a chain reaction.[76] Fermi and Anderson did so too a few weeks later.[77][78] Leó Szilárd obtained 200 kilograms (440 lb) of uranium oxide from Canadian radium producer Eldorado Gold Mines Limited, allowing Fermi and Anderson to conduct experiments with fission on a much larger scale.[79] Fermi and Szilárd collaborated on a design of a device to achieve a self-sustaining nuclear reaction—a nuclear reactor. Owing to the rate of absorption of neutrons by the hydrogen in water, it was unlikely that a self-sustaining reaction could be achieved with natural uranium and water as a neutron moderator. Fermi suggested, based on his work with neutrons, that the reaction could be achieved with uranium oxide blocks and graphite as a moderator instead of water. This would reduce the neutron capture rate, and in theory make a self-sustaining chain reaction possible. Szilárd came up with a workable design: a pile of uranium oxide blocks interspersed with graphite bricks.[80] Szilárd, Anderson, and Fermi published a paper on "Neutron Production in Uranium".[79] But their work habits and personalities were different, and Fermi had trouble working with Szilárd.[81]

Fermi was among the first to warn military leaders about the potential impact of nuclear energy, giving a lecture on the subject at the Navy Department on 18 March 1939. The response fell short of what he had hoped for, although the Navy agreed to provide $1,500 towards further research at Columbia.[82] Later that year, Szilárd, Eugene Wigner, and Edward Teller sent the letter signed by Einstein to US president Franklin D. Roosevelt, warning that Nazi Germany was likely to build an atomic bomb. In response, Roosevelt formed the Advisory Committee on Uranium to investigate the matter.[83]

 
Fermi's ID photo from Los Alamos

The Advisory Committee on Uranium provided money for Fermi to buy graphite,[84] and he built a pile of graphite bricks on the seventh floor of the Pupin Hall laboratory.[85] By August 1941, he had six tons of uranium oxide and thirty tons of graphite, which he used to build a still larger pile in Schermerhorn Hall at Columbia.[86]

The S-1 Section of the Office of Scientific Research and Development, as the Advisory Committee on Uranium was now known, met on 18 December 1941, with the US now engaged in World War II, making its work urgent. Most of the effort sponsored by the committee had been directed at producing enriched uranium, but Committee member Arthur Compton determined that a feasible alternative was plutonium, which could be mass-produced in nuclear reactors by the end of 1944.[87] He decided to concentrate the plutonium work at the University of Chicago. Fermi reluctantly moved, and his team became part of the new Metallurgical Laboratory there.[88]

The possible results of a self-sustaining nuclear reaction were unknown, so it seemed inadvisable to build the first nuclear reactor on the University of Chicago campus in the middle of the city. Compton found a location in the Argonne Woods Forest Preserve, about 20 miles (32 km) from Chicago. Stone & Webster was contracted to develop the site, but the work was halted by an industrial dispute. Fermi then persuaded Compton that he could build the reactor in the squash court under the stands of the University of Chicago's Stagg Field. Construction of the pile began on 6 November 1942, and Chicago Pile-1 went critical on 2 December.[89] The shape of the pile was intended to be roughly spherical, but as work proceeded Fermi calculated that criticality could be achieved without finishing the entire pile as planned.[90]

This experiment was a landmark in the quest for energy, and it was typical of Fermi's approach. Every step was carefully planned, every calculation was meticulously done.[89] When the first self-sustained nuclear chain reaction was achieved, Compton made a coded phone call to James B. Conant, the chairman of the National Defense Research Committee.

I picked up the phone and called Conant. He was reached at the President's office at Harvard University. "Jim," I said, "you'll be interested to know that the Italian navigator has just landed in the new world." Then, half apologetically, because I had led the S-l Committee to believe that it would be another week or more before the pile could be completed, I added, "the earth was not as large as he had estimated, and he arrived at the new world sooner than he had expected."

"Is that so," was Conant's excited response. "Were the natives friendly?"

"Everyone landed safe and happy."[91]

To continue the research where it would not pose a public health hazard, the reactor was disassembled and moved to the Argonne Woods site. There Fermi directed experiments on nuclear reactions, reveling in the opportunities provided by the reactor's abundant production of free neutrons.[92] The laboratory soon branched out from physics and engineering into using the reactor for biological and medical research. Initially, Argonne was run by Fermi as part of the University of Chicago, but it became a separate entity with Fermi as its director in May 1944.[93]

When the air-cooled X-10 Graphite Reactor at Oak Ridge went critical on 4 November 1943, Fermi was on hand just in case something went wrong. The technicians woke him early so that he could see it happen.[94] Getting X-10 operational was another milestone in the plutonium project. It provided data on reactor design, training for DuPont staff in reactor operation, and produced the first small quantities of reactor-bred plutonium.[95] Fermi became an American citizen in July 1944, the earliest date the law allowed.[96]

In September 1944, Fermi inserted the first uranium fuel slug into the B Reactor at the Hanford Site, the production reactor designed to breed plutonium in large quantities. Like X-10, it had been designed by Fermi's team at the Metallurgical Laboratory and built by DuPont, but it was much larger and was water-cooled. Over the next few days, 838 tubes were loaded, and the reactor went critical. Shortly after midnight on 27 September, the operators began to withdraw the control rods to initiate production. At first, all appeared to be well, but around 03:00, the power level started to drop and by 06:30 the reactor had shut down completely. The Army and DuPont turned to Fermi's team for answers. The cooling water was investigated to see if there was a leak or contamination. The next day the reactor suddenly started up again, only to shut down once more a few hours later. The problem was traced to neutron poisoning from xenon-135 or Xe-135, a fission product with a half-life of 9.1 to 9.4 hours. Fermi and John Wheeler both deduced that Xe-135 was responsible for absorbing neutrons in the reactor, thereby sabotaging the fission process. Fermi was recommended by colleague Emilio Segrè to ask Chien-Shiung Wu, as she prepared a printed draft on this topic to be published by the Physical Review.[97] Upon reading the draft, Fermi and the scientists confirmed their suspicions: Xe-135 indeed absorbed neutrons, in fact it had a huge neutron cross-section.[98][99][100] DuPont had deviated from the Metallurgical Laboratory's original design in which the reactor had 1,500 tubes arranged in a circle, and had added 504 tubes to fill in the corners. The scientists had originally considered this over-engineering a waste of time and money, but Fermi realized that if all 2,004 tubes were loaded, the reactor could reach the required power level and efficiently produce plutonium.[101][102]

 
The FERMIAC, an analog computer invented by Fermi to study neutron transport

In April 1943, Fermi raised with Robert Oppenheimer the possibility of using the radioactive byproducts from enrichment to contaminate the German food supply. The background was fear that the German atomic bomb project was already at an advanced stage, and Fermi was also skeptical at the time that an atomic bomb could be developed quickly enough. Oppenheimer discussed the "promising" proposal with Edward Teller, who suggested the use of strontium-90. James B. Conant and Leslie Groves were also briefed, but Oppenheimer wanted to proceed with the plan only if enough food could be contaminated with the weapon to kill half a million people.[103]

In mid-1944, Oppenheimer persuaded Fermi to join his Project Y at Los Alamos, New Mexico.[104] Arriving in September, Fermi was appointed an associate director of the laboratory, with broad responsibility for nuclear and theoretical physics, and was placed in charge of F Division, which was named after him. F Division had four branches: F-1 Super and General Theory under Teller, which investigated the "Super" (thermonuclear) bomb; F-2 Water Boiler under L. D. P. King, which looked after the "water boiler" aqueous homogeneous research reactor; F-3 Super Experimentation under Egon Bretscher; and F-4 Fission Studies under Anderson.[105] Fermi observed the Trinity test on 16 July 1945 and conducted an experiment to estimate the bomb's yield by dropping strips of paper into the blast wave. He paced off the distance they were blown by the explosion, and calculated the yield as ten kilotons of TNT; the actual yield was about 18.6 kilotons.[106]

Along with Oppenheimer, Compton, and Ernest Lawrence, Fermi was part of the scientific panel that advised the Interim Committee on target selection. The panel agreed with the committee that atomic bombs would be used without warning against an industrial target.[107] Like others at the Los Alamos Laboratory, Fermi found out about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki from the public address system in the technical area. Fermi did not believe that atomic bombs would deter nations from starting wars, nor did he think that the time was ripe for world government. He therefore did not join the Association of Los Alamos Scientists.[108]

Postwar work

Fermi became the Charles H. Swift Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago on 1 July 1945,[109] although he did not depart the Los Alamos Laboratory with his family until 31 December 1945.[110] He was elected a member of the US National Academy of Sciences in 1945.[111] The Metallurgical Laboratory became the Argonne National Laboratory on 1 July 1946, the first of the national laboratories established by the Manhattan Project.[112] The short distance between Chicago and Argonne allowed Fermi to work at both places. At Argonne he continued experimental physics, investigating neutron scattering with Leona Marshall.[113] He also discussed theoretical physics with Maria Mayer, helping her develop insights into spin–orbit coupling that would lead to her receiving the Nobel Prize.[114]

The Manhattan Project was replaced by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) on 1 January 1947.[115] Fermi served on the AEC General Advisory Committee, an influential scientific committee chaired by Robert Oppenheimer.[116] He also liked to spend a few weeks of each year at the Los Alamos National Laboratory,[117] where he collaborated with Nicholas Metropolis,[118] and with John von Neumann on Rayleigh–Taylor instability, the science of what occurs at the border between two fluids of different densities.[119]

 
Laura and Enrico Fermi at the Institute for Nuclear Studies, Los Alamos, 1954

After the detonation of the first Soviet fission bomb in August 1949, Fermi, along with Isidor Rabi, wrote a strongly worded report for the committee, opposing the development of a hydrogen bomb on moral and technical grounds.[120] Nonetheless, Fermi continued to participate in work on the hydrogen bomb at Los Alamos as a consultant. Along with Stanislaw Ulam, he calculated that not only would the amount of tritium needed for Teller's model of a thermonuclear weapon be prohibitive, but a fusion reaction could still not be assured to propagate even with this large quantity of tritium.[121] Fermi was among the scientists who testified on Oppenheimer's behalf at the Oppenheimer security hearing in 1954 that resulted in denial of Oppenheimer's security clearance.[122]

In his later years, Fermi continued teaching at the University of Chicago, where he was a founder of what later became the Enrico Fermi Institute. His PhD students in the postwar period included Owen Chamberlain, Geoffrey Chew, Jerome Friedman, Marvin Goldberger, Tsung-Dao Lee, Arthur Rosenfeld and Sam Treiman.[123][73] Jack Steinberger was a graduate student, and Mildred Dresselhaus was highly influenced by Fermi during the year she overlapped with him as a PhD student.[124][125] Fermi conducted important research in particle physics, especially related to pions and muons. He made the first predictions of pion-nucleon resonance,[118] relying on statistical methods, since he reasoned that exact answers were not required when the theory was wrong anyway.[126] In a paper coauthored with Chen Ning Yang, he speculated that pions might actually be composite particles.[127] The idea was elaborated by Shoichi Sakata. It has since been supplanted by the quark model, in which the pion is made up of quarks, which completed Fermi's model, and vindicated his approach.[128]

Fermi wrote a paper "On the Origin of Cosmic Radiation" in which he proposed that cosmic rays arose through material being accelerated by magnetic fields in interstellar space, which led to a difference of opinion with Teller.[126] Fermi examined the issues surrounding magnetic fields in the arms of a spiral galaxy.[129] He mused about what is now referred to as the "Fermi paradox": the contradiction between the presumed probability of the existence of extraterrestrial life and the fact that contact has not been made.[130]

 
Fermi's grave in Chicago

Toward the end of his life, Fermi questioned his faith in society at large to make wise choices about nuclear technology. He said:

Some of you may ask, what is the good of working so hard merely to collect a few facts which will bring no pleasure except to a few long-haired professors who love to collect such things and will be of no use to anybody because only few specialists at best will be able to understand them? In answer to such question[s] I may venture a fairly safe prediction.

History of science and technology has consistently taught us that scientific advances in basic understanding have sooner or later led to technical and industrial applications that have revolutionized our way of life. It seems to me improbable that this effort to get at the structure of matter should be an exception to this rule. What is less certain, and what we all fervently hope, is that man will soon grow sufficiently adult to make good use of the powers that he acquires over nature.[131]

Death

Fermi underwent what was called an "exploratory" operation in Billings Memorial Hospital in October 1954, after which he returned home. Fifty days later he died of inoperable stomach cancer in his home in Chicago. He was 53.[2] Fermi suspected working near the nuclear pile involved great risk but he pressed on because the benefits outweighed the risks to his personal safety. Two of his graduate student assistants working near the pile also died of cancer.[132]

A memorial service was held at the University of Chicago chapel, where colleagues Samuel K. Allison, Emilio Segrè, and Herbert L. Anderson spoke to mourn the loss of one of the world's "most brilliant and productive physicists."[133] His body was interred at Oak Woods Cemetery where a private graveside service for the immediate family took place presided by a Lutheran chaplain.[134]

Impact and legacy

Legacy

As a person, Fermi seemed simplicity itself. He was extraordinarily vigorous and loved games and sport. On such occasions his ambitious nature became apparent. He played tennis with considerable ferocity and when climbing mountains acted rather as a guide. One might have called him a benevolent dictator. I remember once at the top of a mountain Fermi got up and said: "Well, it is two minutes to two, let's all leave at two o'clock"; and of course, everybody got up faithfully and obediently. This leadership and self-assurance gave Fermi the name of "The Pope" whose pronouncements were infallible in physics. He once said: "I can calculate anything in physics within a factor 2 on a few sheets; to get the numerical factor in front of the formula right may well take a physicist a year to calculate, but I am not interested in that." His leadership could go so far that it was a danger to the independence of the person working with him. I recollect once, at a party at his house when my wife cut the bread, Fermi came along and said he had a different philosophy on bread-cutting and took the knife out of my wife's hand and proceeded with the job because he was convinced that his own method was superior. But all this did not offend at all, but rather charmed everybody into liking Fermi. He had very few interests outside physics and when he once heard me play on Teller's piano he confessed that his interest in music was restricted to simple tunes.

Egon Bretscher[135]

Fermi received numerous awards in recognition of his achievements, including the Matteucci Medal in 1926, the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1938, the Hughes Medal in 1942, the Franklin Medal in 1947, and the Rumford Prize in 1953. He was awarded the Medal for Merit in 1946 for his contribution to the Manhattan Project.[136] Fermi was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1950.[135] The Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence, known as the Temple of Italian Glories for its many graves of artists, scientists and prominent figures in Italian history, has a plaque commemorating Fermi.[137] In 1999, Time named Fermi on its list of the top 100 persons of the twentieth century.[138] Fermi was widely regarded as an unusual case of a 20th-century physicist who excelled both theoretically and experimentally. Chemist and novelist C. P. Snow wrote, "if Fermi had been born a few years earlier, one could well imagine him discovering Rutherford's atomic nucleus, and then developing Bohr's theory of the hydrogen atom. If this sounds like hyperbole, anything about Fermi is likely to sound like hyperbole".[139]

Fermi was known as an inspiring teacher and was noted for his attention to detail, simplicity, and careful preparation of his lectures.[140] Later, his lecture notes were transcribed into books.[141] His papers and notebooks are today in the University of Chicago.[142] Victor Weisskopf noted how Fermi "always managed to find the simplest and most direct approach, with the minimum of complication and sophistication."[143] He disliked complicated theories, and while he had great mathematical ability, he would never use it when the job could be done much more simply. He was famous for getting quick and accurate answers to problems that would stump other people. Later on, his method of getting approximate and quick answers through back-of-the-envelope calculations became informally known as the "Fermi method", and is widely taught.[144]

Fermi was fond of pointing out that when Alessandro Volta was working in his laboratory, Volta had no idea where the study of electricity would lead.[145] Fermi is generally remembered for his work on nuclear power and nuclear weapons, especially the creation of the first nuclear reactor, and the development of the first atomic and hydrogen bombs. His scientific work has stood the test of time. This includes his theory of beta decay, his work with non-linear systems, his discovery of the effects of slow neutrons, his study of pion-nucleon collisions, and his Fermi–Dirac statistics. His speculation that a pion was not a fundamental particle pointed the way towards the study of quarks and leptons.[146]

Things named after Fermi

 
The sign at Enrico Fermi Street in Rome
 
Memorial plaque in the Basilica Santa Croce, Florence. Italy

Many things bear Fermi's name. These include the Fermilab particle accelerator and physics lab in Batavia, Illinois, which was renamed in his honor in 1974,[147] and the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, which was named after him in 2008, in recognition of his work on cosmic rays.[148] Three nuclear reactor installations have been named after him: the Fermi 1 and Fermi 2 nuclear power plants in Newport, Michigan, the Enrico Fermi Nuclear Power Plant at Trino Vercellese in Italy,[149] and the RA-1 Enrico Fermi research reactor in Argentina.[150] A synthetic element isolated from the debris of the 1952 Ivy Mike nuclear test was named fermium, in honor of Fermi's contributions to the scientific community.[151][152] This makes him one of 16 scientists who have elements named after them.[153]

Since 1956, the United States Atomic Energy Commission has named its highest honor, the Fermi Award, after him. Recipients of the award have included Otto Hahn, Robert Oppenheimer, Edward Teller and Hans Bethe.[154]

Publications

  • Introduzione alla Fisica Atomica (in Italian). Bologna: N. Zanichelli. 1928. OCLC 9653646.
  • Fisica per i Licei (in Italian). Bologna: N. Zanichelli. 1929. OCLC 9653646.
  • Molecole e cristalli (in Italian). Bologna: N. Zanichelli. 1934. OCLC 19918218.
  • Thermodynamics. New York: Prentice Hall. 1937. OCLC 2379038.
  • Fisica per Istituti Tecnici (in Italian). Bologna: N. Zanichelli. 1938.
  • Fisica per Licei Scientifici (in Italian). Bologna: N. Zanichelli. 1938. (with Edoardo Amaldi)
  • Elementary particles. New Haven: Yale University Press. 1951. OCLC 362513.
  • Notes on Quantum Mechanics. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. 1961. OCLC 1448078.

For a full list of his papers, see pages 75–78 in ref.[135]

Patents

  • US Patent 2206634, "Process for the Production of Radioactive Substances", issued July 1940 
  • US Patent 2836554, "Air Cooled Neutronic Reactor", issued April 1950 
  • US Patent 2524379, "Neutron Velocity Selector", issued October 1950 
  • US Patent 2852461, "Neutronic Reactor", issued September 1953 
  • US Patent 2708656, "Neutronic Reactor", issued May 1955 
  • US Patent 2768134, "Testing Material in a Neutronic Reactor", issued October 1956 
  • US Patent 2780595, "Test Exponential Pile", issued February 1957 
  • US Patent 2798847, "Method of Operating a Neutronic Reactor", issued July 1957 
  • US Patent 2807581, "Neutronic Reactor", issued September 1957 
  • US Patent 2807727, "Neutronic Reactor Shield", issued September 1957 
  • US Patent 2813070, "Method of Sustaining a Neutronic Chain Reacting System", issued November 1957 
  • US Patent 2837477, "Chain Reacting System", issued June 1958 
  • US Patent 2931762, "Neutronic Reactor", issued April 1960 
  • US Patent 2969307, "Method of Testing Thermal Neutron Fissionable Material for Purity", issued January 1961 

Notes

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References

  • Alison, Samuel King (1957). "Enrico Fermi, 1901–1954" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences. 30: 125–155. OCLC 11772127. (PDF) from the original on 16 December 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  • Amaldi, Edoardo (2001). "Commemoration of the Academy Fellow Enrico Fermi". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 23–35. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Amaldi, Ugo (2001). "Nuclear Physics from the Nineteen Thirties to the Present Day". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 151–176. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Bertotti, Bruno (2001). "Fermi's Coordinates and the Principle of Equivalence". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 115–125. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Bonolis, Luisa (2001). "Enrico Fermi's Scientific Work". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 314–394. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Compton, Arthur (1956). Atomic Quest. New York: Oxford University Press. OCLC 173307.
  • Cooper, Dan (1999). Enrico Fermi: And the Revolutions in Modern physics. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-511762-2. OCLC 39508200.
  • Fermi, Enrico (2004). "The Future of Nuclear Physics". In Cronin, J.W (ed.). Fermi Remembered. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-12111-6.
  • Fermi, Laura (1954). Atoms in the Family: My Life with Enrico Fermi. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. OCLC 537507.
  • Hawkins, David (1961). Manhattan District History: Project Y – The Los Alamos Project. Volume I: Inception until August 1945. Los Alamos: Los Alamos National Laboratory. LAMS 2532.
  • Hoff, Richard (23 January 1978). "Production of Eisteinium and Fermium in Nuclear Explosions". In Seaborg, Glenn T (ed.). Proceedings of the Symposium Commemorating the 25th Anniversary of Elements 99 and 100 (PDF). Los Alamos: Los Alamos National Laboratory. pp. 39–49. Report LBL-7701. (PDF) from the original on 16 September 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  • Hewlett, Richard G.; Anderson, Oscar E. (1962). The New World, 1939–1946 (PDF). University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07186-5. OCLC 637004643. (PDF) from the original on 26 September 2019. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  • Hewlett, Richard G.; Duncan, Francis (1969). Atomic Shield, 1947–1952. A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07187-2. OCLC 3717478.
  • Hey, Anthony J. G.; Walters, Patrick (2003). The new quantum universe. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56418-2. OCLC 50252084.
  • Holl, Jack M.; Hewlett, Richard G.; Harris, Ruth R. (1997). Argonne National Laboratory, 1946–96. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-02341-5.
  • Hucke, Matt; Bielski, Ursula (1999). Graveyards of Chicago: The People, History, Art, and Lore of Cook County Cemeteries. Chicago: Lake Claremont Press. ISBN 978-0-9642426-4-7. OCLC 42849992.
  • Jacob, Maurice; Maiani, Luciano (2001). "The Scientific Legacy of Fermi in Particle Physics". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 241–270. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Jones, Eric M. (March 1985). "Where is Everybody?", An Account of Fermi's Question (PDF). Los Alamos: Los Alamos National Laboratory. OCLC 4434691994. LA-10311-MS. (PDF) from the original on 5 November 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  • Jones, Vincent (1985). Manhattan: The Army and the Atomic Bomb. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 10913875.
  • Persico, Enrico (2001). "Commemoration of Enrico Fermi". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 36–44. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Rhodes, Richard (1986). The Making of the Atomic Bomb. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-81378-3. OCLC 13793436.
  • Ricci, Renato Angelo (2001). "Fermi's Last Lessons". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 286–313. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Salvini, Giorgio (2001). "Enrico Fermi: His Life and Comment on his Work". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 1–20. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Salvetti, Carlo (2001). "The Birth of Nuclear Energy: Fermi's Pile". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 177–203. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Seaborg, Glenn T. (23 January 1978). "Introductory Remarks". In Seaborg, Glenn T (ed.). Proceedings of the Symposium Commemorating the 25th Anniversary of Elements 99 and 100 (PDF). Los Alamos: Los Alamos National Laboratory. pp. 1–3. Report LBL-7701. (PDF) from the original on 16 September 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  • Segrè, Emilio (1970). Enrico Fermi, Physicist. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-74473-5. OCLC 118467.
  • Snow, C. P. (1981). The Physicists: A Generation that Changed the World. Boston: Little Brown. ISBN 978-1-84232-436-3. OCLC 7722354.
  • Sullivan, Neil J. (2016). The Prometheus Bomb: The Manhattan Project and Government in the Dark. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-1-61234-890-2. from the original on 1 December 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  • Von Baeyer, H. C. (1993). The Fermi Solution: Essays on Science. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-0-679-40031-8. OCLC 27266040.

External links

  • "To Fermi – with Love – Part 1". Voices of the Manhattan Project 1971 Radio Segment
  • "The First Reactor: 40th Anniversary Commemorative Edition", United States Department of Energy, (December 1982).
  • Nobel prize page for the 1938 physics' prize
  • The Story of the First Pile
  • at The Franklin Institute with information about his contributions to theoretical and experimental physics.
  • "Remembering Enrico Fermi". Session J1. APS April Meeting 2010, American Physical Society.
  • by Richard Rhodes 29 March 1999
  • Fermi's stay with Ehrenfest in Leiden.

enrico, fermi, fermi, redirects, here, other, uses, fermi, disambiguation, italian, enˈriːko, ˈfermi, september, 1901, november, 1954, italian, later, naturalized, american, physicist, creator, world, first, nuclear, reactor, chicago, pile, been, called, archi. Fermi redirects here For other uses see Fermi disambiguation Enrico Fermi Italian enˈriːko ˈfermi 29 September 1901 28 November 1954 was an Italian and later naturalized American physicist and the creator of the world s first nuclear reactor the Chicago Pile 1 He has been called the architect of the nuclear age 1 and the architect of the atomic bomb 2 He was one of very few physicists to excel in both theoretical physics and experimental physics Fermi was awarded the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on induced radioactivity by neutron bombardment and for the discovery of transuranium elements With his colleagues Fermi filed several patents related to the use of nuclear power all of which were taken over by the US government He made significant contributions to the development of statistical mechanics quantum theory and nuclear and particle physics Enrico FermiFermi in 1943Born 1901 09 29 29 September 1901Rome ItalyDied28 November 1954 1954 11 28 aged 53 Chicago Illinois USCitizenshipItalian 1901 1944 United States 1944 1954 Alma materScuola Normale Superiore di Pisa Italy laurea Known forDemonstrating first self sustaining nuclear chain reaction Fermion Fermi gas Fermi Dirac statistics Fermi s golden rule Fermi paradox Fermi method Thomas Fermi model Thomas Fermi screening Fermi theory of beta decay Chandrasekhar Fermi methodSpouseLaura Capon FermiChildren2AwardsMatteucci Medal 1926 Nobel Prize 1938 Hughes Medal 1942 Medal for Merit 1946 Franklin Medal 1947 ForMemRS 1950 Barnard Medal for Meritorious Service to Science 1950 Rumford Prize 1953 Max Planck Medal 1954 Scientific careerFieldsPhysicsInstitutionsScuola Normale Superiore of PisaUniversity of GottingenLeiden UniversityUniversity of FlorenceSapienza University of RomeColumbia UniversityUniversity of ChicagoAcademic advisorsLuigi Puccianti Max Born Paul EhrenfestDoctoral studentsHarold Agnew Edoardo Amaldi Owen Chamberlain Geoffrey Chew Mildred Dresselhaus Jerome Friedman Richard Garwin Marvin Goldberger Tsung Dao Lee Ettore Majorana Arthur Rosenfeld Emilio Segre Sam TreimanOther notable studentsJack Steinberger Chen Ning YangSignatureFermi s first major contribution involved the field of statistical mechanics After Wolfgang Pauli formulated his exclusion principle in 1925 Fermi followed with a paper in which he applied the principle to an ideal gas employing a statistical formulation now known as Fermi Dirac statistics Today particles that obey the exclusion principle are called fermions Pauli later postulated the existence of an uncharged invisible particle emitted along with an electron during beta decay to satisfy the law of conservation of energy Fermi took up this idea developing a model that incorporated the postulated particle which he named the neutrino His theory later referred to as Fermi s interaction and now called weak interaction described one of the four fundamental interactions in nature Through experiments inducing radioactivity with the recently discovered neutron Fermi discovered that slow neutrons were more easily captured by atomic nuclei than fast ones and he developed the Fermi age equation to describe this After bombarding thorium and uranium with slow neutrons he concluded that he had created new elements Although he was awarded the Nobel Prize for this discovery the new elements were later revealed to be nuclear fission products Fermi left Italy in 1938 to escape new Italian racial laws that affected his Jewish wife Laura Capon He emigrated to the United States where he worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II Fermi led the team at the University of Chicago that designed and built Chicago Pile 1 which went critical on 2 December 1942 demonstrating the first human created self sustaining nuclear chain reaction He was on hand when the X 10 Graphite Reactor at Oak Ridge Tennessee went critical in 1943 and when the B Reactor at the Hanford Site did so the next year At Los Alamos he headed F Division part of which worked on Edward Teller s thermonuclear Super bomb He was present at the Trinity test on 16 July 1945 where he used his Fermi method to estimate the bomb s yield After the war Fermi served under J Robert Oppenheimer on the General Advisory Committee which advised the Atomic Energy Commission on nuclear matters After the detonation of the first Soviet fission bomb in August 1949 he strongly opposed the development of a hydrogen bomb on both moral and technical grounds He was among the scientists who testified on Oppenheimer s behalf at the 1954 hearing that resulted in the denial of Oppenheimer s security clearance Fermi did important work in particle physics especially related to pions and muons and he speculated that cosmic rays arose when material was accelerated by magnetic fields in interstellar space Many awards concepts and institutions are named after Fermi including the Enrico Fermi Award the Enrico Fermi Institute the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Fermilab the Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope and the synthetic element fermium making him one of 16 scientists who have elements named after them Fermi tutored or directly influenced no fewer than eight young researchers who went on to win Nobel Prizes 3 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa 3 Professor in Rome 4 Manhattan Project 5 Postwar work 6 Death 7 Impact and legacy 7 1 Legacy 7 2 Things named after Fermi 8 Publications 9 Patents 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life Edit Fermi was born in Rome at Via Gaeta 19 Plaque at Fermi s birthplace Enrico Fermi was born in Rome Italy on 29 September 1901 He was the third child of Alberto Fermi a division head in the Ministry of Railways and Ida de Gattis an elementary school teacher 5 6 His sister Maria was two years older his brother Giulio a year older After the two boys were sent to a rural community to be wet nursed Enrico rejoined his family in Rome when he was two and a half 7 Although he was baptized a Roman Catholic in accordance with his grandparents wishes his family was not particularly religious Enrico was an agnostic throughout his adult life As a young boy he shared the same interests as his brother Giulio building electric motors and playing with electrical and mechanical toys 8 Giulio died during an operation on a throat abscess in 1915 9 and Maria died in an airplane crash near Milan in 1959 10 At a local market in Campo de Fiori Fermi found a physics book the 900 page Elementorum physicae mathematicae Written in Latin by Jesuit Father Andrea Caraffa it a professor at the Collegio Romano it presented mathematics classical mechanics astronomy optics and acoustics as they were understood at the time of its 1840 publication 11 12 With a scientifically inclined friend Enrico Persico 13 Fermi pursued projects such as building gyroscopes and measuring the acceleration of Earth s gravity 14 In 1914 Fermi who used to often meet with his father in front of the office after work met a colleague of his father called Adolfo Amidei who would walk part of the way home with Alberto Enrico had learned that Adolfo was interested in mathematics and physics and took the opportunity to ask Adolfo a question about geometry Adolfo understood that the young Fermi was referring to projective geometry and then proceeded to give him a book on the subject written by Theodor Reye Two months later Fermi returned the book having solved all the problems proposed at the end of the book some of which Adolfo considered difficult Upon verifying this Adolfo felt that Fermi was a prodigy at least with respect to geometry and further mentored the boy providing him with more books on physics and mathematics Adolfo noted that Fermi had a very good memory and thus could return the books after having read them because he could remember their content very well 15 Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa Edit Enrico Fermi as a student in Pisa Fermi graduated from high school in July 1918 having skipped the third year entirely At Amidei s urging Fermi learned German to be able to read the many scientific papers that were published in that language at the time and he applied to the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa Amidei felt that the Scuola would provide better conditions for Fermi s development than the Sapienza University of Rome could at the time Having lost one son Fermi s parents only reluctantly allowed him to live in the school s lodgings away from Rome for four years 16 17 Fermi took first place in the difficult entrance exam which included an essay on the theme of Specific characteristics of Sounds the 17 year old Fermi chose to use Fourier analysis to derive and solve the partial differential equation for a vibrating rod and after interviewing Fermi the examiner declared he would become an outstanding physicist 16 18 At the Scuola Normale Superiore Fermi played pranks with fellow student Franco Rasetti the two became close friends and collaborators Fermi was advised by Luigi Puccianti director of the physics laboratory who said there was little he could teach Fermi and often asked Fermi to teach him something instead Fermi s knowledge of quantum physics was such that Puccianti asked him to organize seminars on the topic 19 During this time Fermi learned tensor calculus a technique key to general relativity 20 Fermi initially chose mathematics as his major but soon switched to physics He remained largely self taught studying general relativity quantum mechanics and atomic physics 21 In September 1920 Fermi was admitted to the Physics department Since there were only three students in the department Fermi Rasetti and Nello Carrara Puccianti let them freely use the laboratory for whatever purposes they chose Fermi decided that they should research X ray crystallography and the three worked to produce a Laue photograph an X ray photograph of a crystal 22 During 1921 his third year at the university Fermi published his first scientific works in the Italian journal Nuovo Cimento The first was entitled On the dynamics of a rigid system of electrical charges in translational motion Sulla dinamica di un sistema rigido di cariche elettriche in moto traslatorio A sign of things to come was that the mass was expressed as a tensor a mathematical construct commonly used to describe something moving and changing in three dimensional space In classical mechanics mass is a scalar quantity but in relativity it changes with velocity The second paper was On the electrostatics of a uniform gravitational field of electromagnetic charges and on the weight of electromagnetic charges Sull elettrostatica di un campo gravitazionale uniforme e sul peso delle masse elettromagnetiche Using general relativity Fermi showed that a charge has a weight equal to U c2 where U was the electrostatic energy of the system and c is the speed of light 21 The first paper seemed to point out a contradiction between the electrodynamic theory and the relativistic one concerning the calculation of the electromagnetic masses as the former predicted a value of 4 3 U c2 Fermi addressed this the next year in a paper Concerning a contradiction between electrodynamic and the relativistic theory of electromagnetic mass in which he showed that the apparent contradiction was a consequence of relativity This paper was sufficiently well regarded that it was translated into German and published in the German scientific journal Physikalische Zeitschrift in 1922 23 That year Fermi submitted his article On the phenomena occurring near a world line Sopra i fenomeni che avvengono in vicinanza di una linea oraria to the Italian journal I Rendiconti dell Accademia dei Lincei it In this article he examined the Principle of Equivalence and introduced the so called Fermi coordinates He proved that on a world line close to the timeline space behaves as if it were a Euclidean space 24 25 A light cone is a three dimensional surface of all possible light rays arriving at and departing from a point in spacetime Here it is depicted with one spatial dimension suppressed The timeline is the vertical axis Fermi submitted his thesis A theorem on probability and some of its applications Un teorema di calcolo delle probabilita ed alcune sue applicazioni to the Scuola Normale Superiore in July 1922 and received his laurea at the unusually young age of 20 The thesis was on X ray diffraction images Theoretical physics was not yet considered a discipline in Italy and the only thesis that would have been accepted was experimental physics For this reason Italian physicists were slow in embracing the new ideas like relativity coming from Germany Since Fermi was quite at home in the lab doing experimental work this did not pose insurmountable problems for him 25 While writing the appendix for the Italian edition of the book Fundamentals of Einstein Relativity by August Kopff in 1923 Fermi was the first to point out that hidden inside the Einstein equation E mc2 was an enormous amount of nuclear potential energy to be exploited It does not seem possible at least in the near future he wrote to find a way to release these dreadful amounts of energy which is all to the good because the first effect of an explosion of such a dreadful amount of energy would be to smash into smithereens the physicist who had the misfortune to find a way to do it 25 In 1924 Fermi was initiated into the Masonic Lodge Adriano Lemmi of the Grand Orient of Italy 26 In 1923 1924 Fermi spent a semester studying under Max Born at the University of Gottingen where he met Werner Heisenberg and Pascual Jordan Fermi then studied in Leiden with Paul Ehrenfest from September to December 1924 on a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation obtained through the intercession of the mathematician Vito Volterra Here Fermi met Hendrik Lorentz and Albert Einstein and became friends with Samuel Goudsmit and Jan Tinbergen From January 1925 to late 1926 Fermi taught mathematical physics and theoretical mechanics at the University of Florence where he teamed up with Rasetti to conduct a series of experiments on the effects of magnetic fields on mercury vapor He also participated in seminars at the Sapienza University of Rome giving lectures on quantum mechanics and solid state physics 27 While giving lectures on the new quantum mechanics based on the remarkable accuracy of predictions of the Schrodinger equation Fermi would often say It has no business to fit so well 28 After Wolfgang Pauli announced his exclusion principle in 1925 Fermi responded with a paper On the quantization of the perfect monoatomic gas Sulla quantizzazione del gas perfetto monoatomico in which he applied the exclusion principle to an ideal gas The paper was especially notable for Fermi s statistical formulation which describes the distribution of particles in systems of many identical particles that obey the exclusion principle This was independently developed soon after by the British physicist Paul Dirac who also showed how it was related to the Bose Einstein statistics Accordingly it is now known as Fermi Dirac statistics 29 After Dirac particles that obey the exclusion principle are today called fermions while those that do not are called bosons 30 Professor in Rome Edit Fermi and his research group the Via Panisperna boys in the courtyard of Rome University s Physics Institute in Via Panisperna c 1934 From left to right Oscar D Agostino Emilio Segre Edoardo Amaldi Franco Rasetti and Fermi Professorships in Italy were granted by competition concorso for a vacant chair the applicants being rated on their publications by a committee of professors Fermi applied for a chair of mathematical physics at the University of Cagliari on Sardinia but was narrowly passed over in favor of Giovanni Giorgi 31 In 1926 at the age of 24 he applied for a professorship at the Sapienza University of Rome This was a new chair one of the first three in theoretical physics in Italy that had been created by the Minister of Education at the urging of Professor Orso Mario Corbino who was the university s professor of experimental physics the Director of the Institute of Physics and a member of Benito Mussolini s cabinet Corbino who also chaired the selection committee hoped that the new chair would raise the standard and reputation of physics in Italy 32 The committee chose Fermi ahead of Enrico Persico and Aldo Pontremoli 33 and Corbino helped Fermi recruit his team which was soon joined by notable students such as Edoardo Amaldi Bruno Pontecorvo Ettore Majorana and Emilio Segre and by Franco Rasetti whom Fermi had appointed as his assistant 34 They soon nicknamed the Via Panisperna boys after the street where the Institute of Physics was located 35 Fermi married Laura Capon a science student at the university on 19 July 1928 36 They had two children Nella born in January 1931 and Giulio born in February 1936 37 On 18 March 1929 Fermi was appointed a member of the Royal Academy of Italy by Mussolini and on 27 April he joined the Fascist Party He later opposed Fascism when the 1938 racial laws were promulgated by Mussolini in order to bring Italian Fascism ideologically closer to German Nazism These laws threatened Laura who was Jewish and put many of Fermi s research assistants out of work 38 39 40 41 42 During their time in Rome Fermi and his group made important contributions to many practical and theoretical aspects of physics In 1928 he published his Introduction to Atomic Physics Introduzione alla fisica atomica which provided Italian university students with an up to date and accessible text Fermi also conducted public lectures and wrote popular articles for scientists and teachers in order to spread knowledge of the new physics as widely as possible 43 Part of his teaching method was to gather his colleagues and graduate students together at the end of the day and go over a problem often from his own research 43 44 A sign of success was that foreign students now began to come to Italy The most notable of these was the German physicist Hans Bethe 45 who came to Rome as a Rockefeller Foundation fellow and collaborated with Fermi on a 1932 paper On the Interaction between Two Electrons German Uber die Wechselwirkung von Zwei Elektronen 43 At this time physicists were puzzled by beta decay in which an electron was emitted from the atomic nucleus To satisfy the law of conservation of energy Pauli postulated the existence of an invisible particle with no charge and little or no mass that was also emitted at the same time Fermi took up this idea which he developed in a tentative paper in 1933 and then a longer paper the next year that incorporated the postulated particle which Fermi called a neutrino 46 47 48 His theory later referred to as Fermi s interaction and still later as the theory of the weak interaction described one of the four fundamental forces of nature The neutrino was detected after his death and his interaction theory showed why it was so difficult to detect When he submitted his paper to the British journal Nature that journal s editor turned it down because it contained speculations which were too remote from physical reality to be of interest to readers 47 Thus Fermi saw the theory published in Italian and German before it was published in English 34 In the introduction to the 1968 English translation physicist Fred L Wilson noted that Fermi s theory aside from bolstering Pauli s proposal of the neutrino has a special significance in the history of modern physics One must remember that only the naturally occurring b emitters were known at the time the theory was proposed Later when positron decay was discovered the process was easily incorporated within Fermi s original framework On the basis of his theory the capture of an orbital electron by a nucleus was predicted and eventually observed With time experimental data accumulated significantly Although peculiarities have been observed many times in b decay Fermi s theory always has been equal to the challenge The consequences of the Fermi theory are vast For example b spectroscopy was established as a powerful tool for the study of nuclear structure But perhaps the most influential aspect of this work of Fermi is that his particular form of the b interaction established a pattern that has been appropriate for the study of other types of interactions It was the first successful theory of the creation and annihilation of material particles Previously only photons had been known to be created and destroyed 48 In January 1934 Irene Joliot Curie and Frederic Joliot announced that they had bombarded elements with alpha particles and induced radioactivity in them 49 50 By March Fermi s assistant Gian Carlo Wick had provided a theoretical explanation using Fermi s theory of beta decay Fermi decided to switch to experimental physics using the neutron which James Chadwick had discovered in 1932 51 In March 1934 Fermi wanted to see if he could induce radioactivity with Rasetti s polonium beryllium neutron source Neutrons had no electric charge and so would not be deflected by the positively charged nucleus This meant that they needed much less energy to penetrate the nucleus than charged particles and so would not require a particle accelerator which the Via Panisperna boys did not have 52 53 Enrico Fermi between Franco Rasetti left and Emilio Segre in academic dress Fermi had the idea to resort to replacing the polonium beryllium neutron source with a radon beryllium one which he created by filling a glass bulb with beryllium powder evacuating the air and then adding 50 mCi of radon gas supplied by Giulio Cesare Trabacchi 54 55 This created a much stronger neutron source the effectiveness of which declined with the 3 8 day half life of radon He knew that this source would also emit gamma rays but on the basis of his theory he believed that this would not affect the results of the experiment He started by bombarding platinum an element with a high atomic number that was readily available without success He turned to aluminium which emitted an alpha particle and produced sodium which then decayed into magnesium by beta particle emission He tried lead without success and then fluorine in the form of calcium fluoride which emitted an alpha particle and produced nitrogen decaying into oxygen by beta particle emission In all he induced radioactivity in 22 different elements 56 Fermi rapidly reported the discovery of neutron induced radioactivity in the Italian journal La Ricerca Scientifica on 25 March 1934 55 57 58 The natural radioactivity of thorium and uranium made it hard to determine what was happening when these elements were bombarded with neutrons but after correctly eliminating the presence of elements lighter than uranium but heavier than lead Fermi concluded that they had created new elements which he called hesperium and ausonium 59 53 The chemist Ida Noddack suggested that some of the experiments could have produced lighter elements than lead rather than new heavier elements Her suggestion was not taken seriously at the time because her team had not carried out any experiments with uranium or built the theoretical basis for this possibility At that time fission was thought to be improbable if not impossible on theoretical grounds While physicists expected elements with higher atomic numbers to form from neutron bombardment of lighter elements nobody expected neutrons to have enough energy to split a heavier atom into two light element fragments in the manner that Noddack suggested 60 59 Beta decay A neutron decays into a proton and an electron is emitted In order for the total energy in the system to remain the same Pauli and Fermi postulated that a neutrino n e displaystyle bar nu e was also emitted The Via Panisperna boys also noticed some unexplained effects The experiment seemed to work better on a wooden table than a marble tabletop Fermi remembered that Joliot Curie and Chadwick had noted that paraffin wax was effective at slowing neutrons so he decided to try that When neutrons were passed through paraffin wax they induced a hundred times as much radioactivity in silver compared with when it was bombarded without the paraffin Fermi guessed that this was due to the hydrogen atoms in the paraffin Those in wood similarly explained the difference between the wooden and the marble tabletops This was confirmed by repeating the effect with water He concluded that collisions with hydrogen atoms slowed the neutrons 61 53 The lower the atomic number of the nucleus it collides with the more energy a neutron loses per collision and therefore the fewer collisions that are required to slow a neutron down by a given amount 62 Fermi realised that this induced more radioactivity because slow neutrons were more easily captured than fast ones He developed a diffusion equation to describe this which became known as the Fermi age equation 61 53 In 1938 Fermi received the Nobel Prize in Physics at the age of 37 for his demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons 63 After Fermi received the prize in Stockholm he did not return home to Italy but rather continued to New York City with his family in December 1938 where they applied for permanent residency The decision to move to America and become US citizens was due primarily to the racial laws in Italy 38 64 Manhattan Project EditMain article Manhattan Project Fermi arrived in New York City on 2 January 1939 65 He was immediately offered positions at five universities and accepted one at Columbia University 66 where he had already given summer lectures in 1936 67 He received the news that in December 1938 the German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann had detected the element barium after bombarding uranium with neutrons 68 which Lise Meitner and her nephew Otto Frisch correctly interpreted as the result of nuclear fission Frisch confirmed this experimentally on 13 January 1939 69 70 The news of Meitner and Frisch s interpretation of Hahn and Strassmann s discovery crossed the Atlantic with Niels Bohr who was to lecture at Princeton University Isidor Isaac Rabi and Willis Lamb two Columbia University physicists working at Princeton found out about it and carried it back to Columbia Rabi said he told Enrico Fermi but Fermi later gave the credit to Lamb 71 I remember very vividly the first month January 1939 that I started working at the Pupin Laboratories because things began happening very fast In that period Niels Bohr was on a lecture engagement at the Princeton University and I remember one afternoon Willis Lamb came back very excited and said that Bohr had leaked out great news The great news that had leaked out was the discovery of fission and at least the outline of its interpretation Then somewhat later that same month there was a meeting in Washington where the possible importance of the newly discovered phenomenon of fission was first discussed in semi jocular earnest as a possible source of nuclear power 72 Noddack was proven right after all Fermi had dismissed the possibility of fission on the basis of his calculations but he had not taken into account the binding energy that would appear when a nuclide with an odd number of neutrons absorbed an extra neutron 60 For Fermi the news came as a profound embarrassment as the transuranic elements that he had partly been awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering had not been transuranic elements at all but fission products He added a footnote to this effect to his Nobel Prize acceptance speech 71 73 Diagram of Chicago Pile 1 the first nuclear reactor to achieve a self sustaining chain reaction Designed by Fermi it consisted of uranium and uranium oxide in a cubic lattice embedded in graphite The scientists at Columbia decided that they should try to detect the energy released in the nuclear fission of uranium when bombarded by neutrons On 25 January 1939 in the basement of Pupin Hall at Columbia an experimental team including Fermi conducted the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States The other members of the team were Herbert L Anderson Eugene T Booth John R Dunning G Norris Glasoe and Francis G Slack 74 The next day the Fifth Washington Conference on Theoretical Physics began in Washington D C under the joint auspices of George Washington University and the Carnegie Institution of Washington There the news on nuclear fission was spread even further fostering many more experimental demonstrations 75 French scientists Hans von Halban Lew Kowarski and Frederic Joliot Curie had demonstrated that uranium bombarded by neutrons emitted more neutrons than it absorbed suggesting the possibility of a chain reaction 76 Fermi and Anderson did so too a few weeks later 77 78 Leo Szilard obtained 200 kilograms 440 lb of uranium oxide from Canadian radium producer Eldorado Gold Mines Limited allowing Fermi and Anderson to conduct experiments with fission on a much larger scale 79 Fermi and Szilard collaborated on a design of a device to achieve a self sustaining nuclear reaction a nuclear reactor Owing to the rate of absorption of neutrons by the hydrogen in water it was unlikely that a self sustaining reaction could be achieved with natural uranium and water as a neutron moderator Fermi suggested based on his work with neutrons that the reaction could be achieved with uranium oxide blocks and graphite as a moderator instead of water This would reduce the neutron capture rate and in theory make a self sustaining chain reaction possible Szilard came up with a workable design a pile of uranium oxide blocks interspersed with graphite bricks 80 Szilard Anderson and Fermi published a paper on Neutron Production in Uranium 79 But their work habits and personalities were different and Fermi had trouble working with Szilard 81 Fermi was among the first to warn military leaders about the potential impact of nuclear energy giving a lecture on the subject at the Navy Department on 18 March 1939 The response fell short of what he had hoped for although the Navy agreed to provide 1 500 towards further research at Columbia 82 Later that year Szilard Eugene Wigner and Edward Teller sent the letter signed by Einstein to US president Franklin D Roosevelt warning that Nazi Germany was likely to build an atomic bomb In response Roosevelt formed the Advisory Committee on Uranium to investigate the matter 83 Fermi s ID photo from Los Alamos The Advisory Committee on Uranium provided money for Fermi to buy graphite 84 and he built a pile of graphite bricks on the seventh floor of the Pupin Hall laboratory 85 By August 1941 he had six tons of uranium oxide and thirty tons of graphite which he used to build a still larger pile in Schermerhorn Hall at Columbia 86 The S 1 Section of the Office of Scientific Research and Development as the Advisory Committee on Uranium was now known met on 18 December 1941 with the US now engaged in World War II making its work urgent Most of the effort sponsored by the committee had been directed at producing enriched uranium but Committee member Arthur Compton determined that a feasible alternative was plutonium which could be mass produced in nuclear reactors by the end of 1944 87 He decided to concentrate the plutonium work at the University of Chicago Fermi reluctantly moved and his team became part of the new Metallurgical Laboratory there 88 The possible results of a self sustaining nuclear reaction were unknown so it seemed inadvisable to build the first nuclear reactor on the University of Chicago campus in the middle of the city Compton found a location in the Argonne Woods Forest Preserve about 20 miles 32 km from Chicago Stone amp Webster was contracted to develop the site but the work was halted by an industrial dispute Fermi then persuaded Compton that he could build the reactor in the squash court under the stands of the University of Chicago s Stagg Field Construction of the pile began on 6 November 1942 and Chicago Pile 1 went critical on 2 December 89 The shape of the pile was intended to be roughly spherical but as work proceeded Fermi calculated that criticality could be achieved without finishing the entire pile as planned 90 This experiment was a landmark in the quest for energy and it was typical of Fermi s approach Every step was carefully planned every calculation was meticulously done 89 When the first self sustained nuclear chain reaction was achieved Compton made a coded phone call to James B Conant the chairman of the National Defense Research Committee I picked up the phone and called Conant He was reached at the President s office at Harvard University Jim I said you ll be interested to know that the Italian navigator has just landed in the new world Then half apologetically because I had led the S l Committee to believe that it would be another week or more before the pile could be completed I added the earth was not as large as he had estimated and he arrived at the new world sooner than he had expected Is that so was Conant s excited response Were the natives friendly Everyone landed safe and happy 91 Ernest O Lawrence Fermi and Isidor Isaac Rabi To continue the research where it would not pose a public health hazard the reactor was disassembled and moved to the Argonne Woods site There Fermi directed experiments on nuclear reactions reveling in the opportunities provided by the reactor s abundant production of free neutrons 92 The laboratory soon branched out from physics and engineering into using the reactor for biological and medical research Initially Argonne was run by Fermi as part of the University of Chicago but it became a separate entity with Fermi as its director in May 1944 93 When the air cooled X 10 Graphite Reactor at Oak Ridge went critical on 4 November 1943 Fermi was on hand just in case something went wrong The technicians woke him early so that he could see it happen 94 Getting X 10 operational was another milestone in the plutonium project It provided data on reactor design training for DuPont staff in reactor operation and produced the first small quantities of reactor bred plutonium 95 Fermi became an American citizen in July 1944 the earliest date the law allowed 96 In September 1944 Fermi inserted the first uranium fuel slug into the B Reactor at the Hanford Site the production reactor designed to breed plutonium in large quantities Like X 10 it had been designed by Fermi s team at the Metallurgical Laboratory and built by DuPont but it was much larger and was water cooled Over the next few days 838 tubes were loaded and the reactor went critical Shortly after midnight on 27 September the operators began to withdraw the control rods to initiate production At first all appeared to be well but around 03 00 the power level started to drop and by 06 30 the reactor had shut down completely The Army and DuPont turned to Fermi s team for answers The cooling water was investigated to see if there was a leak or contamination The next day the reactor suddenly started up again only to shut down once more a few hours later The problem was traced to neutron poisoning from xenon 135 or Xe 135 a fission product with a half life of 9 1 to 9 4 hours Fermi and John Wheeler both deduced that Xe 135 was responsible for absorbing neutrons in the reactor thereby sabotaging the fission process Fermi was recommended by colleague Emilio Segre to ask Chien Shiung Wu as she prepared a printed draft on this topic to be published by the Physical Review 97 Upon reading the draft Fermi and the scientists confirmed their suspicions Xe 135 indeed absorbed neutrons in fact it had a huge neutron cross section 98 99 100 DuPont had deviated from the Metallurgical Laboratory s original design in which the reactor had 1 500 tubes arranged in a circle and had added 504 tubes to fill in the corners The scientists had originally considered this over engineering a waste of time and money but Fermi realized that if all 2 004 tubes were loaded the reactor could reach the required power level and efficiently produce plutonium 101 102 The FERMIAC an analog computer invented by Fermi to study neutron transport In April 1943 Fermi raised with Robert Oppenheimer the possibility of using the radioactive byproducts from enrichment to contaminate the German food supply The background was fear that the German atomic bomb project was already at an advanced stage and Fermi was also skeptical at the time that an atomic bomb could be developed quickly enough Oppenheimer discussed the promising proposal with Edward Teller who suggested the use of strontium 90 James B Conant and Leslie Groves were also briefed but Oppenheimer wanted to proceed with the plan only if enough food could be contaminated with the weapon to kill half a million people 103 In mid 1944 Oppenheimer persuaded Fermi to join his Project Y at Los Alamos New Mexico 104 Arriving in September Fermi was appointed an associate director of the laboratory with broad responsibility for nuclear and theoretical physics and was placed in charge of F Division which was named after him F Division had four branches F 1 Super and General Theory under Teller which investigated the Super thermonuclear bomb F 2 Water Boiler under L D P King which looked after the water boiler aqueous homogeneous research reactor F 3 Super Experimentation under Egon Bretscher and F 4 Fission Studies under Anderson 105 Fermi observed the Trinity test on 16 July 1945 and conducted an experiment to estimate the bomb s yield by dropping strips of paper into the blast wave He paced off the distance they were blown by the explosion and calculated the yield as ten kilotons of TNT the actual yield was about 18 6 kilotons 106 Along with Oppenheimer Compton and Ernest Lawrence Fermi was part of the scientific panel that advised the Interim Committee on target selection The panel agreed with the committee that atomic bombs would be used without warning against an industrial target 107 Like others at the Los Alamos Laboratory Fermi found out about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki from the public address system in the technical area Fermi did not believe that atomic bombs would deter nations from starting wars nor did he think that the time was ripe for world government He therefore did not join the Association of Los Alamos Scientists 108 Postwar work EditFermi became the Charles H Swift Distinguished Professor of Physics at the University of Chicago on 1 July 1945 109 although he did not depart the Los Alamos Laboratory with his family until 31 December 1945 110 He was elected a member of the US National Academy of Sciences in 1945 111 The Metallurgical Laboratory became the Argonne National Laboratory on 1 July 1946 the first of the national laboratories established by the Manhattan Project 112 The short distance between Chicago and Argonne allowed Fermi to work at both places At Argonne he continued experimental physics investigating neutron scattering with Leona Marshall 113 He also discussed theoretical physics with Maria Mayer helping her develop insights into spin orbit coupling that would lead to her receiving the Nobel Prize 114 The Manhattan Project was replaced by the Atomic Energy Commission AEC on 1 January 1947 115 Fermi served on the AEC General Advisory Committee an influential scientific committee chaired by Robert Oppenheimer 116 He also liked to spend a few weeks of each year at the Los Alamos National Laboratory 117 where he collaborated with Nicholas Metropolis 118 and with John von Neumann on Rayleigh Taylor instability the science of what occurs at the border between two fluids of different densities 119 Laura and Enrico Fermi at the Institute for Nuclear Studies Los Alamos 1954 After the detonation of the first Soviet fission bomb in August 1949 Fermi along with Isidor Rabi wrote a strongly worded report for the committee opposing the development of a hydrogen bomb on moral and technical grounds 120 Nonetheless Fermi continued to participate in work on the hydrogen bomb at Los Alamos as a consultant Along with Stanislaw Ulam he calculated that not only would the amount of tritium needed for Teller s model of a thermonuclear weapon be prohibitive but a fusion reaction could still not be assured to propagate even with this large quantity of tritium 121 Fermi was among the scientists who testified on Oppenheimer s behalf at the Oppenheimer security hearing in 1954 that resulted in denial of Oppenheimer s security clearance 122 In his later years Fermi continued teaching at the University of Chicago where he was a founder of what later became the Enrico Fermi Institute His PhD students in the postwar period included Owen Chamberlain Geoffrey Chew Jerome Friedman Marvin Goldberger Tsung Dao Lee Arthur Rosenfeld and Sam Treiman 123 73 Jack Steinberger was a graduate student and Mildred Dresselhaus was highly influenced by Fermi during the year she overlapped with him as a PhD student 124 125 Fermi conducted important research in particle physics especially related to pions and muons He made the first predictions of pion nucleon resonance 118 relying on statistical methods since he reasoned that exact answers were not required when the theory was wrong anyway 126 In a paper coauthored with Chen Ning Yang he speculated that pions might actually be composite particles 127 The idea was elaborated by Shoichi Sakata It has since been supplanted by the quark model in which the pion is made up of quarks which completed Fermi s model and vindicated his approach 128 Fermi wrote a paper On the Origin of Cosmic Radiation in which he proposed that cosmic rays arose through material being accelerated by magnetic fields in interstellar space which led to a difference of opinion with Teller 126 Fermi examined the issues surrounding magnetic fields in the arms of a spiral galaxy 129 He mused about what is now referred to as the Fermi paradox the contradiction between the presumed probability of the existence of extraterrestrial life and the fact that contact has not been made 130 Fermi s grave in Chicago Toward the end of his life Fermi questioned his faith in society at large to make wise choices about nuclear technology He said Some of you may ask what is the good of working so hard merely to collect a few facts which will bring no pleasure except to a few long haired professors who love to collect such things and will be of no use to anybody because only few specialists at best will be able to understand them In answer to such question s I may venture a fairly safe prediction History of science and technology has consistently taught us that scientific advances in basic understanding have sooner or later led to technical and industrial applications that have revolutionized our way of life It seems to me improbable that this effort to get at the structure of matter should be an exception to this rule What is less certain and what we all fervently hope is that man will soon grow sufficiently adult to make good use of the powers that he acquires over nature 131 Death EditFermi underwent what was called an exploratory operation in Billings Memorial Hospital in October 1954 after which he returned home Fifty days later he died of inoperable stomach cancer in his home in Chicago He was 53 2 Fermi suspected working near the nuclear pile involved great risk but he pressed on because the benefits outweighed the risks to his personal safety Two of his graduate student assistants working near the pile also died of cancer 132 A memorial service was held at the University of Chicago chapel where colleagues Samuel K Allison Emilio Segre and Herbert L Anderson spoke to mourn the loss of one of the world s most brilliant and productive physicists 133 His body was interred at Oak Woods Cemetery where a private graveside service for the immediate family took place presided by a Lutheran chaplain 134 Impact and legacy EditLegacy Edit As a person Fermi seemed simplicity itself He was extraordinarily vigorous and loved games and sport On such occasions his ambitious nature became apparent He played tennis with considerable ferocity and when climbing mountains acted rather as a guide One might have called him a benevolent dictator I remember once at the top of a mountain Fermi got up and said Well it is two minutes to two let s all leave at two o clock and of course everybody got up faithfully and obediently This leadership and self assurance gave Fermi the name of The Pope whose pronouncements were infallible in physics He once said I can calculate anything in physics within a factor 2 on a few sheets to get the numerical factor in front of the formula right may well take a physicist a year to calculate but I am not interested in that His leadership could go so far that it was a danger to the independence of the person working with him I recollect once at a party at his house when my wife cut the bread Fermi came along and said he had a different philosophy on bread cutting and took the knife out of my wife s hand and proceeded with the job because he was convinced that his own method was superior But all this did not offend at all but rather charmed everybody into liking Fermi He had very few interests outside physics and when he once heard me play on Teller s piano he confessed that his interest in music was restricted to simple tunes Egon Bretscher 135 Fermi received numerous awards in recognition of his achievements including the Matteucci Medal in 1926 the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1938 the Hughes Medal in 1942 the Franklin Medal in 1947 and the Rumford Prize in 1953 He was awarded the Medal for Merit in 1946 for his contribution to the Manhattan Project 136 Fermi was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society FRS in 1950 135 The Basilica of Santa Croce Florence known as the Temple of Italian Glories for its many graves of artists scientists and prominent figures in Italian history has a plaque commemorating Fermi 137 In 1999 Time named Fermi on its list of the top 100 persons of the twentieth century 138 Fermi was widely regarded as an unusual case of a 20th century physicist who excelled both theoretically and experimentally Chemist and novelist C P Snow wrote if Fermi had been born a few years earlier one could well imagine him discovering Rutherford s atomic nucleus and then developing Bohr s theory of the hydrogen atom If this sounds like hyperbole anything about Fermi is likely to sound like hyperbole 139 Fermi was known as an inspiring teacher and was noted for his attention to detail simplicity and careful preparation of his lectures 140 Later his lecture notes were transcribed into books 141 His papers and notebooks are today in the University of Chicago 142 Victor Weisskopf noted how Fermi always managed to find the simplest and most direct approach with the minimum of complication and sophistication 143 He disliked complicated theories and while he had great mathematical ability he would never use it when the job could be done much more simply He was famous for getting quick and accurate answers to problems that would stump other people Later on his method of getting approximate and quick answers through back of the envelope calculations became informally known as the Fermi method and is widely taught 144 Fermi was fond of pointing out that when Alessandro Volta was working in his laboratory Volta had no idea where the study of electricity would lead 145 Fermi is generally remembered for his work on nuclear power and nuclear weapons especially the creation of the first nuclear reactor and the development of the first atomic and hydrogen bombs His scientific work has stood the test of time This includes his theory of beta decay his work with non linear systems his discovery of the effects of slow neutrons his study of pion nucleon collisions and his Fermi Dirac statistics His speculation that a pion was not a fundamental particle pointed the way towards the study of quarks and leptons 146 Things named after Fermi Edit The sign at Enrico Fermi Street in Rome Memorial plaque in the Basilica Santa Croce Florence Italy Main article List of things named after Enrico Fermi Many things bear Fermi s name These include the Fermilab particle accelerator and physics lab in Batavia Illinois which was renamed in his honor in 1974 147 and the Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope which was named after him in 2008 in recognition of his work on cosmic rays 148 Three nuclear reactor installations have been named after him the Fermi 1 and Fermi 2 nuclear power plants in Newport Michigan the Enrico Fermi Nuclear Power Plant at Trino Vercellese in Italy 149 and the RA 1 Enrico Fermi research reactor in Argentina 150 A synthetic element isolated from the debris of the 1952 Ivy Mike nuclear test was named fermium in honor of Fermi s contributions to the scientific community 151 152 This makes him one of 16 scientists who have elements named after them 153 Since 1956 the United States Atomic Energy Commission has named its highest honor the Fermi Award after him Recipients of the award have included Otto Hahn Robert Oppenheimer Edward Teller and Hans Bethe 154 Publications EditIntroduzione alla Fisica Atomica in Italian Bologna N Zanichelli 1928 OCLC 9653646 Fisica per i Licei in Italian Bologna N Zanichelli 1929 OCLC 9653646 Molecole e cristalli in Italian Bologna N Zanichelli 1934 OCLC 19918218 Thermodynamics New York Prentice Hall 1937 OCLC 2379038 Fisica per Istituti Tecnici in Italian Bologna N Zanichelli 1938 Fisica per Licei Scientifici in Italian Bologna N Zanichelli 1938 with Edoardo Amaldi Elementary particles New Haven Yale University Press 1951 OCLC 362513 Notes on Quantum Mechanics Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1961 OCLC 1448078 For a full list of his papers see pages 75 78 in ref 135 Patents EditUS Patent 2206634 Process for the Production of Radioactive Substances issued July 1940 US Patent 2836554 Air Cooled Neutronic Reactor issued April 1950 US Patent 2524379 Neutron Velocity Selector issued October 1950 US Patent 2852461 Neutronic Reactor issued September 1953 US Patent 2708656 Neutronic Reactor issued May 1955 US Patent 2768134 Testing Material in a Neutronic Reactor issued October 1956 US Patent 2780595 Test Exponential Pile issued February 1957 US Patent 2798847 Method of Operating a Neutronic Reactor issued July 1957 US Patent 2807581 Neutronic Reactor issued September 1957 US Patent 2807727 Neutronic Reactor Shield issued September 1957 US Patent 2813070 Method of Sustaining a Neutronic Chain Reacting System issued November 1957 US Patent 2837477 Chain Reacting System issued June 1958 US Patent 2931762 Neutronic Reactor issued April 1960 US Patent 2969307 Method of Testing Thermal Neutron Fissionable Material for Purity issued January 1961 Notes Edit Enrico Fermi architect of the nuclear age dies Autumn 1954 Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 2 November 2015 a b Enrico Fermi Dead at 53 Architect of Atomic Bomb The New York Times 29 November 1954 Archived from the original on 14 March 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Orear Jay 27 January 2004 Enrico Fermi The Master Scientist Archived from the original on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 19 November 2022 via ecommons cornell edu H Zuckerman Scientific Elite Nobel Laureates in the United States Routledge 1977 Segre 1970 pp 3 4 8 Amaldi 2001 p 23 Cooper 1999 p 19 Segre 1970 pp 5 6 Fermi 1954 pp 15 16 Maria Fermi Sacchetti 1899 1959 www OlgiateOlona26giugno1959 org in Italian Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2017 Segre 1970 p 7 Bonolis 2001 p 315 Amaldi 2001 p 24 Segre 1970 pp 11 12 Segre 1970 pp 8 10 a b Segre 1970 pp 11 13 Fermi 1954 pp 20 21 Edizione Nazionale Mathematica Italiana Giulio Pittarelli in Italian Scuola Normale Superiore Archived from the original on 17 December 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2017 Segre 1970 pp 15 18 Bonolis 2001 p 320 a b Bonolis 2001 pp 317 319 Segre 1970 p 20 Uber einen Widerspruch zwischen der elektrodynamischen und relativistischen Theorie der elektromagnetischen Masse Physikalische Zeitschrift in German 23 340 344 Archived from the original on 3 February 2021 Retrieved 17 January 2013 Bertotti 2001 p 115 a b c Bonolis 2001 p 321 Enrico Fermi L Uomo lo Scienziato e il Massone in Italian Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2015 Bonolis 2001 pp 321 324 Hey amp Walters 2003 p 61 Bonolis 2001 pp 329 330 Cooper 1999 p 31 Fermi 1954 pp 37 38 Segre 1970 p 45 Fermi 1954 p 38 a b Alison 1957 p 127 Enrico Fermi e i ragazzi di via Panisperna in Italian University of Rome Archived from the original on 20 February 2021 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Segre 1970 p 61 Cooper 1999 pp 38 39 a b Alison 1957 p 130 About Enrico Fermi University of Chicago Archived from the original on 21 December 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Mieli Paolo 2 October 2001 Cosi Fermi scopri la natura vessatoria del fascismo Corriere della Sera in Italian Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Direzione generale per gli archivi 2005 Reale accademia d Italia inventario dell archivio PDF in Italian Rome Ministero per i beni culturali e ambientali p xxxix Archived from the original PDF on 7 September 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2013 A Legal Examination of Mussolini s Race Laws Printed Matter Centro Primo Levi Archived from the original on 17 August 2015 Retrieved 7 August 2015 a b c Bonolis 2001 pp 333 335 Amaldi 2001 p 38 Fermi 1954 p 217 Amaldi 2001 pp 50 51 a b Bonolis 2001 p 346 a b Fermi E 1968 Fermi s Theory of Beta Decay English translation by Fred L Wilson 1968 American Journal of Physics 36 12 1150 Bibcode 1968AmJPh 36 1150W doi 10 1119 1 1974382 Archived from the original on 12 May 2013 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Joliot Curie Irene Joliot Frederic 15 January 1934 Un nouveau type de radioactivite A new type of radioactivity Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l Academie des Sciences in French 198 January June 1934 254 256 Archived from the original on 20 February 2021 Retrieved 19 October 2013 Joliot Frederic Joliot Curie Irene 1934 Artificial Production of a New Kind of Radio Element PDF Nature 133 3354 201 202 Bibcode 1934Natur 133 201J doi 10 1038 133201a0 S2CID 4096977 Archived PDF from the original on 23 November 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2013 Amaldi 2001a pp 152 153 Bonolis 2001 pp 347 351 a b c d Amaldi 2001a pp 153 156 Segre 1970 p 73 a b De Gregorio Alberto G 2005 Neutron physics in the early 1930s Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 35 2 293 340 arXiv physics 0510044 Bibcode 2005physics 10044D doi 10 1525 hsps 2005 35 2 293 S2CID 119489980 Guerra Francesco Robotti Nadia December 2009 Enrico Fermi s Discovery of Neutron Induced Artificial Radioactivity The Influence of His Theory of Beta Decay Physics in Perspective 11 4 379 404 Bibcode 2009PhP 11 379G doi 10 1007 s00016 008 0415 1 S2CID 120707438 Fermi Enrico 25 March 1934 Radioattivita indotta da bombardamento di neutroni La Ricerca Scientifica in Italian 1 5 283 Archived from the original on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 20 October 2013 Fermi E Amaldi E d Agostino O Rasetti F Segre E 1934 Artificial Radioactivity Produced by Neutron Bombardment Proceedings of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 146 857 483 Bibcode 1934RSPSA 146 483F doi 10 1098 rspa 1934 0168 a b Bonolis 2001 pp 347 349 a b Amaldi 2001a pp 161 162 a b Bonolis 2001 pp 347 352 A Few Good Moderators The Numbers The Energy From Thorium Foundation 13 February 2007 Archived from the original on 24 February 2021 Retrieved 24 September 2013 Cooper 1999 p 51 Sullivan 2016 p 19 Cooper 1999 p 52 Persico 2001 p 40 Bonolis 2001 p 352 Hahn O Strassmann F 1939 Uber den Nachweis und das Verhalten der bei der Bestrahlung des Urans mittels Neutronen entstehenden Erdalkalimetalle On the detection and characteristics of the alkaline earth metals formed by irradiation of uranium with neutrons Naturwissenschaften in German 27 1 11 15 Bibcode 1939NW 27 11H doi 10 1007 BF01488241 S2CID 5920336 Frisch O R 1939 Physical Evidence for the Division of Heavy Nuclei under Neutron Bombardment Nature 143 3616 276 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 276F doi 10 1038 143276a0 S2CID 4076376 Meitner L Frisch O R 1939 Disintegration of Uranium by Neutrons a New Type of Nuclear Reaction Nature 143 3615 239 240 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 239M doi 10 1038 143239a0 S2CID 4113262 Archived from the original on 28 April 2019 Retrieved 17 March 2008 a b Rhodes 1986 p 267 Segre 1970 pp 222 223 a b Enrico Fermi on Nobelprize org including the Nobel Lecture 12 December 1938 Artificial Radioactivity Produced by Neutron Bombardment Anderson H L Booth E Dunning J Fermi E Glasoe G Slack F 16 February 1939 The Fission of Uranium Physical Review 55 5 511 512 Bibcode 1939PhRv 55 511A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 55 511 2 Rhodes 1986 pp 269 270 Von Halban H Joliot F Kowarski L 22 April 1939 Number of Neutrons Liberated in the Nuclear Fission of Uranium Nature 143 3625 680 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 680V doi 10 1038 143680a0 S2CID 4089039 Anderson H Fermi E Hanstein H 16 March 1939 Production of Neutrons in Uranium Bombarded by Neutrons Physical Review 55 8 797 798 Bibcode 1939PhRv 55 797A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 55 797 2 Anderson H L April 1973 Early Days of Chain Reaction Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 29 4 8 12 Bibcode 1973BuAtS 29d 8A doi 10 1080 00963402 1973 11455466 Archived from the original on 8 June 2020 Retrieved 20 November 2015 a b Anderson H Fermi E Szilard L 1 August 1939 Neutron Production and Absorption in Uranium Physical Review 56 3 284 286 Bibcode 1939PhRv 56 284A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 56 284 Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 19 October 2013 Salvetti 2001 pp 186 188 Bonolis 2001 pp 356 357 Salvetti 2001 p 185 Salvetti 2001 pp 188 189 Rhodes 1986 pp 314 317 Salvetti 2001 p 190 Salvetti 2001 p 195 Salvetti 2001 pp 194 196 Rhodes 1986 pp 399 400 a b Salvetti 2001 pp 198 202 Fermi E 1946 The Development of the First Chain Reaction Pile Proc Am Philos Soc 90 1 20 24 JSTOR 3301034 Compton 1956 p 144 Bonolis 2001 p 366 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 207 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 208 211 Jones 1985 p 205 Segre 1970 p 104 Dicke William 18 February 1997 Chien Shiung Wu 84 Top Experimental Physicist Archived from the original on 14 July 2010 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Benczer Koller Noemie January 2009 Chien shiungwu 1912 1997 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 26 March 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Lykknes Annette 2019 Women In Their Element Selected Women s Contributions To The Periodic System ISBN 9789811206306 Archived from the original on 30 May 2021 Retrieved 3 May 2021 Chiang T C 27 November 2012 Inside Story C S Wu First Lady of physics research CERN Courier Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 5 April 2014 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 304 307 Jones 1985 pp 220 223 Rhodes 1986 pp 510 511 Bonolis 2001 pp 368 369 Hawkins 1961 p 213 Rhodes 1986 pp 674 677 Jones 1985 pp 531 532 Fermi 1954 pp 244 245 Segre 1970 p 157 Segre 1970 p 167 Enrico Fermi on NASOnline org Archived from the original on 25 February 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2016 Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 pp xix xx Segre 1970 p 171 Segre 1970 p 172 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 643 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 648 Segre 1970 p 175 a b Segre 1970 p 179 Bonolis 2001 p 381 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 380 385 Hewlett amp Duncan 1969 pp 527 530 Cooper 1999 pp 102 103 Enrico Fermi at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Jack Steinberger Biographical Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 15 August 2013 Cornish Audie 24 November 2014 Queen Of Carbon Among Medal Of Freedom Honorees All Things Considered NPR Archived from the original on 30 September 2018 Retrieved 30 September 2018 a b Bonolis 2001 pp 374 379 Fermi E Yang C 1949 Are Mesons Elementary Particles Physical Review 76 12 1739 Bibcode 1949PhRv 76 1739F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 76 1739 Jacob amp Maiani 2001 pp 254 258 Bonolis 2001 p 386 Jones 1985a pp 1 3 Fermi 2004 p 142 The Life of Enrico Fermi 12 December 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Allison S K Segre Emilio Anderson Herbert L January 1955 Enrico Fermi 1901 1954 Physics Today 8 1 9 13 Bibcode 1955PhT 8a 9A doi 10 1063 1 3061909 Hucke amp Bielski 1999 pp 147 150 a b c Bretscher E Cockcroft J D 1955 Enrico Fermi 1901 1954 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 1 69 78 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1955 0006 JSTOR 769243 Alison 1957 pp 135 136 Enrico Fermi in Santa Croce Florence gotterdammerung org Retrieved 10 May 2015 Time 100 Persons of the Century Time 6 June 1999 Archived from the original on 11 February 2001 Retrieved 2 March 2013 Snow 1981 p 79 Ricci 2001 pp 297 302 Ricci 2001 p 286 Enrico Fermi Collection University of Chicago Archived from the original on 18 March 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2013 Salvini 2001 p 5 Von Baeyer 1993 pp 3 8 Fermi 1954 p 242 Salvini 2001 p 17 About Fermilab History Fermilab Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2013 First Light for the Fermi Space Telescope National Aeronautics and Space Administration Archived from the original on 1 October 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Nuclear Power in Italy World Nuclear Association Archived from the original on 11 June 2020 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Report of the National Atomic Energy Commission of Argentina CNEA PDF CNEA November 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Seaborg 1978 p 2 Hoff 1978 pp 39 48 Kevin A Boudreaux Derivations of the Names and Symbols of the Elements Angelo State University Archived from the original on 3 December 2017 Retrieved 11 February 2017 The Enrico Fermi Award United States Department of Energy Archived from the original on 13 December 2013 Retrieved 25 August 2010 References EditAlison Samuel King 1957 Enrico Fermi 1901 1954 PDF Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences 30 125 155 OCLC 11772127 Archived PDF from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 4 December 2021 Amaldi Edoardo 2001 Commemoration of the Academy Fellow Enrico Fermi In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 23 35 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Amaldi Ugo 2001 Nuclear Physics from the Nineteen Thirties to the Present Day In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 151 176 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Bertotti Bruno 2001 Fermi s Coordinates and the Principle of Equivalence In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 115 125 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Bonolis Luisa 2001 Enrico Fermi s Scientific Work In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 314 394 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Compton Arthur 1956 Atomic Quest New York Oxford University Press OCLC 173307 Cooper Dan 1999 Enrico Fermi And the Revolutions in Modern physics New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511762 2 OCLC 39508200 Fermi Enrico 2004 The Future of Nuclear Physics In Cronin J W ed Fermi Remembered Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 12111 6 Fermi Laura 1954 Atoms in the Family My Life with Enrico Fermi Chicago University of Chicago Press OCLC 537507 Hawkins David 1961 Manhattan District History Project Y The Los Alamos Project Volume I Inception until August 1945 Los Alamos Los Alamos National Laboratory LAMS 2532 Hoff Richard 23 January 1978 Production of Eisteinium and Fermium in Nuclear Explosions In Seaborg Glenn T ed Proceedings of the Symposium Commemorating the 25th Anniversary of Elements 99 and 100 PDF Los Alamos Los Alamos National Laboratory pp 39 49 Report LBL 7701 Archived PDF from the original on 16 September 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Hewlett Richard G Anderson Oscar E 1962 The New World 1939 1946 PDF University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 520 07186 5 OCLC 637004643 Archived PDF from the original on 26 September 2019 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Hewlett Richard G Duncan Francis 1969 Atomic Shield 1947 1952 A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 520 07187 2 OCLC 3717478 Hey Anthony J G Walters Patrick 2003 The new quantum universe Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56418 2 OCLC 50252084 Holl Jack M Hewlett Richard G Harris Ruth R 1997 Argonne National Laboratory 1946 96 Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02341 5 Hucke Matt Bielski Ursula 1999 Graveyards of Chicago The People History Art and Lore of Cook County Cemeteries Chicago Lake Claremont Press ISBN 978 0 9642426 4 7 OCLC 42849992 Jacob Maurice Maiani Luciano 2001 The Scientific Legacy of Fermi in Particle Physics In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 241 270 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Jones Eric M March 1985 Where is Everybody An Account of Fermi s Question PDF Los Alamos Los Alamos National Laboratory OCLC 4434691994 LA 10311 MS Archived PDF from the original on 5 November 2015 Retrieved 20 November 2015 Jones Vincent 1985 Manhattan The Army and the Atomic Bomb Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 10913875 Persico Enrico 2001 Commemoration of Enrico Fermi In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 36 44 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Rhodes Richard 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 81378 3 OCLC 13793436 Ricci Renato Angelo 2001 Fermi s Last Lessons In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 286 313 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Salvini Giorgio 2001 Enrico Fermi His Life and Comment on his Work In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 1 20 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Salvetti Carlo 2001 The Birth of Nuclear Energy Fermi s Pile In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 177 203 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Seaborg Glenn T 23 January 1978 Introductory Remarks In Seaborg Glenn T ed Proceedings of the Symposium Commemorating the 25th Anniversary of Elements 99 and 100 PDF Los Alamos Los Alamos National Laboratory pp 1 3 Report LBL 7701 Archived PDF from the original on 16 September 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Segre Emilio 1970 Enrico Fermi Physicist Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 74473 5 OCLC 118467 Snow C P 1981 The Physicists A Generation that Changed the World Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 1 84232 436 3 OCLC 7722354 Sullivan Neil J 2016 The Prometheus Bomb The Manhattan Project and Government in the Dark Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 1 61234 890 2 Archived from the original on 1 December 2021 Retrieved 4 December 2021 Von Baeyer H C 1993 The Fermi Solution Essays on Science New York Random House ISBN 978 0 679 40031 8 OCLC 27266040 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Enrico Fermi Wikiquote has quotations related to Enrico Fermi Wikisource has original works by or about Enrico Fermi To Fermi with Love Part 1 Voices of the Manhattan Project 1971 Radio Segment The First Reactor 40th Anniversary Commemorative Edition United States Department of Energy December 1982 Nobel prize page for the 1938 physics prize The Story of the First Pile Enrico Fermi s Case File at The Franklin Institute with information about his contributions to theoretical and experimental physics Remembering Enrico Fermi Session J1 APS April Meeting 2010 American Physical Society Time 100 Enrico Fermi by Richard Rhodes 29 March 1999 Fermi s stay with Ehrenfest in Leiden Portals World War II Nuclear technology Physics History of science United States Italy Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enrico Fermi amp oldid 1145792447, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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