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Joseph Rotblat

Sir Joseph Rotblat KCMG CBE FRS (4 November 1908 – 31 August 2005) was a Polish and British physicist.[2] During World War II he worked on Tube Alloys and the Manhattan Project, but left the Los Alamos Laboratory on grounds of conscience after it became clear to him in 1944 that Germany had ceased development of an atomic bomb.


Joseph Rotblat

Los Alamos badge photograph, 1944
Born
Józef Rotblat

(1908-11-04)4 November 1908
Died31 August 2005(2005-08-31) (aged 96)
London, United Kingdom
NationalityPolish-British
Alma mater
Known for
SpouseTola Gryn
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
Institutions
ThesisDetermination of a number of neutrons emitted from a source (1950)
Doctoral advisorJames Chadwick

His work on nuclear fallout was a major contribution toward the ratification of the 1963 Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. A signatory of the 1955 Russell–Einstein Manifesto, he was secretary-general of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs from their founding until 1973 and shared, with the Pugwash Conferences, the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize "for efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international affairs and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms."[3]

Early life edit

Józef Rotblat was born on 4 November 1908 to a Polish-Jewish family in Warsaw,[4] then part of the Russian-ruled Kingdom of Poland, better known as Congress Poland.[5] He was one of seven children, two of whom died in infancy.[6] His father, Zygmunt Rotblat, built up and ran a nationwide horse-drawn carriage business, owned land and bred horses. Józef's early years were spent in what was a prosperous household but circumstances changed at the outbreak of World War I. Borders were closed and the family's horses were requisitioned, leading to the failure of the business and poverty for their family.[5] Despite having a religious background, by the age of ten, he doubted the existence of God,[7] and later became an agnostic.[8][9]

Rotblat's parents could not afford to send him to a gymnasium, so Rotblat received his secondary education in a cheder taught by a local rabbi. He then attended a technical school, where he studied electrical engineering, graduating with his diploma in 1923 in the newly established Republic of Poland. After graduating, Rotblat worked as an electrician in Warsaw, but had an ambition to become a physicist.[6] He sat the entrance examinations of the Free University of Poland in January 1929, and passed the physics one with ease, but was less successful in writing a paper about the Commission of National Education, a subject about which he knew nothing. He was then interviewed by Ludwik Wertenstein [pl], the Dean of the Science Faculty. Wertenstein had studied in Paris under Marie Curie and at the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge under Ernest Rutherford. Wertenstein offered Rotblat a place.[10]

Rotblat earned a Master of Arts at the Free University in 1932. After, he entered the University of Warsaw, and became a Doctor of Physics in 1938. He held the position of Research Fellow in the Radiological Laboratory of the Scientific Society of Warsaw, of which Wertenstein was the director, and became assistant Director of the Atomic Physics Institute of the Free University of Poland in 1938.[11]

Marriage and early physics work edit

During this period, Rotblat married a literature student, Tola Gryn, whom he had met at a student summer camp in 1930.[4][12]

Before the outbreak of World War II, he conducted experiments that showed that in the fission process, neutrons were emitted.[13] In early 1939, he envisaged that a large number of fissions could occur and if this happened within a sufficiently short time, then considerable amounts of energy could be released. He went on to calculate that this process could occur in less than a microsecond, and as a consequence would result in an explosion.[14][15]

In 1939, through Wertenstein's connections, Rotblat was invited to study in Paris and at the University of Liverpool under James Chadwick, winner of the 1932 Nobel Prize for discovering the neutron. Chadwick was building a particle accelerator called a "cyclotron" to study fundamental nuclear reactions, and Rotblat wanted to build a similar machine in Warsaw, so he decided to join Chadwick in Liverpool. He travelled to England alone because he could not afford to support his wife there.[16]

Before long, Chadwick gave Rotblat a fellowship (the Oliver Lodge Fellowship), doubling his income, and in that summer of 1939, the young Pole returned home, intending to bring Tola back with him.[17] When the time came to leave Warsaw in late August, however, she was ill following an operation for appendicitis, and remained behind, expecting to follow within days; however, the outbreak of war brought calamity.[18] Tola was trapped, and desperate efforts in the ensuing months to bring her out through Denmark (with the help of Niels Bohr), Belgium, and finally Italy came to nothing, as each country in turn was closed off by the war.[19] He never saw her again; she was murdered in the Holocaust at the Belzec concentration camp.[20] This affected him deeply for the rest of his life, and he never remarried.[21]

Manhattan Project edit

While still in Poland, Rotblat had realised that nuclear fission might possibly be used to produce an atomic bomb. He first thought that he should "put the whole thing out of my mind",[22] but he continued because he thought the only way to prevent Nazi Germany from using a nuclear bomb was if Britain had one to act as a deterrent. He worked with Chadwick on Tube Alloys, the British atomic bomb project.[22]

In February 1944, Rotblat joined the Los Alamos Laboratory as part of Chadwick's British Mission to the Manhattan Project.[22] Although he was upset by the morality of the project, he believed the allies needed to be able to threaten retaliation in case Germany developed the bomb.[23] The usual condition for people to work on the Manhattan Project was that they had to become US citizens or British subjects. Rotblat declined, and the condition was waived.[24] At Los Alamos, he was befriended by Stan Ulam, a fellow Polish-Jewish scientist, with whom he was able to converse in Polish. Rotblat worked in Egon Bretscher's group, investigating whether high-energy gamma rays produced by nuclear fission would interfere with the nuclear chain reaction process, and then with Robert R. Wilson's cyclotron group.[25]

Rotblat continued to have strong reservations about the use of science to develop such a devastating weapon. In 1985, he related that, at a private dinner at the Chadwicks' house at Los Alamos in March 1944, he was shocked to hear the director of the Manhattan Project, Major General Leslie R. Groves, Jr., say words to the effect that the real purpose in making the bomb was to subdue the Soviets. Indeed, Groves testified under oath at the 1954 hearing about J. Robert Oppenheimer's security record that "there was never, from about two weeks from the time I took charge of this project, any illusion on my part but that Russia was our enemy and that the project was conducted on that basis."[26][27] Despite Groves' testimony, in response to a suggestion by Andrew Brown that Groves' remark may have been made to test Rotblat's loyalty, Barton Bernstein, who had questioned the accuracy of Rotblat's memory, commented in a letter to Brown: "It's an interesting, responsible interpretation, and cannot be dismissed, though I'm not prepared to embrace it."[28]

By the end of 1944, it was also apparent that Germany had abandoned the development of its own bomb in 1942. Rotblat then asked to leave the project on grounds of conscience and returned to Liverpool.[23]

Chadwick learned that the chief of security held a security dossier in which Rotblat was accused of intending to return to England so that he could be flown over Poland and parachute into Soviet territory to pass on the secrets of the atomic bomb. He was also accused of visiting someone in Santa Fe and leaving them a blank cheque to finance the formation of a communist cell.[22]

Rotblat was able to show that much of the information within the dossier had been fabricated.[22] In addition, FBI records show that in 1950, Rotblat's friend in Santa Fe was tracked down in California, and she flatly denied the story; the cheque had never been cashed and had been left to pay for items not available in the UK during the war. In 1985, Rotblat recounted how a box containing "all my documents" went missing on a train ride from Washington D.C. to New York as he was leaving the country,[27] but the presence of large numbers of Rotblat's personal papers from Los Alamos now archived at the Churchill Archives Centre "is totally at odds with Rotblat's account of events".[29][30]

Nuclear fallout edit

Rotblat returned to Britain to become senior lecturer and acting director of research in nuclear physics at the University of Liverpool.[11] He was naturalised as a British subject on 8 January 1946.[31] Most of his family had survived the war. With the help of a Polish man, his brother-in-law Mieczysław (Mietek) Pokorny had created false Polish Catholic identities for Rotblat's sister Ewa and niece Halina. Ewa, taking advantage of the fact that she was an ash blonde who, like Rotblat, spoke fluent Polish as well as Yiddish, smuggled the rest of the family out of the Warsaw Ghetto. Mietek, Rotblat's brother Mordecai (Michael) and Michael's wife Manya, Rotblat's mother Scheindel, and two Russian soldiers lived in a concealed bunker underneath a house near Otwock, in which Ewa and Halina lived with a Polish family. Displays of Polish anti-Semitism that she witnessed during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising embittered Ewa towards Poland, and she petitioned Rotblat to help the family emigrate to England. He therefore now accepted Chadwick's offer of British citizenship so he could help them escape from Poland.[32] They lived with him in London for some time before becoming established.[33] Halina would go on to graduate from Somerville College, Oxford, and University College London, and become an editor of the Dictionary of National Biography.[34]

Rotblat felt betrayed by the use of atomic weapons against Japan, and gave a series of public lectures in which he called for a three-year moratorium on all atomic research.[22] Rotblat was determined that his research should have only peaceful ends, and so became interested in the medical and biological uses of radiation. In 1949, he became Professor of Physics at St Bartholomew's Hospital ("Barts"), London,[35][36] a teaching hospital associated with the University of London. He remained there for the rest of his career, becoming a professor emeritus in 1976.[37] He received his PhD from Liverpool in 1950, having written his thesis on the "Determination of a number of neutrons emitted from a source".[38] He also worked on several official bodies connected with nuclear physics, and arranged the Atom Train, a major travelling exhibition for schools on civil nuclear energy.[27]

At St Bartholomew's, Rotblat worked on the effects of radiation on living organisms, especially on ageing and fertility. This led him to an interest in nuclear fallout, especially strontium-90 and the safe limits of ionising radiation. In 1955, he demonstrated that the contamination caused by the fallout after the Castle Bravo nuclear test at Bikini Atoll by the United States had been far greater than that stated officially. Until then the official line had been that the growth in the strength of atomic bombs was not accompanied by an equivalent growth in radioactivity released. Japanese scientists who had collected data from a fishing vessel, the Lucky Dragon, which had inadvertently been exposed to fallout, disagreed with this. Rotblat was able to deduce that the bomb had three stages and showed that the fission phase at the end of the explosion increased the amount of radioactivity by forty times. His paper was taken up by the media and contributed to the public debate that resulted in the ending of atmospheric tests by the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.[39]

Peace work edit

Rotblat believed that scientists should always be concerned with the ethical consequences of their work.[40] He became one of the most prominent critics of the nuclear arms race, was the youngest signatory of the Russell–Einstein Manifesto in 1955, and chaired the press conference that launched it. After the positive coverage of the manifesto, Cyrus Eaton offered to fund the influential Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, an international organisation that brought together scholars and public figures to work toward reducing the danger of armed conflict and to seek solutions to global security threats, particularly those related to nuclear warfare. With Bertrand Russell and others, Rotblat organised the first of these in 1957 and continued to work within their framework until his death. In 1958, Rotblat joined the executive committee of the newly launched Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND). Despite the Iron Curtain and the Cold War, he advocated establishing links between scientists from the West and East. For this reason, the Pugwash conferences were viewed with suspicion. Initially the British government thought them little more than "Communist front gatherings".[41]

However, he persuaded John Cockcroft, a member of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, to suggest who might be invited to the 1958 conference. He successfully resisted a subsequent attempt to take over the conferences,[41] causing a Foreign Office official to write that "the difficulty is to get Prof. Rotblat to pay any attention to what we think ... He is no doubt jealous of his independence and scientific integrity", and that securing "a new organizer for the British delegation seems to be the first need, but I do not know if there is any hope of this."[41] By the early 1960s the Ministry of Defence thought that the Pugwash Conferences were "now a very respectable organization", and the Foreign Office stated that it had "official blessing" and that any breakthrough may well originate at such gatherings.[41] The Pugwash Conferences are credited with laying the ground work for the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963, the Nonproliferation Treaty of 1968, the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty of 1972, the Biological Weapons Convention of 1972 and the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993.[4] In parallel with the Pugwash Conferences, he joined with Albert Einstein, Robert Oppenheimer, Bertrand Russell and other concerned scientists to found the World Academy of Art and Science, which was proposed by them in the mid-1950s and formally constituted in 1960.[42]

He was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting a world constitution.[43][44] As a result, for the first time in human history, a World Constituent Assembly convened to draft and adopt a Constitution for the Federation of Earth.[45]

Later life edit

Rotblat retired from St Bartholomew's in 1976. In 1975 and 1976, he was Montague Visiting Professor of International Relations at the University of Edinburgh.[46][47] He believed that scientists have an individual moral responsibility and, just as the Hippocratic Oath provides a code of conduct for physicians, he thought that scientists should have their own code of moral conduct, a Hippocratic Oath for scientists.[40] During his tenure as president of the Pugwash conferences, Rotblat nominated Israeli nuclear technician Mordechai Vanunu for the Nobel Peace Prize every year from 1988 to 2004. Vanunu had disclosed the extent of Israel's nuclear weapons programme and consequently spent 18 years in prison, including more than 11 years in solitary confinement.[48]

Rotblat campaigned ceaselessly against nuclear weapons. In an interview shortly before the 2004 US presidential election, he expressed his belief that the Russell–Einstein Manifesto still had "great relevance today, after 50 years, particularly in connection with the election of a president in the United States",[49] and above all, with respect to the potential pre-emptive use of nuclear weapons.[50] Central to his view of the world were the words of the Russell–Einstein Manifesto with which he concluded his acceptance lecture for the Nobel Prize in 1995:[51] "Above all, remember your humanity".[52] He also served as editor-in-chief of the journal Physics in Medicine and Biology from 1960 to 1972.[11] He was the president of several institutions and professional associations and also a co-founder and member of the governing board of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, as well as a member of the Advisory Committee on Medical Research of the World Health Organization.[11] Rotblat was a programme advisor to the BAFTA award-winning nuclear docudrama Threads, produced in 1984.[53]

Rotblat suffered a stroke in 2004, and his health declined. He died of septicaemia at the Royal Free Hospital in Camden, London, on 31 August 2005.[6]

Awards and honours edit

Rotblat was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1965 New Year Honours.[54] He won the Albert Einstein Peace Prize in 1992, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1995.[55] He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 1998 Birthday Honours for services to international understanding.[56] His certificate of election to the Royal Society read

He made important contributions to nuclear physics, both before and after working during the war on atomic energy problems at Liverpool and at Los Alamos. This included observations on the angular distribution of protons from the (d,p) reaction, which led to an important tool for determining the spin and parity of nuclear levels. He worked on the medical applications of nuclear physics, and later on the biological effects of radiation. His outstanding distinction is in his work for the Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. He was one of the founders of these conferences, and for the past 37 years has been untiring in his support and enthusiasms [sic] for the conferences, which have enabled scientists from all over the world and with opposing ideologies to talk objectively about the issues dividing them. His untiring devotion to this cause and his inspiration have been vital for the development and continuing existence of the conferences.[57]

Rotblat shared, with the Pugwash Conferences, the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize for efforts toward nuclear disarmament.[58] His citation read: "for efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international affairs and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms."[3] Towards the end of his life, he was also elected honorary member of the International Association of Physics Students,[59] and the Jamnalal Bajaj Foundation of India awarded him the Jamnalal Bajaj Award in 1999.[60] He was an honorary editorial board member for ‘Journal of Environment Peace’ published from the library of University of Toronto, now from Noble International University, edited by Professor Bob Ganguly and Professor Roger Hansell.

A plaque commemorating Joseph Rotblat, unveiled in 2017 in the presence of Polish Ambassador Arkady Rzegocki, can be found outside the offices of British Pugwash, on the corner of Bury Place and Great Russell Street in London.[61]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Joseph Rotblat". Great Lives. Series 26. Episode 6. 13 January 2012. BBC Radio 4. from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  2. ^ "Manhattan Project: People > Scientists > JOSEPH ROTBLAT". www.osti.gov. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  3. ^ a b "The Nobel Peace Prize 1995". from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  4. ^ a b c Noble, Holcomb B. (2 September 2005). "Joseph Rotblat, 96, Dies; Resisted Nuclear Weapons". The New York Times. from the original on 29 May 2015. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  5. ^ a b Brown 2012, pp. 1–5.
  6. ^ a b c Cathcart, Brian (2004). "Rotblat, Sir Joseph (1908–2005)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/96004. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  7. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 5–6.
  8. ^ Brown 2012, p. 151.
  9. ^ Rotblat & Ikeda 2007, p. 94. "I have to admit, however, that there are really many things that I do not know. I am not a particularly religious person, and this is the reason for my agnosticism. To be an agnostic simply means that I do not know and will keep seeking the answer for eternity. This is my response to questions about religion."
  10. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 7–9.
  11. ^ a b c d "Joseph Rotblat – Biographical – Curriculum Vitae". from the original on 11 October 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  12. ^ Brown 2012, p. 13.
  13. ^ Rotblat, J. (20 May 1939). "Emission of Neutrons accompanying the Fission of Uranium Nuclei". Nature. 143 (470): 852. Bibcode:1939Natur.143..852R. doi:10.1038/143852a0. S2CID 4129149.
  14. ^ Holdren, J. P. (2005). "Retrospective: Joseph Rotblat (1908–2005)". Science. 310 (5748): 633. doi:10.1126/science.1121081. PMID 16254178. S2CID 26854983.
  15. ^ . BBC. Archived from the original on 28 May 2011.
  16. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 12–14.
  17. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 23–24.
  18. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 25–27.
  19. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 32–33.
  20. ^ Brown 2012, p. 65.
  21. ^ Underwood, Martin (2011). . Joseph Rotblat: The bomb, peace, and his archive. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Abrams, Irwin. "The 1995 Nobel Peace Prize For Joseph Rotblat and the Pugwash Conference on Science And World Affairs". from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2007.
  23. ^ a b Milne, S.; Hinde, R. (2005). "Obituary: Joseph Rotblat (1908–2005) Physicist who committed his life to the cause of nuclear disarmament". Nature. 437 (7059): 634. Bibcode:2005Natur.437..634M. doi:10.1038/437634a. PMID 16193034. S2CID 29764779.
  24. ^ "Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat". The Daily Telegraph. 2 September 2005. from the original on 3 December 2017. Retrieved 2 April 2018.
  25. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 47–49.
  26. ^ United States Atomic Energy Commission and J. Robert Oppenheimer (1971). In the Matter of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 173.
  27. ^ a b c Rotblat, Joseph (August 1985). "Leaving the Bomb Project". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. 41 (7): 16–19. Bibcode:1985BuAtS..41g..16R. doi:10.1080/00963402.1985.11455991. from the original on 10 January 2021. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  28. ^ Brown 2012, p. 295.
  29. ^ Underwood, Martin (2011). "Joseph Rotblat's Archive: Some Anomalies and Difficulties" (PDF). AIP History Newsletter. 43: 5–7.
  30. ^ Underwood, M. C. (2011). "Joseph Rotblat, the Bomb and Anomalies from His Archive". Science and Engineering Ethics. 19 (2): 487–90. doi:10.1007/s11948-011-9345-4. PMID 22190230. S2CID 32392242.
  31. ^ "No. 37461". The London Gazette. 8 February 1946. p. 865.
  32. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 65–69.
  33. ^ Brown 2012, p. 97.
  34. ^ Sand, Katherine (13 August 2009). "Obituary – Halina Sand". The Guardian. from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  35. ^ Burrows, H.; Gibson, W.; Rotblat, J. (1950). "Angular Distributions of Protons from the Reaction O16(d,p)O17". Physical Review. 80 (6): 1095. Bibcode:1950PhRv...80Q1095B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.80.1095.
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2008. Retrieved 23 September 2007.
  37. ^ "Obituary – Sir Joseph Rotblat". The Guardian. 2 September 2005. from the original on 13 May 2019. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  38. ^ Rotblat, Joseph (1950). Determination of a number of neutrons emitted from a source (PhD thesis). University of Liverpool. ProQuest 301122892.
  39. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 107–118.
  40. ^ a b Rotblat, J. (1999). "A Hippocratic Oath for scientists". Science. 286 (5444): 1475. doi:10.1126/science.286.5444.1475. PMID 10610545. S2CID 4959172.
  41. ^ a b c d Wittner, Lawrence S. (2005). "The Political Rehabilitation of Józef Rotblat". from the original on 3 March 2020. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  42. ^ "History". World Academy of Art and Science. from the original on 21 February 2017. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  43. ^ "Letters from Thane Read asking Helen Keller to sign the World Constitution for world peace. 1961". Helen Keller Archive. American Foundation for the Blind. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  44. ^ "Letter from World Constitution Coordinating Committee to Helen, enclosing current materials". Helen Keller Archive. American Foundation for the Blind. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  45. ^ "Preparing earth constitution | Global Strategies & Solutions | The Encyclopedia of World Problems". The Encyclopedia of World Problems | Union of International Associations (UIA). Retrieved 15 July 2023.
  46. ^ "Joseph Rotblat – Biographical". Nobel Foundation. from the original on 3 October 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  47. ^ "Sir Joseph Rotblat". The Scotsman. 5 September 2005. from the original on 17 December 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  48. ^ Brown 2012, pp. 267–268.
  49. ^ . TheCommunity.com. 2004. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011.
  50. ^ . MEDACT. Archived from the original on 3 November 2005.
  51. ^ "Nobel Prize lecture". from the original on 25 April 2006. Retrieved 19 May 2006.
  52. ^ Rotblat, J. (1996). "Remember your humanity*". Medicine and War. 12 (3): 195–201. doi:10.1080/13623699608409284.
  53. ^ "Joseph Rotblat on IMDb.com". IMDb. from the original on 17 February 2017. Retrieved 21 July 2018.
  54. ^ "No. 43529". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 1965. p. 11.
  55. ^ Hinde, R. A.; Finney, J. L. (2007). "Joseph (Józef) Rotblat 4 November 1908 – 31 August 2005: Elected FRS 1995". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 53: 309. doi:10.1098/rsbm.2007.0023. S2CID 74731514.
  56. ^ "No. 55155". The London Gazette (Supplement). 15 June 1998. p. 3.
  57. ^ "Library and Archive Catalogue Rotblat". London: The Royal Society. Archived from the original on 17 December 2013.
  58. ^ "Joseph Rotblat – Biographical – Facts". from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  59. ^ . International Association of Physics Students. Archived from the original on 23 March 2015. Retrieved 30 November 2014.
  60. ^ "Prof. Sir Joseph Rotblat – 1999 – Jamnalal Bajaj Award for Promoting Gandhian Values Outside India". Jamnalal Bajaj Foundation. from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
  61. ^ "Sir Joseph Rotblat honoured by Polish Heritage Society plaque". British Pugwash. 18 November 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2020.

References edit

  • Brown, Andrew (2012). Keeper of the Nuclear Conscience: The Life and Works of Joseph Rotblat. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-958658-5. OCLC 963830214.
  • Górlikowski, Marek (2018). Noblista z Nowolipek. Józefa Rotblata wojna o pokój. Kraków: Znak. ISBN 9788324055401. OCLC 1050817827.
  • Rotblat, Joseph; Ikeda, Daisaku (2007). A Quest for Global Peace: Rotblat and Ikeda on War, Ethics and the Nuclear Threat. London: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-278-3. OCLC 123195789.

External links edit

  • The Papers of Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat held at the Churchill Archives Centre
  • 1989 Audio Interview with Joseph Rotblat by Martin Sherwin Voices of the Manhattan Project.
  • Dr. Rotblat: Or How I Learned to Start Worrying & Fear the Bomb via Culture.pl
  • Annotated Bibliography for Józef Rotblat 13 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues.
  • The Strangest Dream, a National Film Board of Canada film that tells Rotblat's life story.
  • for the WGBH-TV series .
  • Series 1 video interviews (recorded in 2002) with Sir Józef Rotblat by the Vega Science Trust.
  • Series 2 video interview (recorded in 2005) with Sir Józef Rotblat by the Vega Science Trust.
  • Joseph Rotblat on Nobelprize.org  
  • Op-Ed: The 50-Year Shadow by Józef Rotblat, The New York Times, 17 May 2005.
  • Józef Rotblat – Nobel Lecture
  • The Guardian 2 September 2005.
  • Interview with Józef Rotblat recorded in 2005 a few months before he died.
  • , assembled by Dr Martin Underwood.
  • Listen to a life story oral history interview with Sir Joseph Rotblat, recorded for National Life Stories 25 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine at the British Library.
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Dr. Rotblat: Or How I Learned to Start Worrying & Fear the Bomb

joseph, rotblat, kcmg, november, 1908, august, 2005, polish, british, physicist, during, world, worked, tube, alloys, manhattan, project, left, alamos, laboratory, grounds, conscience, after, became, clear, 1944, that, germany, ceased, development, atomic, bom. Sir Joseph Rotblat KCMG CBE FRS 4 November 1908 31 August 2005 was a Polish and British physicist 2 During World War II he worked on Tube Alloys and the Manhattan Project but left the Los Alamos Laboratory on grounds of conscience after it became clear to him in 1944 that Germany had ceased development of an atomic bomb SirJoseph RotblatKCMG CBE FRSLos Alamos badge photograph 1944BornJozef Rotblat 1908 11 04 4 November 1908Warsaw Congress PolandDied31 August 2005 2005 08 31 aged 96 London United KingdomNationalityPolish BritishAlma materFree University of Poland University of Warsaw University of Liverpool University of LondonKnown forCampaigning for nuclear disarmament Manhattan Project Hippocratic Oath for scientistsSpouseTola GrynAwardsKnight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George 1998 Nobel Peace Prize 1995 Fellow of the Royal Society 1995 Albert Einstein Peace Prize 1992 Commander of the Order of the British Empire 1965 Scientific careerFieldsPhysicsInstitutionsScientific Society of Warsaw Free University of Poland University of Warsaw University of Liverpool Los Alamos National Laboratory St Bartholomew s Hospital University of London University of EdinburghThesisDetermination of a number of neutrons emitted from a source 1950 Doctoral advisorJames ChadwickRotblat s voice source source source from the BBC Radio 4 programme Great Lives broadcast 13 January 2012 1 His work on nuclear fallout was a major contribution toward the ratification of the 1963 Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty A signatory of the 1955 Russell Einstein Manifesto he was secretary general of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs from their founding until 1973 and shared with the Pugwash Conferences the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize for efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international affairs and in the longer run to eliminate such arms 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and early physics work 3 Manhattan Project 4 Nuclear fallout 5 Peace work 6 Later life 7 Awards and honours 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editJozef Rotblat was born on 4 November 1908 to a Polish Jewish family in Warsaw 4 then part of the Russian ruled Kingdom of Poland better known as Congress Poland 5 He was one of seven children two of whom died in infancy 6 His father Zygmunt Rotblat built up and ran a nationwide horse drawn carriage business owned land and bred horses Jozef s early years were spent in what was a prosperous household but circumstances changed at the outbreak of World War I Borders were closed and the family s horses were requisitioned leading to the failure of the business and poverty for their family 5 Despite having a religious background by the age of ten he doubted the existence of God 7 and later became an agnostic 8 9 Rotblat s parents could not afford to send him to a gymnasium so Rotblat received his secondary education in a cheder taught by a local rabbi He then attended a technical school where he studied electrical engineering graduating with his diploma in 1923 in the newly established Republic of Poland After graduating Rotblat worked as an electrician in Warsaw but had an ambition to become a physicist 6 He sat the entrance examinations of the Free University of Poland in January 1929 and passed the physics one with ease but was less successful in writing a paper about the Commission of National Education a subject about which he knew nothing He was then interviewed by Ludwik Wertenstein pl the Dean of the Science Faculty Wertenstein had studied in Paris under Marie Curie and at the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge under Ernest Rutherford Wertenstein offered Rotblat a place 10 Rotblat earned a Master of Arts at the Free University in 1932 After he entered the University of Warsaw and became a Doctor of Physics in 1938 He held the position of Research Fellow in the Radiological Laboratory of the Scientific Society of Warsaw of which Wertenstein was the director and became assistant Director of the Atomic Physics Institute of the Free University of Poland in 1938 11 Marriage and early physics work editDuring this period Rotblat married a literature student Tola Gryn whom he had met at a student summer camp in 1930 4 12 Before the outbreak of World War II he conducted experiments that showed that in the fission process neutrons were emitted 13 In early 1939 he envisaged that a large number of fissions could occur and if this happened within a sufficiently short time then considerable amounts of energy could be released He went on to calculate that this process could occur in less than a microsecond and as a consequence would result in an explosion 14 15 In 1939 through Wertenstein s connections Rotblat was invited to study in Paris and at the University of Liverpool under James Chadwick winner of the 1932 Nobel Prize for discovering the neutron Chadwick was building a particle accelerator called a cyclotron to study fundamental nuclear reactions and Rotblat wanted to build a similar machine in Warsaw so he decided to join Chadwick in Liverpool He travelled to England alone because he could not afford to support his wife there 16 Before long Chadwick gave Rotblat a fellowship the Oliver Lodge Fellowship doubling his income and in that summer of 1939 the young Pole returned home intending to bring Tola back with him 17 When the time came to leave Warsaw in late August however she was ill following an operation for appendicitis and remained behind expecting to follow within days however the outbreak of war brought calamity 18 Tola was trapped and desperate efforts in the ensuing months to bring her out through Denmark with the help of Niels Bohr Belgium and finally Italy came to nothing as each country in turn was closed off by the war 19 He never saw her again she was murdered in the Holocaust at the Belzec concentration camp 20 This affected him deeply for the rest of his life and he never remarried 21 Manhattan Project editWhile still in Poland Rotblat had realised that nuclear fission might possibly be used to produce an atomic bomb He first thought that he should put the whole thing out of my mind 22 but he continued because he thought the only way to prevent Nazi Germany from using a nuclear bomb was if Britain had one to act as a deterrent He worked with Chadwick on Tube Alloys the British atomic bomb project 22 In February 1944 Rotblat joined the Los Alamos Laboratory as part of Chadwick s British Mission to the Manhattan Project 22 Although he was upset by the morality of the project he believed the allies needed to be able to threaten retaliation in case Germany developed the bomb 23 The usual condition for people to work on the Manhattan Project was that they had to become US citizens or British subjects Rotblat declined and the condition was waived 24 At Los Alamos he was befriended by Stan Ulam a fellow Polish Jewish scientist with whom he was able to converse in Polish Rotblat worked in Egon Bretscher s group investigating whether high energy gamma rays produced by nuclear fission would interfere with the nuclear chain reaction process and then with Robert R Wilson s cyclotron group 25 Rotblat continued to have strong reservations about the use of science to develop such a devastating weapon In 1985 he related that at a private dinner at the Chadwicks house at Los Alamos in March 1944 he was shocked to hear the director of the Manhattan Project Major General Leslie R Groves Jr say words to the effect that the real purpose in making the bomb was to subdue the Soviets Indeed Groves testified under oath at the 1954 hearing about J Robert Oppenheimer s security record that there was never from about two weeks from the time I took charge of this project any illusion on my part but that Russia was our enemy and that the project was conducted on that basis 26 27 Despite Groves testimony in response to a suggestion by Andrew Brown that Groves remark may have been made to test Rotblat s loyalty Barton Bernstein who had questioned the accuracy of Rotblat s memory commented in a letter to Brown It s an interesting responsible interpretation and cannot be dismissed though I m not prepared to embrace it 28 By the end of 1944 it was also apparent that Germany had abandoned the development of its own bomb in 1942 Rotblat then asked to leave the project on grounds of conscience and returned to Liverpool 23 Chadwick learned that the chief of security held a security dossier in which Rotblat was accused of intending to return to England so that he could be flown over Poland and parachute into Soviet territory to pass on the secrets of the atomic bomb He was also accused of visiting someone in Santa Fe and leaving them a blank cheque to finance the formation of a communist cell 22 Rotblat was able to show that much of the information within the dossier had been fabricated 22 In addition FBI records show that in 1950 Rotblat s friend in Santa Fe was tracked down in California and she flatly denied the story the cheque had never been cashed and had been left to pay for items not available in the UK during the war In 1985 Rotblat recounted how a box containing all my documents went missing on a train ride from Washington D C to New York as he was leaving the country 27 but the presence of large numbers of Rotblat s personal papers from Los Alamos now archived at the Churchill Archives Centre is totally at odds with Rotblat s account of events 29 30 Nuclear fallout editRotblat returned to Britain to become senior lecturer and acting director of research in nuclear physics at the University of Liverpool 11 He was naturalised as a British subject on 8 January 1946 31 Most of his family had survived the war With the help of a Polish man his brother in law Mieczyslaw Mietek Pokorny had created false Polish Catholic identities for Rotblat s sister Ewa and niece Halina Ewa taking advantage of the fact that she was an ash blonde who like Rotblat spoke fluent Polish as well as Yiddish smuggled the rest of the family out of the Warsaw Ghetto Mietek Rotblat s brother Mordecai Michael and Michael s wife Manya Rotblat s mother Scheindel and two Russian soldiers lived in a concealed bunker underneath a house near Otwock in which Ewa and Halina lived with a Polish family Displays of Polish anti Semitism that she witnessed during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising embittered Ewa towards Poland and she petitioned Rotblat to help the family emigrate to England He therefore now accepted Chadwick s offer of British citizenship so he could help them escape from Poland 32 They lived with him in London for some time before becoming established 33 Halina would go on to graduate from Somerville College Oxford and University College London and become an editor of the Dictionary of National Biography 34 Rotblat felt betrayed by the use of atomic weapons against Japan and gave a series of public lectures in which he called for a three year moratorium on all atomic research 22 Rotblat was determined that his research should have only peaceful ends and so became interested in the medical and biological uses of radiation In 1949 he became Professor of Physics at St Bartholomew s Hospital Barts London 35 36 a teaching hospital associated with the University of London He remained there for the rest of his career becoming a professor emeritus in 1976 37 He received his PhD from Liverpool in 1950 having written his thesis on the Determination of a number of neutrons emitted from a source 38 He also worked on several official bodies connected with nuclear physics and arranged the Atom Train a major travelling exhibition for schools on civil nuclear energy 27 At St Bartholomew s Rotblat worked on the effects of radiation on living organisms especially on ageing and fertility This led him to an interest in nuclear fallout especially strontium 90 and the safe limits of ionising radiation In 1955 he demonstrated that the contamination caused by the fallout after the Castle Bravo nuclear test at Bikini Atoll by the United States had been far greater than that stated officially Until then the official line had been that the growth in the strength of atomic bombs was not accompanied by an equivalent growth in radioactivity released Japanese scientists who had collected data from a fishing vessel the Lucky Dragon which had inadvertently been exposed to fallout disagreed with this Rotblat was able to deduce that the bomb had three stages and showed that the fission phase at the end of the explosion increased the amount of radioactivity by forty times His paper was taken up by the media and contributed to the public debate that resulted in the ending of atmospheric tests by the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 39 Peace work editRotblat believed that scientists should always be concerned with the ethical consequences of their work 40 He became one of the most prominent critics of the nuclear arms race was the youngest signatory of the Russell Einstein Manifesto in 1955 and chaired the press conference that launched it After the positive coverage of the manifesto Cyrus Eaton offered to fund the influential Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs an international organisation that brought together scholars and public figures to work toward reducing the danger of armed conflict and to seek solutions to global security threats particularly those related to nuclear warfare With Bertrand Russell and others Rotblat organised the first of these in 1957 and continued to work within their framework until his death In 1958 Rotblat joined the executive committee of the newly launched Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament CND Despite the Iron Curtain and the Cold War he advocated establishing links between scientists from the West and East For this reason the Pugwash conferences were viewed with suspicion Initially the British government thought them little more than Communist front gatherings 41 However he persuaded John Cockcroft a member of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority to suggest who might be invited to the 1958 conference He successfully resisted a subsequent attempt to take over the conferences 41 causing a Foreign Office official to write that the difficulty is to get Prof Rotblat to pay any attention to what we think He is no doubt jealous of his independence and scientific integrity and that securing a new organizer for the British delegation seems to be the first need but I do not know if there is any hope of this 41 By the early 1960s the Ministry of Defence thought that the Pugwash Conferences were now a very respectable organization and the Foreign Office stated that it had official blessing and that any breakthrough may well originate at such gatherings 41 The Pugwash Conferences are credited with laying the ground work for the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963 the Nonproliferation Treaty of 1968 the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty of 1972 the Biological Weapons Convention of 1972 and the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993 4 In parallel with the Pugwash Conferences he joined with Albert Einstein Robert Oppenheimer Bertrand Russell and other concerned scientists to found the World Academy of Art and Science which was proposed by them in the mid 1950s and formally constituted in 1960 42 He was one of the signatories of the agreement to convene a convention for drafting a world constitution 43 44 As a result for the first time in human history a World Constituent Assembly convened to draft and adopt a Constitution for the Federation of Earth 45 Later life editRotblat retired from St Bartholomew s in 1976 In 1975 and 1976 he was Montague Visiting Professor of International Relations at the University of Edinburgh 46 47 He believed that scientists have an individual moral responsibility and just as the Hippocratic Oath provides a code of conduct for physicians he thought that scientists should have their own code of moral conduct a Hippocratic Oath for scientists 40 During his tenure as president of the Pugwash conferences Rotblat nominated Israeli nuclear technician Mordechai Vanunu for the Nobel Peace Prize every year from 1988 to 2004 Vanunu had disclosed the extent of Israel s nuclear weapons programme and consequently spent 18 years in prison including more than 11 years in solitary confinement 48 Rotblat campaigned ceaselessly against nuclear weapons In an interview shortly before the 2004 US presidential election he expressed his belief that the Russell Einstein Manifesto still had great relevance today after 50 years particularly in connection with the election of a president in the United States 49 and above all with respect to the potential pre emptive use of nuclear weapons 50 Central to his view of the world were the words of the Russell Einstein Manifesto with which he concluded his acceptance lecture for the Nobel Prize in 1995 51 Above all remember your humanity 52 He also served as editor in chief of the journal Physics in Medicine and Biology from 1960 to 1972 11 He was the president of several institutions and professional associations and also a co founder and member of the governing board of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute as well as a member of the Advisory Committee on Medical Research of the World Health Organization 11 Rotblat was a programme advisor to the BAFTA award winning nuclear docudrama Threads produced in 1984 53 Rotblat suffered a stroke in 2004 and his health declined He died of septicaemia at the Royal Free Hospital in Camden London on 31 August 2005 6 Awards and honours editRotblat was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1965 New Year Honours 54 He won the Albert Einstein Peace Prize in 1992 and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society FRS in 1995 55 He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in the 1998 Birthday Honours for services to international understanding 56 His certificate of election to the Royal Society readHe made important contributions to nuclear physics both before and after working during the war on atomic energy problems at Liverpool and at Los Alamos This included observations on the angular distribution of protons from the d p reaction which led to an important tool for determining the spin and parity of nuclear levels He worked on the medical applications of nuclear physics and later on the biological effects of radiation His outstanding distinction is in his work for the Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs He was one of the founders of these conferences and for the past 37 years has been untiring in his support and enthusiasms sic for the conferences which have enabled scientists from all over the world and with opposing ideologies to talk objectively about the issues dividing them His untiring devotion to this cause and his inspiration have been vital for the development and continuing existence of the conferences 57 Rotblat shared with the Pugwash Conferences the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize for efforts toward nuclear disarmament 58 His citation read for efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international affairs and in the longer run to eliminate such arms 3 Towards the end of his life he was also elected honorary member of the International Association of Physics Students 59 and the Jamnalal Bajaj Foundation of India awarded him the Jamnalal Bajaj Award in 1999 60 He was an honorary editorial board member for Journal of Environment Peace published from the library of University of Toronto now from Noble International University edited by Professor Bob Ganguly and Professor Roger Hansell A plaque commemorating Joseph Rotblat unveiled in 2017 in the presence of Polish Ambassador Arkady Rzegocki can be found outside the offices of British Pugwash on the corner of Bury Place and Great Russell Street in London 61 See also editList of Poles List of Polish Nobel laureates List of Jewish Nobel laureatesNotes edit Joseph Rotblat Great Lives Series 26 Episode 6 13 January 2012 BBC Radio 4 Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2014 Manhattan Project People gt Scientists gt JOSEPH ROTBLAT www osti gov Retrieved 5 October 2022 a b The Nobel Peace Prize 1995 Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 a b c Noble Holcomb B 2 September 2005 Joseph Rotblat 96 Dies Resisted Nuclear Weapons The New York Times Archived from the original on 29 May 2015 Retrieved 3 June 2016 a b Brown 2012 pp 1 5 a b c Cathcart Brian 2004 Rotblat Sir Joseph 1908 2005 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 96004 Subscription or UK public library membership required Brown 2012 pp 5 6 Brown 2012 p 151 Rotblat amp Ikeda 2007 p 94 I have to admit however that there are really many things that I do not know I am not a particularly religious person and this is the reason for my agnosticism To be an agnostic simply means that I do not know and will keep seeking the answer for eternity This is my response to questions about religion Brown 2012 pp 7 9 a b c d Joseph Rotblat Biographical Curriculum Vitae Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Brown 2012 p 13 Rotblat J 20 May 1939 Emission of Neutrons accompanying the Fission of Uranium Nuclei Nature 143 470 852 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 852R doi 10 1038 143852a0 S2CID 4129149 Holdren J P 2005 Retrospective Joseph Rotblat 1908 2005 Science 310 5748 633 doi 10 1126 science 1121081 PMID 16254178 S2CID 26854983 Joseph Rotblat BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs Castaway 8 November 1998 BBC Archived from the original on 28 May 2011 Brown 2012 pp 12 14 Brown 2012 pp 23 24 Brown 2012 pp 25 27 Brown 2012 pp 32 33 Brown 2012 p 65 Underwood Martin 2011 Liverpool University 1939 43 Joseph Rotblat The bomb peace and his archive Archived from the original on 13 July 2011 Retrieved 13 October 2015 a b c d e f Abrams Irwin The 1995 Nobel Peace Prize For Joseph Rotblat and the Pugwash Conference on Science And World Affairs Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 2 March 2007 a b Milne S Hinde R 2005 Obituary Joseph Rotblat 1908 2005 Physicist who committed his life to the cause of nuclear disarmament Nature 437 7059 634 Bibcode 2005Natur 437 634M doi 10 1038 437634a PMID 16193034 S2CID 29764779 Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat The Daily Telegraph 2 September 2005 Archived from the original on 3 December 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Brown 2012 pp 47 49 United States Atomic Energy Commission and J Robert Oppenheimer 1971 In the Matter of J Robert Oppenheimer Cambridge MA MIT Press p 173 a b c Rotblat Joseph August 1985 Leaving the Bomb Project Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 41 7 16 19 Bibcode 1985BuAtS 41g 16R doi 10 1080 00963402 1985 11455991 Archived from the original on 10 January 2021 Retrieved 31 October 2020 Brown 2012 p 295 Underwood Martin 2011 Joseph Rotblat s Archive Some Anomalies and Difficulties PDF AIP History Newsletter 43 5 7 Underwood M C 2011 Joseph Rotblat the Bomb and Anomalies from His Archive Science and Engineering Ethics 19 2 487 90 doi 10 1007 s11948 011 9345 4 PMID 22190230 S2CID 32392242 No 37461 The London Gazette 8 February 1946 p 865 Brown 2012 pp 65 69 Brown 2012 p 97 Sand Katherine 13 August 2009 Obituary Halina Sand The Guardian Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Burrows H Gibson W Rotblat J 1950 Angular Distributions of Protons from the Reaction O16 d p O17 Physical Review 80 6 1095 Bibcode 1950PhRv 80Q1095B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 80 1095 Queen Mary University of London Notable Alumni and Staff Archived from the original on 22 December 2008 Retrieved 23 September 2007 Obituary Sir Joseph Rotblat The Guardian 2 September 2005 Archived from the original on 13 May 2019 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Rotblat Joseph 1950 Determination of a number of neutrons emitted from a source PhD thesis University of Liverpool ProQuest 301122892 Brown 2012 pp 107 118 a b Rotblat J 1999 A Hippocratic Oath for scientists Science 286 5444 1475 doi 10 1126 science 286 5444 1475 PMID 10610545 S2CID 4959172 a b c d Wittner Lawrence S 2005 The Political Rehabilitation of Jozef Rotblat Archived from the original on 3 March 2020 Retrieved 24 November 2016 History World Academy of Art and Science Archived from the original on 21 February 2017 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Letters from Thane Read asking Helen Keller to sign the World Constitution for world peace 1961 Helen Keller Archive American Foundation for the Blind Retrieved 1 July 2023 Letter from World Constitution Coordinating Committee to Helen enclosing current materials Helen Keller Archive American Foundation for the Blind Retrieved 3 July 2023 Preparing earth constitution Global Strategies amp Solutions The Encyclopedia of World Problems The Encyclopedia of World Problems Union of International Associations UIA Retrieved 15 July 2023 Joseph Rotblat Biographical Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 3 October 2013 Retrieved 8 October 2013 Sir Joseph Rotblat The Scotsman 5 September 2005 Archived from the original on 17 December 2013 Retrieved 8 October 2013 Brown 2012 pp 267 268 Interview TheCommunity com 2004 Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Remember Your Humanity Message from Nobel Laureate Sir Joseph Rotblat MEDACT Archived from the original on 3 November 2005 Nobel Prize lecture Archived from the original on 25 April 2006 Retrieved 19 May 2006 Rotblat J 1996 Remember your humanity Medicine and War 12 3 195 201 doi 10 1080 13623699608409284 Joseph Rotblat on IMDb com IMDb Archived from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 21 July 2018 No 43529 The London Gazette Supplement 1 January 1965 p 11 Hinde R A Finney J L 2007 Joseph Jozef Rotblat 4 November 1908 31 August 2005 Elected FRS 1995 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 53 309 doi 10 1098 rsbm 2007 0023 S2CID 74731514 No 55155 The London Gazette Supplement 15 June 1998 p 3 Library and Archive Catalogue Rotblat London The Royal Society Archived from the original on 17 December 2013 Joseph Rotblat Biographical Facts Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 List of IAPS Members International Association of Physics Students Archived from the original on 23 March 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2014 Prof Sir Joseph Rotblat 1999 Jamnalal Bajaj Award for Promoting Gandhian Values Outside India Jamnalal Bajaj Foundation Archived from the original on 24 November 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Sir Joseph Rotblat honoured by Polish Heritage Society plaque British Pugwash 18 November 2020 Retrieved 18 November 2020 References editBrown Andrew 2012 Keeper of the Nuclear Conscience The Life and Works of Joseph Rotblat Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958658 5 OCLC 963830214 Gorlikowski Marek 2018 Noblista z Nowolipek Jozefa Rotblata wojna o pokoj Krakow Znak ISBN 9788324055401 OCLC 1050817827 Rotblat Joseph Ikeda Daisaku 2007 A Quest for Global Peace Rotblat and Ikeda on War Ethics and the Nuclear Threat London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 278 3 OCLC 123195789 External links editThe Papers of Professor Sir Joseph Rotblat held at the Churchill Archives Centre 1989 Audio Interview with Joseph Rotblat by Martin Sherwin Voices of the Manhattan Project Dr Rotblat Or How I Learned to Start Worrying amp Fear the Bomb via Culture pl Annotated Bibliography for Jozef Rotblat Archived 13 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues The Strangest Dream a National Film Board of Canada film that tells Rotblat s life story Interview about the Manhattan Project for the WGBH TV series War and Peace in the Nuclear Age Series 1 video interviews recorded in 2002 with Sir Jozef Rotblat by the Vega Science Trust Series 2 video interview recorded in 2005 with Sir Jozef Rotblat by the Vega Science Trust Joseph Rotblat on Nobelprize org nbsp Op Ed The 50 Year Shadow by Jozef Rotblat The New York Times 17 May 2005 Jozef Rotblat Nobel Lecture Man of Peace Dies Scientist Who Turned Back on A bomb Project The Guardian 2 September 2005 Interview with Jozef Rotblat recorded in 2005 a few months before he died Jozef Rotblat A site dedicated to his life work and archive assembled by Dr Martin Underwood Listen to a life story oral history interview with Sir Joseph Rotblat recorded for National Life Stories Archived 25 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine at the British Library Appearances on C SPAN Dr Rotblat Or How I Learned to Start Worrying amp Fear the Bomb Portals nbsp History of science nbsp Politics nbsp Medicine nbsp Nuclear technology nbsp Physics nbsp Poland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Rotblat amp oldid 1216668191, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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