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Stanisław Ulam

Stanisław Marcin Ulam ([sta'ɲiswaf 'mart͡ɕin 'ulam]; 13 April 1909 – 13 May 1984) was a Polish-American mathematician and nuclear physicist. He participated in the Manhattan Project, originated the Teller–Ulam design of thermonuclear weapons, discovered the concept of the cellular automaton, invented the Monte Carlo method of computation, and suggested nuclear pulse propulsion. In pure and applied mathematics, he proved some theorems and proposed several conjectures.

Born into a wealthy Polish Jewish family, Ulam studied mathematics at the Lwów Polytechnic Institute, where he earned his PhD in 1933 under the supervision of Kazimierz Kuratowski and Włodzimierz Stożek.[1] In 1935, John von Neumann, whom Ulam had met in Warsaw, invited him to come to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, for a few months. From 1936 to 1939, he spent summers in Poland and academic years at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he worked to establish important results regarding ergodic theory. On 20 August 1939, he sailed for the United States for the last time with his 17-year-old brother Adam Ulam. He became an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1940, and a United States citizen in 1941.

In October 1943, he received an invitation from Hans Bethe to join the Manhattan Project at the secret Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico. There, he worked on the hydrodynamic calculations to predict the behavior of the explosive lenses that were needed by an implosion-type weapon. He was assigned to Edward Teller's group, where he worked on Teller's "Super" bomb for Teller and Enrico Fermi. After the war he left to become an associate professor at the University of Southern California, but returned to Los Alamos in 1946 to work on thermonuclear weapons. With the aid of a cadre of female "computers" he found that Teller's "Super" design was unworkable. In January 1951, Ulam and Teller came up with the Teller–Ulam design, which became the basis for all thermonuclear weapons.

Ulam considered the problem of nuclear propulsion of rockets, which was pursued by Project Rover, and proposed, as an alternative to Rover's nuclear thermal rocket, to harness small nuclear explosions for propulsion, which became Project Orion. With Fermi, John Pasta, and Mary Tsingou, Ulam studied the Fermi–Pasta–Ulam–Tsingou problem, which became the inspiration for the field of non-linear science. He is probably best known for realising that electronic computers made it practical to apply statistical methods to functions without known solutions, and as computers have developed, the Monte Carlo method has become a common and standard approach to many problems.

Poland edit

Ulam was born in Lemberg, Galicia, on 13 April 1909.[2][3][4] At this time, Galicia was in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which was known to Poles as the Austrian partition. In 1918, it became part of the newly restored Poland, the Second Polish Republic, and the city took its Polish name again, Lwów.[5]

The Ulams were a wealthy Polish Jewish family of bankers, industrialists, and other professionals. Ulam's immediate family was "well-to-do but hardly rich".[6] His father, Józef Ulam, was born in Lwów and was a lawyer,[5] and his mother, Anna (née Auerbach), was born in Stryj.[7] His uncle, Michał Ulam, was an architect, building contractor, and lumber industrialist.[8] From 1916 until 1918, Józef's family lived temporarily in Vienna.[9] After they returned, Lwów became the epicenter of the Polish–Ukrainian War, during which the city experienced a Ukrainian siege.[5]

 
The Scottish Café's building in Lviv, Ukraine now houses the Szkocka Restaurant & Bar (named for the original Scottish Café).

In 1919, Ulam entered Lwów Gymnasium Nr. VII, from which he graduated in 1927.[10] He then studied mathematics at the Lwów Polytechnic Institute. Under the supervision of Kazimierz Kuratowski, he received his Master of Arts degree in 1932, and became a Doctor of Science in 1933.[9][11] At the age of 20, in 1929, he published his first paper Concerning Function of Sets in the journal Fundamenta Mathematicae.[11] From 1931 until 1935, he traveled to and studied in Wilno (Vilnius), Vienna, Zurich, Paris, and Cambridge, England, where he met G. H. Hardy and Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.[12]

Along with Stanisław Mazur, Mark Kac, Włodzimierz Stożek, Kuratowski, and others, Ulam was a member of the Lwów School of Mathematics. Its founders were Hugo Steinhaus and Stefan Banach, who were professors at the Jan Kazimierz University. Mathematicians of this "school" met for long hours at the Scottish Café, where the problems they discussed were collected in the Scottish Book, a thick notebook provided by Banach's wife. Ulam was a major contributor to the book. Of the 193 problems recorded between 1935 and 1941, he contributed 40 problems as a single author, another 11 with Banach and Mazur, and an additional 15 with others. In 1957, he received from Steinhaus a copy of the book, which had survived the war, and translated it into English.[13] In 1981, Ulam's friend R. Daniel Mauldin published an expanded and annotated version.[14]

Move to the United States edit

In 1935, John von Neumann, whom Ulam had met in Warsaw, invited him to come to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, for a few months. In December of that year, Ulam sailed to the US. At Princeton, he went to lectures and seminars, where he heard Oswald Veblen, James Alexander, and Albert Einstein. During a tea party at von Neumann's house, he encountered G. D. Birkhoff, who suggested that he apply for a position with the Harvard Society of Fellows.[9] Following up on Birkhoff's suggestion, Ulam spent summers in Poland and academic years at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts from 1936 to 1939, where he worked with John C. Oxtoby to establish results regarding ergodic theory. These appeared in Annals of Mathematics in 1941.[10][15] In 1938, Stanislaw's mother Anna hanna Ulam (maiden name Auerbach) died of cancer.

On 20 August 1939, in Gdynia, Józef Ulam, along with his brother Szymon, put his two sons, Stanislaw and 17 year old Adam, on a ship headed for the US.[9] Eleven days later, the Germans invaded Poland. Within two months, the Germans completed their occupation of western Poland, and the Soviets invaded and occupied eastern Poland. Within two years, Józef Ulam and the rest of his family, including Stanislaw's sister Stefania Ulam, were victims of the Holocaust, Hugo Steinhaus was in hiding, Kazimierz Kuratowski was lecturing at the underground university in Warsaw, Włodzimierz Stożek and his two sons had been killed in the massacre of Lwów professors, and the last problem had been recorded in the Scottish Book. Stefan Banach survived the Nazi occupation by feeding lice at Rudolf Weigl's typhus research institute. In 1963, Adam Ulam, who had become an eminent kremlinologist at Harvard,[16] received a letter from George Volsky,[17] who hid in Józef Ulam's house after deserting from the Polish army. This reminiscence gave a chilling account of Lwów's chaotic scenes in late 1939.[18] In later life Ulam described himself as "an agnostic. Sometimes I muse deeply on the forces that are for me invisible. When I am almost close to the idea of God, I feel immediately estranged by the horrors of this world, which he seems to tolerate".[19]

In 1940, after being recommended by Birkhoff, Ulam became an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Here, he became a United States citizen in 1941.[9] That year, he married Françoise Aron.[10] She had been a French exchange student at Mount Holyoke College, whom he met in Cambridge. They had one daughter, Claire. In Madison, Ulam met his friend and colleague C. J. Everett, with whom he collaborated on a number of papers.[20]

Manhattan Project edit

 
Ulam's ID badge photo from Los Alamos National Laboratory

In early 1943, Ulam asked von Neumann to find him a war job. In October, he received an invitation to join an unidentified project near Santa Fe, New Mexico.[9] The letter was signed by Hans Bethe, who had been appointed as leader of the theoretical division of Los Alamos National Laboratory by Robert Oppenheimer, its scientific director.[21] Knowing nothing of the area, he borrowed a New Mexico guide book. On the checkout card, he found the names of his Wisconsin colleagues, Joan Hinton, David Frisch, and Joseph McKibben, all of whom had mysteriously disappeared.[9] This was Ulam's introduction to the Manhattan Project, which was the US's wartime effort to create the atomic bomb.[22]

Hydrodynamical calculations of implosion edit

A few weeks after Ulam reached Los Alamos in February 1944, the project experienced a crisis. In April, Emilio Segrè discovered that plutonium made in reactors would not work in a gun-type plutonium weapon like the "Thin Man", which was being developed in parallel with a uranium weapon, the "Little Boy" that was dropped on Hiroshima. This problem threatened to waste an enormous investment in new reactors at the Hanford site and to make slow uranium isotope separation the only way to prepare fissile material suitable for use in bombs. To respond, Oppenheimer implemented, in August, a sweeping reorganization of the laboratory to focus on development of an implosion-type weapon and appointed George Kistiakowsky head of the implosion department. He was a professor at Harvard and an expert on precise use of explosives.[23]

The basic concept of implosion is to use chemical explosives to crush a chunk of fissile material into a critical mass, where neutron multiplication leads to a nuclear chain reaction, releasing a large amount of energy. Cylindrical implosive configurations had been studied by Seth Neddermeyer, but von Neumann, who had experience with shaped charges used in armor-piercing ammunition, was a vocal advocate of spherical implosion driven by explosive lenses. He realized that the symmetry and speed with which implosion compressed the plutonium were critical issues,[23] and enlisted Ulam to help design lens configurations that would provide nearly spherical implosion. Within an implosion, because of enormous pressures and high temperatures, solid materials behave much like fluids. This meant that hydrodynamical calculations were needed to predict and minimize asymmetries that would spoil a nuclear detonation. Of these calculations, Ulam said:

The hydrodynamical problem was simply stated, but very difficult to calculate – not only in detail, but even in order of magnitude. In this discussion, I stressed pure pragmatism and the necessity to get a heuristic survey of the problem by simple-minded brute force, rather than by massive numerical work.[9]

Nevertheless, with the primitive facilities available at the time, Ulam and von Neumann did carry out numerical computations that led to a satisfactory design. This motivated their advocacy of a powerful computational capability at Los Alamos, which began during the war years,[24] continued through the cold war, and still exists.[25] Otto Frisch remembered Ulam as "a brilliant Polish topologist with a charming French wife. At once he told me that he was a pure mathematician who had sunk so low that his latest paper actually contained numbers with decimal points!"[26]

Statistics of branching and multiplicative processes edit

Even the inherent statistical fluctuations of neutron multiplication within a chain reaction have implications with regard to implosion speed and symmetry. In November 1944, David Hawkins[27] and Ulam addressed this problem in a report entitled "Theory of Multiplicative Processes".[28] This report, which invokes probability-generating functions, is also an early entry in the extensive literature on statistics of branching and multiplicative processes. In 1948, its scope was extended by Ulam and Everett.[29]

Early in the Manhattan project, Enrico Fermi's attention was focused on the use of reactors to produce plutonium. In September 1944, he arrived at Los Alamos, shortly after breathing life into the first Hanford reactor, which had been poisoned by a xenon isotope.[30] Soon after Fermi's arrival, Teller's "Super" bomb group, of which Ulam was a part, was transferred to a new division headed by Fermi.[31] Fermi and Ulam formed a relationship that became very fruitful after the war.[32]

Post war Los Alamos edit

In September 1945, Ulam left Los Alamos to become an associate professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. In January 1946, he suffered an acute attack of encephalitis, which put his life in danger, but which was alleviated by emergency brain surgery. During his recuperation, many friends visited, including Nicholas Metropolis from Los Alamos and the famous mathematician Paul Erdős,[33] who remarked: "Stan, you are just like before."[9] This was encouraging, because Ulam was concerned about the state of his mental faculties, for he had lost the ability to speak during the crisis. Another friend, Gian-Carlo Rota, asserted in a 1987 article that the attack changed Ulam's personality: afterwards, he turned from rigorous pure mathematics to more speculative conjectures concerning the application of mathematics to physics and biology; Rota also cites Ulam's former collaborator Paul Stein as noting that Ulam was sloppier in his clothing afterwards, and John Oxtoby as noting that Ulam before the encephalitis could work for hours on end doing calculations, while when Rota worked with him, was reluctant to solve even a quadratic equation.[34] This assertion was not accepted by Françoise Aron Ulam.[35]

By late April 1946, Ulam had recovered enough to attend a secret conference at Los Alamos to discuss thermonuclear weapons. Those in attendance included Ulam, von Neumann, Metropolis, Teller, Stan Frankel, and others. Throughout his participation in the Manhattan Project, Teller's efforts had been directed toward the development of a "super" weapon based on nuclear fusion, rather than toward development of a practical fission bomb. After extensive discussion, the participants reached a consensus that his ideas were worthy of further exploration. A few weeks later, Ulam received an offer of a position at Los Alamos from Metropolis and Robert D. Richtmyer, the new head of its theoretical division, at a higher salary, and the Ulams returned to Los Alamos.[36]

Monte Carlo method edit

 
Stan Ulam holding the FERMIAC

Late in the war, under the sponsorship of von Neumann, Frankel and Metropolis began to carry out calculations on the first general-purpose electronic computer, the ENIAC at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland. Shortly after returning to Los Alamos, Ulam participated in a review of results from these calculations.[37] Earlier, while playing solitaire during his recovery from surgery, Ulam had thought about playing hundreds of games to estimate statistically the probability of a successful outcome.[38] With ENIAC in mind, he realized that the availability of computers made such statistical methods very practical. John von Neumann immediately saw the significance of this insight. In March 1947 he proposed a statistical approach to the problem of neutron diffusion in fissionable material.[39] Because Ulam had often mentioned his uncle, Michał Ulam, "who just had to go to Monte Carlo" to gamble, Metropolis dubbed the statistical approach "The Monte Carlo method".[37] Metropolis and Ulam published the first unclassified paper on the Monte Carlo method in 1949.[40]

Fermi, learning of Ulam's breakthrough, devised an analog computer known as the Monte Carlo trolley, later dubbed the FERMIAC. The device performed a mechanical simulation of random diffusion of neutrons. As computers improved in speed and programmability, these methods became more useful. In particular, many Monte Carlo calculations carried out on modern massively parallel supercomputers are embarrassingly parallel applications, whose results can be very accurate.[25]

Teller–Ulam design edit

On 29 August 1949, the Soviet Union tested its first fission bomb, the RDS-1. Created under the supervision of Lavrentiy Beria, who sought to duplicate the US effort, this weapon was nearly identical to Fat Man, for its design was based on information provided by spies Klaus Fuchs, Theodore Hall, and David Greenglass. In response, on 31 January 1950, President Harry S. Truman announced a crash program to develop a fusion bomb.[41]

To advocate an aggressive development program, Ernest Lawrence and Luis Alvarez came to Los Alamos, where they conferred with Norris Bradbury, the laboratory director, and with George Gamow, Edward Teller, and Ulam. Soon, these three became members of a short-lived committee appointed by Bradbury to study the problem, with Teller as chairman.[9] At this time, research on the use of a fission weapon to create a fusion reaction had been ongoing since 1942, but the design was still essentially the one originally proposed by Teller. His concept was to put tritium and/or deuterium in close proximity to a fission bomb, with the hope that the heat and intense flux of neutrons released when the bomb exploded, would ignite a self-sustaining fusion reaction. Reactions of these isotopes of hydrogen are of interest because the energy per unit mass of fuel released by their fusion is much larger than that from fission of heavy nuclei.[42]

 
Ivy Mike, the first full test of the Teller–Ulam design (a staged fusion bomb), with a yield of 10.4 megatons on 1 November 1952

Because the results of calculations based on Teller's concept were discouraging, many scientists believed it could not lead to a successful weapon, while others had moral and economic grounds for not proceeding. Consequently, several senior people of the Manhattan Project opposed development, including Bethe and Oppenheimer.[43] To clarify the situation, Ulam and von Neumann resolved to do new calculations to determine whether Teller's approach was feasible. To carry out these studies, von Neumann decided to use electronic computers: ENIAC at Aberdeen, a new computer, MANIAC, at Princeton, and its twin, which was under construction at Los Alamos. Ulam enlisted Everett to follow a completely different approach, one guided by physical intuition. Françoise Ulam was one of[44] a cadre of women "computers" who carried out laborious and extensive computations of thermonuclear scenarios on mechanical calculators, supplemented and confirmed by Everett's slide rule. Ulam and Fermi collaborated on further analysis of these scenarios. The results showed that, in workable configurations, a thermonuclear reaction would not ignite, and if ignited, it would not be self-sustaining. Ulam had used his expertise in combinatorics to analyze the chain reaction in deuterium, which was much more complicated than the ones in uranium and plutonium, and he concluded that no self-sustaining chain reaction would take place at the (low) densities that Teller was considering.[45] In late 1950, these conclusions were confirmed by von Neumann's results.[35][46]

In January 1951, Ulam had another idea: to channel the mechanical shock of a nuclear explosion so as to compress the fusion fuel. On the recommendation of his wife,[35] Ulam discussed this idea with Bradbury and Mark before he told Teller about it.[47] Almost immediately, Teller saw its merit, but noted that soft X-rays from the fission bomb would compress the thermonuclear fuel more strongly than mechanical shock and suggested ways to enhance this effect. On 9 March 1951, Teller and Ulam submitted a joint report describing these innovations.[48] A few weeks later, Teller suggested placing a fissile rod or cylinder at the center of the fusion fuel. The detonation of this "spark plug"[49] would help to initiate and enhance the fusion reaction. The design based on these ideas, called staged radiation implosion, has become the standard way to build thermonuclear weapons. It is often described as the "Teller–Ulam design".[50]

 
The Sausage device of Mike nuclear test (yield 10.4 Mt) on Enewetak Atoll. The test was part of the Operation Ivy. The Sausage was the first true H-Bomb ever tested, meaning the first thermonuclear device built upon the Teller-Ulam principles of staged radiation implosion.

In September 1951, after a series of differences with Bradbury and other scientists, Teller resigned from Los Alamos, and returned to the University of Chicago.[51] At about the same time, Ulam went on leave as a visiting professor at Harvard for a semester.[52] Although Teller and Ulam submitted a joint report on their design[48] and jointly applied for a patent on it,[22] they soon became involved in a dispute over who deserved credit.[47] After the war, Bethe returned to Cornell University, but he was deeply involved in the development of thermonuclear weapons as a consultant. In 1954, he wrote an article on the history of the H-bomb,[53] which presents his opinion that both men contributed very significantly to the breakthrough. This balanced view is shared by others who were involved, including Mark and Fermi, but Teller persistently attempted to downplay Ulam's role.[54] "After the H-bomb was made," Bethe recalled, "reporters started to call Teller the father of the H-bomb. For the sake of history, I think it is more precise to say that Ulam is the father, because he provided the seed, and Teller is the mother, because he remained with the child. As for me, I guess I am the midwife."[55]

With the basic fusion reactions confirmed, and with a feasible design in hand, there was nothing to prevent Los Alamos from testing a thermonuclear device. On 1 November 1952, the first thermonuclear explosion occurred when Ivy Mike was detonated on Enewetak Atoll, within the US Pacific Proving Grounds. This device, which used liquid deuterium as its fusion fuel, was immense and utterly unusable as a weapon. Nevertheless, its success validated the Teller–Ulam design, and stimulated intensive development of practical weapons.[52]

Fermi–Pasta–Ulam–Tsingou problem edit

When Ulam returned to Los Alamos, his attention turned away from weapon design and toward the use of computers to investigate problems in physics and mathematics. With John Pasta, who helped Metropolis to bring MANIAC on line in March 1952, he explored these ideas in a report "Heuristic Studies in Problems of Mathematical Physics on High Speed Computing Machines", which was submitted on 9 June 1953. It treated several problems that cannot be addressed within the framework of traditional analytic methods: billowing of fluids, rotational motion in gravitating systems, magnetic lines of force, and hydrodynamic instabilities.[56]

Soon, Pasta and Ulam became experienced with electronic computation on MANIAC, and by this time, Enrico Fermi had settled into a routine of spending academic years at the University of Chicago and summers at Los Alamos. During these summer visits, Pasta, Ulam, and Mary Tsingou, a programmer in the MANIAC group, joined him to study a variation of the classic problem of a string of masses held together by springs that exert forces linearly proportional to their displacement from equilibrium.[57] Fermi proposed to add to this force a nonlinear component, which could be chosen to be proportional to either the square or cube of the displacement, or to a more complicated "broken linear" function. This addition is the key element of the Fermi–Pasta–Ulam–Tsingou problem, which is often designated by the abbreviation FPUT.[58][59]

A classical spring system can be described in terms of vibrational modes, which are analogous to the harmonics that occur on a stretched violin string. If the system starts in a particular mode, vibrations in other modes do not develop. With the nonlinear component, Fermi expected energy in one mode to transfer gradually to other modes, and eventually, to be distributed equally among all modes. This is roughly what began to happen shortly after the system was initialized with all its energy in the lowest mode, but much later, essentially all the energy periodically reappeared in the lowest mode.[59] This behavior is very different from the expected equipartition of energy. It remained mysterious until 1965, when Kruskal and Zabusky showed that, after appropriate mathematical transformations, the system can be described by the Korteweg–de Vries equation, which is the prototype of nonlinear partial differential equations that have soliton solutions. This means that FPUT behavior can be understood in terms of solitons.[60]

Nuclear propulsion edit

 
An artist's conception of the NASA reference design for the Project Orion spacecraft powered by nuclear propulsion

Starting in 1955, Ulam and Frederick Reines considered nuclear propulsion of aircraft and rockets.[61] This is an attractive possibility, because the nuclear energy per unit mass of fuel is a million times greater than that available from chemicals. From 1955 to 1972, their ideas were pursued during Project Rover, which explored the use of nuclear reactors to power rockets.[62] In response to a question by Senator John O. Pastore at a congressional committee hearing on "Outer Space Propulsion by Nuclear Energy", on January 22, 1958, Ulam replied that "the future as a whole of mankind is to some extent involved inexorably now with going outside the globe."[63]

Ulam and C. J. Everett also proposed, in contrast to Rover's continuous heating of rocket exhaust, to harness small nuclear explosions for propulsion.[64] Project Orion was a study of this idea. It began in 1958 and ended in 1965, after the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of 1963 banned nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere and in space.[65] Work on this project was spearheaded by physicist Freeman Dyson, who commented on the decision to end Orion in his article, "Death of a Project".[66]

Bradbury appointed Ulam and John H. Manley as research advisors to the laboratory director in 1957. These newly created positions were on the same administrative level as division leaders, and Ulam held his until he retired from Los Alamos. In this capacity, he was able to influence and guide programs in many divisions: theoretical, physics, chemistry, metallurgy, weapons, health, Rover, and others.[62]

In addition to these activities, Ulam continued to publish technical reports and research papers. One of these introduced the Fermi–Ulam model, an extension of Fermi's theory of the acceleration of cosmic rays.[67] Another, with Paul Stein and Mary Tsingou, titled "Quadratic Transformations", was an early investigation of chaos theory and is considered the first published use of the phrase "chaotic behavior".[68][69]

Return to academia edit

 
When the positive integers are arrayed along the Ulam spiral, prime numbers, represented by dots, tend to collect along diagonal lines.

During his years at Los Alamos, Ulam was a visiting professor at Harvard from 1951 to 1952, MIT from 1956 to 1957, the University of California, San Diego, in 1963, and the University of Colorado at Boulder from 1961 to 1962 and 1965 to 1967. In 1967, the last of these positions became permanent, when Ulam was appointed Professor and Chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Colorado. He kept a residence in Santa Fe, which made it convenient to spend summers at Los Alamos as a consultant.[70] He was an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the United States National Academy of Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society.[71][72][73]

In Colorado, where he rejoined his friends Gamow, Richtmyer, and Hawkins, Ulam's research interests turned toward biology. In 1968, recognizing this emphasis, the University of Colorado School of Medicine appointed Ulam as Professor of Biomathematics, and he held this position until his death. With his Los Alamos colleague Robert Schrandt he published a report, "Some Elementary Attempts at Numerical Modeling of Problems Concerning Rates of Evolutionary Processes", which applied his earlier ideas on branching processes to evolution.[74] Another, report, with William Beyer, Temple F. Smith, and M. L. Stein, titled "Metrics in Biology", introduced new ideas about numerical taxonomy and evolutionary distances.[75]

When he retired from Colorado in 1975, Ulam began to spend winter semesters at the University of Florida, where he was a graduate research professor. In 1976, he was awarded the Commander's Cross with the Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta by the Polish government-in-exile in London.[76] Except for sabbaticals at the University of California, Davis from 1982 to 1983, and at Rockefeller University from 1980 to 1984,[70] this pattern of spending summers in Colorado and Los Alamos and winters in Florida continued until Ulam died of an apparent heart attack in Santa Fe on 13 May 1984.[3]Paul Erdős noted that "he died suddenly of heart failure, without fear or pain, while he could still prove and conjecture."[33] In 1987, Françoise Ulam deposited his papers with the American Philosophical Society Library in Philadelphia.[77] She continued to live in Santa Fe until she died in 2011, at the age of 93. Both Françoise and her husband were buried with her family in Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris.[78][79]

Challenge to economics edit

Alfred Marshall and his disciples dominated economic theory until the end of WWII. With the Cold War, the theory changed, emphasizing that a market economy was superior and the only sensible way. In Paul Samuelson's "Economics: An Introductory Analysis", 1948, Adam Smith's "invisible hand" was only a footnote. In later editions, it became the central theme. As Samuelson remembers, all this was challenged by Stanislaw Ulam:

[Y]ears ago... I was in the Society of Fellows at Harvard along with the mathematician Stanislaw Ulam. Ulam, who was to become an originator of the Monte Carlo method and co-discoverer of the hydrogen-bomb,... used to tease me by saying, 'Name me one proposition in all of the social sciences which is both true and non-trivial.' This was the test that I always failed. But now, some thirty years later ... an appropriate answer occurs to me: The Ricardian theory of comparative advantage ... That it is logically true need not be argued before a mathematician; that it is not trivial is attested by the thousands of important and intelligent men who have never been able to grasp the doctrine for themselves or to believe it after it was explained to them.[80][81]

Impact and legacy edit

Ulam participated in the creation of a hydrogen bomb as part of the Los Alamos Laboratory nuclear project. From the publication of his first paper as a student in 1929 until his death, Ulam was constantly writing on mathematics. The list of Ulam's publications includes more than 150 papers.[10] Topics represented by a significant number of papers are: set theory (including measurable cardinals and abstract measures), topology, functional analysis, transformation theory, ergodic theory, group theory, projective algebra, number theory, combinatorics, and graph theory.[82]

Notable results of this work are:

Ulam played pivotal role in the development of thermonuclear weapons. According to Françoise Ulam: "Stan would reassure me that, barring accidents, the H-bomb rendered nuclear war impossible."[35] In 1980, Ulam and his wife appeared in the television documentary The Day After Trinity.[83]

 
An animation demonstrating the lucky number sieve. The numbers in red are lucky numbers

The Monte Carlo method has become a ubiquitous and standard approach to computation, and the method has been applied to a vast number of scientific problems.[84] In addition to problems in physics and mathematics, the method has been applied to finance, social science,[85] environmental risk assessment,[86] linguistics,[87] radiation therapy,[88] and sports.[89]

The Fermi–Pasta–Ulam–Tsingou problem is credited not only as "the birth of experimental mathematics",[59] but also as inspiration for the vast field of Nonlinear Science. In his Lilienfeld Prize lecture, David K. Campbell noted this relationship and described how FPUT gave rise to ideas in chaos, solitons, and dynamical systems.[90] In 1980, Donald Kerr, laboratory director at Los Alamos, with the strong support of Ulam and Mark Kac,[91] founded the Center for Nonlinear Studies (CNLS).[92] In 1985, CNLS initiated the Stanislaw M. Ulam Distinguished Scholar program, which provides an annual award that enables a noted scientist to spend a year carrying out research at Los Alamos.[93]

The fiftieth anniversary of the original FPUT paper was the subject of the March 2005 issue of the journal Chaos,[94] and the topic of the 25th Annual International Conference of CNLS.[95] The University of Southern Mississippi and the University of Florida supported the Ulam Quarterly,[96] which was active from 1992 to 1996, and which was one of the first online mathematical journals.[97] Florida's Department of Mathematics has sponsored, since 1998, the annual Ulam Colloquium Lecture,[98] and in March 2009, the Ulam Centennial Conference.[99]

Ulam's work on non-Euclidean distance metrics in the context of molecular biology made a significant contribution to sequence analysis[100] and his contributions in theoretical biology are considered watersheds in the development of cellular automata theory, population biology, pattern recognition, and biometrics generally (David Sankoff, however, challenged conclusions of Walter by writing that Ulam had only modest influence on early development of sequence alignment methods.[101]). Colleagues noted that some of his greatest contributions were in clearly identifying problems to be solved and general techniques for solving them.[102]

In 1987, Los Alamos issued a special issue of its Science publication, which summarized his accomplishments,[103] and which appeared, in 1989, as the book From Cardinals to Chaos. Similarly, in 1990, the University of California Press issued a compilation of mathematical reports by Ulam and his Los Alamos collaborators: Analogies Between Analogies.[104] During his career, Ulam was awarded honorary degrees by the Universities of New Mexico, Wisconsin, and Pittsburgh.[9]

In 2021, German film director Thorsten Klein made a film adaptation of the book Adventures of a Mathematician about Ulam's life.

Ulam is the grandfather of Rebecca Weiner, the New York Police Department’s deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism.[105][106]

Bibliography edit

  • Kac, Mark; Ulam, Stanisław (1968). Mathematics and Logic: Retrospect and Prospects. New York: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-486-67085-0. OCLC 24847821.
  • Ulam, Stanisław (1974). Beyer, W. A.; Mycielski and, J.; Rota, G.-C. (eds.). Sets, Numbers, and Universes: selected works. Mathematicians of Our Time. Vol. 9. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.-London. ISBN 978-0-262-02108-1. MR 0441664.
  • Ulam, Stanisław (1960). A Collection of Mathematical Problems. New York: Interscience Publishers. OCLC 526673.
  • Ulam, Stanisław (1983). Adventures of a Mathematician. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-684-14391-0. OCLC 1528346. (autobiography).
  • Ulam, Stanisław (1986). Science, Computers, and People: From the Tree of Mathematics. Boston: Birkhauser. ISBN 978-3-7643-3276-1. OCLC 11260216.
  • Ulam, Stanisław; Ulam, Françoise (1990). Analogies Between Analogies: The Mathematical Reports of S.M. Ulam and his Los Alamos Collaborators. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05290-1. OCLC 20318499.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mathematics Genealogy Project: Stanisław Marcin Ulam". Mathematics Genealogy Project. Retrieved 2022-05-17.
  2. ^ Chartrand, Gary; Zhang, Ping (2013-05-20). A First Course in Graph Theory. Courier Corporation. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-486-29730-9.
  3. ^ a b Sullivan, Walter (15 May 1984). "Stanislaw Ulam, Theorist on Hydrogen Bomb". New York Times. Retrieved 30 May 2013.
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External links edit

  • 1979 Audio Interview with Stanislaus Ulam by Martin Sherwin Voices of the Manhattan Project
  • 1965 Audio Interview with Stanislaus Ulam by Richard Rhodes Voices of the Manhattan Project
  • "Publications of Stanislaw M. Ulam" (PDF). Los Alamos Science (Special Issue): 313. 1987. ISSN 0273-7116. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  • Von Neumann: The Interaction of Mathematics and Computing on YouTube – 1976 lecture on The First International Research Conference on the History of Computing.

stanisław, ulam, stanisław, marcin, ulam, ɲiswaf, mart, ɕin, ulam, april, 1909, 1984, polish, american, mathematician, nuclear, physicist, participated, manhattan, project, originated, teller, ulam, design, thermonuclear, weapons, discovered, concept, cellular. Stanislaw Marcin Ulam sta ɲiswaf mart ɕin ulam 13 April 1909 13 May 1984 was a Polish American mathematician and nuclear physicist He participated in the Manhattan Project originated the Teller Ulam design of thermonuclear weapons discovered the concept of the cellular automaton invented the Monte Carlo method of computation and suggested nuclear pulse propulsion In pure and applied mathematics he proved some theorems and proposed several conjectures Stanislaw UlamUlam at Los AlamosBornStanislaw Marcin Ulam 1909 04 13 13 April 1909Lemberg Austria Hungary now Lviv Ukraine Died13 May 1984 1984 05 13 aged 75 Santa Fe New Mexico U S CitizenshipPoland United States naturalized in 1941 EducationLwow Polytechnic InstituteSecond Polish RepublicKnown forTeller Ulam designMonte Carlo methodFermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problemNuclear pulse propulsionScientific careerFieldsMathematicsInstitutionsInstitute for Advanced StudyHarvard UniversityUniversity of WisconsinLos Alamos National LaboratoryUniversity of ColoradoUniversity of FloridaDoctoral advisorKazimierz KuratowskiWlodzimierz StozekDoctoral studentsPaul KellyBorn into a wealthy Polish Jewish family Ulam studied mathematics at the Lwow Polytechnic Institute where he earned his PhD in 1933 under the supervision of Kazimierz Kuratowski and Wlodzimierz Stozek 1 In 1935 John von Neumann whom Ulam had met in Warsaw invited him to come to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey for a few months From 1936 to 1939 he spent summers in Poland and academic years at Harvard University in Cambridge Massachusetts where he worked to establish important results regarding ergodic theory On 20 August 1939 he sailed for the United States for the last time with his 17 year old brother Adam Ulam He became an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin Madison in 1940 and a United States citizen in 1941 In October 1943 he received an invitation from Hans Bethe to join the Manhattan Project at the secret Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico There he worked on the hydrodynamic calculations to predict the behavior of the explosive lenses that were needed by an implosion type weapon He was assigned to Edward Teller s group where he worked on Teller s Super bomb for Teller and Enrico Fermi After the war he left to become an associate professor at the University of Southern California but returned to Los Alamos in 1946 to work on thermonuclear weapons With the aid of a cadre of female computers he found that Teller s Super design was unworkable In January 1951 Ulam and Teller came up with the Teller Ulam design which became the basis for all thermonuclear weapons Ulam considered the problem of nuclear propulsion of rockets which was pursued by Project Rover and proposed as an alternative to Rover s nuclear thermal rocket to harness small nuclear explosions for propulsion which became Project Orion With Fermi John Pasta and Mary Tsingou Ulam studied the Fermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problem which became the inspiration for the field of non linear science He is probably best known for realising that electronic computers made it practical to apply statistical methods to functions without known solutions and as computers have developed the Monte Carlo method has become a common and standard approach to many problems Contents 1 Poland 2 Move to the United States 3 Manhattan Project 3 1 Hydrodynamical calculations of implosion 3 2 Statistics of branching and multiplicative processes 4 Post war Los Alamos 4 1 Monte Carlo method 4 2 Teller Ulam design 4 3 Fermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problem 4 4 Nuclear propulsion 5 Return to academia 6 Challenge to economics 7 Impact and legacy 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksPoland editUlam was born in Lemberg Galicia on 13 April 1909 2 3 4 At this time Galicia was in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria of the Austro Hungarian Empire which was known to Poles as the Austrian partition In 1918 it became part of the newly restored Poland the Second Polish Republic and the city took its Polish name again Lwow 5 The Ulams were a wealthy Polish Jewish family of bankers industrialists and other professionals Ulam s immediate family was well to do but hardly rich 6 His father Jozef Ulam was born in Lwow and was a lawyer 5 and his mother Anna nee Auerbach was born in Stryj 7 His uncle Michal Ulam was an architect building contractor and lumber industrialist 8 From 1916 until 1918 Jozef s family lived temporarily in Vienna 9 After they returned Lwow became the epicenter of the Polish Ukrainian War during which the city experienced a Ukrainian siege 5 nbsp The Scottish Cafe s building in Lviv Ukraine now houses the Szkocka Restaurant amp Bar named for the original Scottish Cafe In 1919 Ulam entered Lwow Gymnasium Nr VII from which he graduated in 1927 10 He then studied mathematics at the Lwow Polytechnic Institute Under the supervision of Kazimierz Kuratowski he received his Master of Arts degree in 1932 and became a Doctor of Science in 1933 9 11 At the age of 20 in 1929 he published his first paper Concerning Function of Sets in the journal Fundamenta Mathematicae 11 From 1931 until 1935 he traveled to and studied in Wilno Vilnius Vienna Zurich Paris and Cambridge England where he met G H Hardy and Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar 12 Along with Stanislaw Mazur Mark Kac Wlodzimierz Stozek Kuratowski and others Ulam was a member of the Lwow School of Mathematics Its founders were Hugo Steinhaus and Stefan Banach who were professors at the Jan Kazimierz University Mathematicians of this school met for long hours at the Scottish Cafe where the problems they discussed were collected in the Scottish Book a thick notebook provided by Banach s wife Ulam was a major contributor to the book Of the 193 problems recorded between 1935 and 1941 he contributed 40 problems as a single author another 11 with Banach and Mazur and an additional 15 with others In 1957 he received from Steinhaus a copy of the book which had survived the war and translated it into English 13 In 1981 Ulam s friend R Daniel Mauldin published an expanded and annotated version 14 Move to the United States editIn 1935 John von Neumann whom Ulam had met in Warsaw invited him to come to the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey for a few months In December of that year Ulam sailed to the US At Princeton he went to lectures and seminars where he heard Oswald Veblen James Alexander and Albert Einstein During a tea party at von Neumann s house he encountered G D Birkhoff who suggested that he apply for a position with the Harvard Society of Fellows 9 Following up on Birkhoff s suggestion Ulam spent summers in Poland and academic years at Harvard University in Cambridge Massachusetts from 1936 to 1939 where he worked with John C Oxtoby to establish results regarding ergodic theory These appeared in Annals of Mathematics in 1941 10 15 In 1938 Stanislaw s mother Anna hanna Ulam maiden name Auerbach died of cancer On 20 August 1939 in Gdynia Jozef Ulam along with his brother Szymon put his two sons Stanislaw and 17 year old Adam on a ship headed for the US 9 Eleven days later the Germans invaded Poland Within two months the Germans completed their occupation of western Poland and the Soviets invaded and occupied eastern Poland Within two years Jozef Ulam and the rest of his family including Stanislaw s sister Stefania Ulam were victims of the Holocaust Hugo Steinhaus was in hiding Kazimierz Kuratowski was lecturing at the underground university in Warsaw Wlodzimierz Stozek and his two sons had been killed in the massacre of Lwow professors and the last problem had been recorded in the Scottish Book Stefan Banach survived the Nazi occupation by feeding lice at Rudolf Weigl s typhus research institute In 1963 Adam Ulam who had become an eminent kremlinologist at Harvard 16 received a letter from George Volsky 17 who hid in Jozef Ulam s house after deserting from the Polish army This reminiscence gave a chilling account of Lwow s chaotic scenes in late 1939 18 In later life Ulam described himself as an agnostic Sometimes I muse deeply on the forces that are for me invisible When I am almost close to the idea of God I feel immediately estranged by the horrors of this world which he seems to tolerate 19 In 1940 after being recommended by Birkhoff Ulam became an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin Madison Here he became a United States citizen in 1941 9 That year he married Francoise Aron 10 She had been a French exchange student at Mount Holyoke College whom he met in Cambridge They had one daughter Claire In Madison Ulam met his friend and colleague C J Everett with whom he collaborated on a number of papers 20 Manhattan Project edit nbsp Ulam s ID badge photo from Los Alamos National LaboratoryIn early 1943 Ulam asked von Neumann to find him a war job In October he received an invitation to join an unidentified project near Santa Fe New Mexico 9 The letter was signed by Hans Bethe who had been appointed as leader of the theoretical division of Los Alamos National Laboratory by Robert Oppenheimer its scientific director 21 Knowing nothing of the area he borrowed a New Mexico guide book On the checkout card he found the names of his Wisconsin colleagues Joan Hinton David Frisch and Joseph McKibben all of whom had mysteriously disappeared 9 This was Ulam s introduction to the Manhattan Project which was the US s wartime effort to create the atomic bomb 22 Hydrodynamical calculations of implosion edit A few weeks after Ulam reached Los Alamos in February 1944 the project experienced a crisis In April Emilio Segre discovered that plutonium made in reactors would not work in a gun type plutonium weapon like the Thin Man which was being developed in parallel with a uranium weapon the Little Boy that was dropped on Hiroshima This problem threatened to waste an enormous investment in new reactors at the Hanford site and to make slow uranium isotope separation the only way to prepare fissile material suitable for use in bombs To respond Oppenheimer implemented in August a sweeping reorganization of the laboratory to focus on development of an implosion type weapon and appointed George Kistiakowsky head of the implosion department He was a professor at Harvard and an expert on precise use of explosives 23 The basic concept of implosion is to use chemical explosives to crush a chunk of fissile material into a critical mass where neutron multiplication leads to a nuclear chain reaction releasing a large amount of energy Cylindrical implosive configurations had been studied by Seth Neddermeyer but von Neumann who had experience with shaped charges used in armor piercing ammunition was a vocal advocate of spherical implosion driven by explosive lenses He realized that the symmetry and speed with which implosion compressed the plutonium were critical issues 23 and enlisted Ulam to help design lens configurations that would provide nearly spherical implosion Within an implosion because of enormous pressures and high temperatures solid materials behave much like fluids This meant that hydrodynamical calculations were needed to predict and minimize asymmetries that would spoil a nuclear detonation Of these calculations Ulam said The hydrodynamical problem was simply stated but very difficult to calculate not only in detail but even in order of magnitude In this discussion I stressed pure pragmatism and the necessity to get a heuristic survey of the problem by simple minded brute force rather than by massive numerical work 9 Nevertheless with the primitive facilities available at the time Ulam and von Neumann did carry out numerical computations that led to a satisfactory design This motivated their advocacy of a powerful computational capability at Los Alamos which began during the war years 24 continued through the cold war and still exists 25 Otto Frisch remembered Ulam as a brilliant Polish topologist with a charming French wife At once he told me that he was a pure mathematician who had sunk so low that his latest paper actually contained numbers with decimal points 26 Statistics of branching and multiplicative processes edit Even the inherent statistical fluctuations of neutron multiplication within a chain reaction have implications with regard to implosion speed and symmetry In November 1944 David Hawkins 27 and Ulam addressed this problem in a report entitled Theory of Multiplicative Processes 28 This report which invokes probability generating functions is also an early entry in the extensive literature on statistics of branching and multiplicative processes In 1948 its scope was extended by Ulam and Everett 29 Early in the Manhattan project Enrico Fermi s attention was focused on the use of reactors to produce plutonium In September 1944 he arrived at Los Alamos shortly after breathing life into the first Hanford reactor which had been poisoned by a xenon isotope 30 Soon after Fermi s arrival Teller s Super bomb group of which Ulam was a part was transferred to a new division headed by Fermi 31 Fermi and Ulam formed a relationship that became very fruitful after the war 32 Post war Los Alamos editIn September 1945 Ulam left Los Alamos to become an associate professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles In January 1946 he suffered an acute attack of encephalitis which put his life in danger but which was alleviated by emergency brain surgery During his recuperation many friends visited including Nicholas Metropolis from Los Alamos and the famous mathematician Paul Erdos 33 who remarked Stan you are just like before 9 This was encouraging because Ulam was concerned about the state of his mental faculties for he had lost the ability to speak during the crisis Another friend Gian Carlo Rota asserted in a 1987 article that the attack changed Ulam s personality afterwards he turned from rigorous pure mathematics to more speculative conjectures concerning the application of mathematics to physics and biology Rota also cites Ulam s former collaborator Paul Stein as noting that Ulam was sloppier in his clothing afterwards and John Oxtoby as noting that Ulam before the encephalitis could work for hours on end doing calculations while when Rota worked with him was reluctant to solve even a quadratic equation 34 This assertion was not accepted by Francoise Aron Ulam 35 By late April 1946 Ulam had recovered enough to attend a secret conference at Los Alamos to discuss thermonuclear weapons Those in attendance included Ulam von Neumann Metropolis Teller Stan Frankel and others Throughout his participation in the Manhattan Project Teller s efforts had been directed toward the development of a super weapon based on nuclear fusion rather than toward development of a practical fission bomb After extensive discussion the participants reached a consensus that his ideas were worthy of further exploration A few weeks later Ulam received an offer of a position at Los Alamos from Metropolis and Robert D Richtmyer the new head of its theoretical division at a higher salary and the Ulams returned to Los Alamos 36 Monte Carlo method edit nbsp Stan Ulam holding the FERMIACLate in the war under the sponsorship of von Neumann Frankel and Metropolis began to carry out calculations on the first general purpose electronic computer the ENIAC at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland Shortly after returning to Los Alamos Ulam participated in a review of results from these calculations 37 Earlier while playing solitaire during his recovery from surgery Ulam had thought about playing hundreds of games to estimate statistically the probability of a successful outcome 38 With ENIAC in mind he realized that the availability of computers made such statistical methods very practical John von Neumann immediately saw the significance of this insight In March 1947 he proposed a statistical approach to the problem of neutron diffusion in fissionable material 39 Because Ulam had often mentioned his uncle Michal Ulam who just had to go to Monte Carlo to gamble Metropolis dubbed the statistical approach The Monte Carlo method 37 Metropolis and Ulam published the first unclassified paper on the Monte Carlo method in 1949 40 Fermi learning of Ulam s breakthrough devised an analog computer known as the Monte Carlo trolley later dubbed the FERMIAC The device performed a mechanical simulation of random diffusion of neutrons As computers improved in speed and programmability these methods became more useful In particular many Monte Carlo calculations carried out on modern massively parallel supercomputers are embarrassingly parallel applications whose results can be very accurate 25 Teller Ulam design edit On 29 August 1949 the Soviet Union tested its first fission bomb the RDS 1 Created under the supervision of Lavrentiy Beria who sought to duplicate the US effort this weapon was nearly identical to Fat Man for its design was based on information provided by spies Klaus Fuchs Theodore Hall and David Greenglass In response on 31 January 1950 President Harry S Truman announced a crash program to develop a fusion bomb 41 To advocate an aggressive development program Ernest Lawrence and Luis Alvarez came to Los Alamos where they conferred with Norris Bradbury the laboratory director and with George Gamow Edward Teller and Ulam Soon these three became members of a short lived committee appointed by Bradbury to study the problem with Teller as chairman 9 At this time research on the use of a fission weapon to create a fusion reaction had been ongoing since 1942 but the design was still essentially the one originally proposed by Teller His concept was to put tritium and or deuterium in close proximity to a fission bomb with the hope that the heat and intense flux of neutrons released when the bomb exploded would ignite a self sustaining fusion reaction Reactions of these isotopes of hydrogen are of interest because the energy per unit mass of fuel released by their fusion is much larger than that from fission of heavy nuclei 42 nbsp Ivy Mike the first full test of the Teller Ulam design a staged fusion bomb with a yield of 10 4 megatons on 1 November 1952Because the results of calculations based on Teller s concept were discouraging many scientists believed it could not lead to a successful weapon while others had moral and economic grounds for not proceeding Consequently several senior people of the Manhattan Project opposed development including Bethe and Oppenheimer 43 To clarify the situation Ulam and von Neumann resolved to do new calculations to determine whether Teller s approach was feasible To carry out these studies von Neumann decided to use electronic computers ENIAC at Aberdeen a new computer MANIAC at Princeton and its twin which was under construction at Los Alamos Ulam enlisted Everett to follow a completely different approach one guided by physical intuition Francoise Ulam was one of 44 a cadre of women computers who carried out laborious and extensive computations of thermonuclear scenarios on mechanical calculators supplemented and confirmed by Everett s slide rule Ulam and Fermi collaborated on further analysis of these scenarios The results showed that in workable configurations a thermonuclear reaction would not ignite and if ignited it would not be self sustaining Ulam had used his expertise in combinatorics to analyze the chain reaction in deuterium which was much more complicated than the ones in uranium and plutonium and he concluded that no self sustaining chain reaction would take place at the low densities that Teller was considering 45 In late 1950 these conclusions were confirmed by von Neumann s results 35 46 In January 1951 Ulam had another idea to channel the mechanical shock of a nuclear explosion so as to compress the fusion fuel On the recommendation of his wife 35 Ulam discussed this idea with Bradbury and Mark before he told Teller about it 47 Almost immediately Teller saw its merit but noted that soft X rays from the fission bomb would compress the thermonuclear fuel more strongly than mechanical shock and suggested ways to enhance this effect On 9 March 1951 Teller and Ulam submitted a joint report describing these innovations 48 A few weeks later Teller suggested placing a fissile rod or cylinder at the center of the fusion fuel The detonation of this spark plug 49 would help to initiate and enhance the fusion reaction The design based on these ideas called staged radiation implosion has become the standard way to build thermonuclear weapons It is often described as the Teller Ulam design 50 nbsp The Sausage device of Mike nuclear test yield 10 4 Mt on Enewetak Atoll The test was part of the Operation Ivy The Sausage was the first true H Bomb ever tested meaning the first thermonuclear device built upon the Teller Ulam principles of staged radiation implosion In September 1951 after a series of differences with Bradbury and other scientists Teller resigned from Los Alamos and returned to the University of Chicago 51 At about the same time Ulam went on leave as a visiting professor at Harvard for a semester 52 Although Teller and Ulam submitted a joint report on their design 48 and jointly applied for a patent on it 22 they soon became involved in a dispute over who deserved credit 47 After the war Bethe returned to Cornell University but he was deeply involved in the development of thermonuclear weapons as a consultant In 1954 he wrote an article on the history of the H bomb 53 which presents his opinion that both men contributed very significantly to the breakthrough This balanced view is shared by others who were involved including Mark and Fermi but Teller persistently attempted to downplay Ulam s role 54 After the H bomb was made Bethe recalled reporters started to call Teller the father of the H bomb For the sake of history I think it is more precise to say that Ulam is the father because he provided the seed and Teller is the mother because he remained with the child As for me I guess I am the midwife 55 With the basic fusion reactions confirmed and with a feasible design in hand there was nothing to prevent Los Alamos from testing a thermonuclear device On 1 November 1952 the first thermonuclear explosion occurred when Ivy Mike was detonated on Enewetak Atoll within the US Pacific Proving Grounds This device which used liquid deuterium as its fusion fuel was immense and utterly unusable as a weapon Nevertheless its success validated the Teller Ulam design and stimulated intensive development of practical weapons 52 Fermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problem edit Main article Fermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problem When Ulam returned to Los Alamos his attention turned away from weapon design and toward the use of computers to investigate problems in physics and mathematics With John Pasta who helped Metropolis to bring MANIAC on line in March 1952 he explored these ideas in a report Heuristic Studies in Problems of Mathematical Physics on High Speed Computing Machines which was submitted on 9 June 1953 It treated several problems that cannot be addressed within the framework of traditional analytic methods billowing of fluids rotational motion in gravitating systems magnetic lines of force and hydrodynamic instabilities 56 Soon Pasta and Ulam became experienced with electronic computation on MANIAC and by this time Enrico Fermi had settled into a routine of spending academic years at the University of Chicago and summers at Los Alamos During these summer visits Pasta Ulam and Mary Tsingou a programmer in the MANIAC group joined him to study a variation of the classic problem of a string of masses held together by springs that exert forces linearly proportional to their displacement from equilibrium 57 Fermi proposed to add to this force a nonlinear component which could be chosen to be proportional to either the square or cube of the displacement or to a more complicated broken linear function This addition is the key element of the Fermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problem which is often designated by the abbreviation FPUT 58 59 A classical spring system can be described in terms of vibrational modes which are analogous to the harmonics that occur on a stretched violin string If the system starts in a particular mode vibrations in other modes do not develop With the nonlinear component Fermi expected energy in one mode to transfer gradually to other modes and eventually to be distributed equally among all modes This is roughly what began to happen shortly after the system was initialized with all its energy in the lowest mode but much later essentially all the energy periodically reappeared in the lowest mode 59 This behavior is very different from the expected equipartition of energy It remained mysterious until 1965 when Kruskal and Zabusky showed that after appropriate mathematical transformations the system can be described by the Korteweg de Vries equation which is the prototype of nonlinear partial differential equations that have soliton solutions This means that FPUT behavior can be understood in terms of solitons 60 Nuclear propulsion edit nbsp An artist s conception of the NASA reference design for the Project Orion spacecraft powered by nuclear propulsionStarting in 1955 Ulam and Frederick Reines considered nuclear propulsion of aircraft and rockets 61 This is an attractive possibility because the nuclear energy per unit mass of fuel is a million times greater than that available from chemicals From 1955 to 1972 their ideas were pursued during Project Rover which explored the use of nuclear reactors to power rockets 62 In response to a question by Senator John O Pastore at a congressional committee hearing on Outer Space Propulsion by Nuclear Energy on January 22 1958 Ulam replied that the future as a whole of mankind is to some extent involved inexorably now with going outside the globe 63 Ulam and C J Everett also proposed in contrast to Rover s continuous heating of rocket exhaust to harness small nuclear explosions for propulsion 64 Project Orion was a study of this idea It began in 1958 and ended in 1965 after the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of 1963 banned nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere and in space 65 Work on this project was spearheaded by physicist Freeman Dyson who commented on the decision to end Orion in his article Death of a Project 66 Bradbury appointed Ulam and John H Manley as research advisors to the laboratory director in 1957 These newly created positions were on the same administrative level as division leaders and Ulam held his until he retired from Los Alamos In this capacity he was able to influence and guide programs in many divisions theoretical physics chemistry metallurgy weapons health Rover and others 62 In addition to these activities Ulam continued to publish technical reports and research papers One of these introduced the Fermi Ulam model an extension of Fermi s theory of the acceleration of cosmic rays 67 Another with Paul Stein and Mary Tsingou titled Quadratic Transformations was an early investigation of chaos theory and is considered the first published use of the phrase chaotic behavior 68 69 Return to academia edit nbsp When the positive integers are arrayed along the Ulam spiral prime numbers represented by dots tend to collect along diagonal lines During his years at Los Alamos Ulam was a visiting professor at Harvard from 1951 to 1952 MIT from 1956 to 1957 the University of California San Diego in 1963 and the University of Colorado at Boulder from 1961 to 1962 and 1965 to 1967 In 1967 the last of these positions became permanent when Ulam was appointed Professor and Chairman of the Department of Mathematics at the University of Colorado He kept a residence in Santa Fe which made it convenient to spend summers at Los Alamos as a consultant 70 He was an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the United States National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society 71 72 73 In Colorado where he rejoined his friends Gamow Richtmyer and Hawkins Ulam s research interests turned toward biology In 1968 recognizing this emphasis the University of Colorado School of Medicine appointed Ulam as Professor of Biomathematics and he held this position until his death With his Los Alamos colleague Robert Schrandt he published a report Some Elementary Attempts at Numerical Modeling of Problems Concerning Rates of Evolutionary Processes which applied his earlier ideas on branching processes to evolution 74 Another report with William Beyer Temple F Smith and M L Stein titled Metrics in Biology introduced new ideas about numerical taxonomy and evolutionary distances 75 When he retired from Colorado in 1975 Ulam began to spend winter semesters at the University of Florida where he was a graduate research professor In 1976 he was awarded the Commander s Cross with the Star of the Order of Polonia Restituta by the Polish government in exile in London 76 Except for sabbaticals at the University of California Davis from 1982 to 1983 and at Rockefeller University from 1980 to 1984 70 this pattern of spending summers in Colorado and Los Alamos and winters in Florida continued until Ulam died of an apparent heart attack in Santa Fe on 13 May 1984 3 Paul Erdos noted that he died suddenly of heart failure without fear or pain while he could still prove and conjecture 33 In 1987 Francoise Ulam deposited his papers with the American Philosophical Society Library in Philadelphia 77 She continued to live in Santa Fe until she died in 2011 at the age of 93 Both Francoise and her husband were buried with her family in Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris 78 79 Challenge to economics editAlfred Marshall and his disciples dominated economic theory until the end of WWII With the Cold War the theory changed emphasizing that a market economy was superior and the only sensible way In Paul Samuelson s Economics An Introductory Analysis 1948 Adam Smith s invisible hand was only a footnote In later editions it became the central theme As Samuelson remembers all this was challenged by Stanislaw Ulam Y ears ago I was in the Society of Fellows at Harvard along with the mathematician Stanislaw Ulam Ulam who was to become an originator of the Monte Carlo method and co discoverer of the hydrogen bomb used to tease me by saying Name me one proposition in all of the social sciences which is both true and non trivial This was the test that I always failed But now some thirty years later an appropriate answer occurs to me The Ricardian theory of comparative advantage That it is logically true need not be argued before a mathematician that it is not trivial is attested by the thousands of important and intelligent men who have never been able to grasp the doctrine for themselves or to believe it after it was explained to them 80 81 Impact and legacy editUlam participated in the creation of a hydrogen bomb as part of the Los Alamos Laboratory nuclear project From the publication of his first paper as a student in 1929 until his death Ulam was constantly writing on mathematics The list of Ulam s publications includes more than 150 papers 10 Topics represented by a significant number of papers are set theory including measurable cardinals and abstract measures topology functional analysis transformation theory ergodic theory group theory projective algebra number theory combinatorics and graph theory 82 Notable results of this work are Borsuk Ulam theorem Mazur Ulam theorem Kuratowski Ulam theorem Hyers Ulam Rassias stability Lucky number Ulam spiral Ulam conjecture in Number Theory Ulam conjecture in Graph theory Ulam s packing conjecture Ulam s game Ulam matrix Ulam numbers Ulam played pivotal role in the development of thermonuclear weapons According to Francoise Ulam Stan would reassure me that barring accidents the H bomb rendered nuclear war impossible 35 In 1980 Ulam and his wife appeared in the television documentary The Day After Trinity 83 nbsp An animation demonstrating the lucky number sieve The numbers in red are lucky numbersThe Monte Carlo method has become a ubiquitous and standard approach to computation and the method has been applied to a vast number of scientific problems 84 In addition to problems in physics and mathematics the method has been applied to finance social science 85 environmental risk assessment 86 linguistics 87 radiation therapy 88 and sports 89 The Fermi Pasta Ulam Tsingou problem is credited not only as the birth of experimental mathematics 59 but also as inspiration for the vast field of Nonlinear Science In his Lilienfeld Prize lecture David K Campbell noted this relationship and described how FPUT gave rise to ideas in chaos solitons and dynamical systems 90 In 1980 Donald Kerr laboratory director at Los Alamos with the strong support of Ulam and Mark Kac 91 founded the Center for Nonlinear Studies CNLS 92 In 1985 CNLS initiated the Stanislaw M Ulam Distinguished Scholar program which provides an annual award that enables a noted scientist to spend a year carrying out research at Los Alamos 93 The fiftieth anniversary of the original FPUT paper was the subject of the March 2005 issue of the journal Chaos 94 and the topic of the 25th Annual International Conference of CNLS 95 The University of Southern Mississippi and the University of Florida supported the Ulam Quarterly 96 which was active from 1992 to 1996 and which was one of the first online mathematical journals 97 Florida s Department of Mathematics has sponsored since 1998 the annual Ulam Colloquium Lecture 98 and in March 2009 the Ulam Centennial Conference 99 Ulam s work on non Euclidean distance metrics in the context of molecular biology made a significant contribution to sequence analysis 100 and his contributions in theoretical biology are considered watersheds in the development of cellular automata theory population biology pattern recognition and biometrics generally David Sankoff however challenged conclusions of Walter by writing that Ulam had only modest influence on early development of sequence alignment methods 101 Colleagues noted that some of his greatest contributions were in clearly identifying problems to be solved and general techniques for solving them 102 In 1987 Los Alamos issued a special issue of its Science publication which summarized his accomplishments 103 and which appeared in 1989 as the book From Cardinals to Chaos Similarly in 1990 the University of California Press issued a compilation of mathematical reports by Ulam and his Los Alamos collaborators Analogies Between Analogies 104 During his career Ulam was awarded honorary degrees by the Universities of New Mexico Wisconsin and Pittsburgh 9 In 2021 German film director Thorsten Klein made a film adaptation of the book Adventures of a Mathematician about Ulam s life Ulam is the grandfather of Rebecca Weiner the New York Police Department s deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism 105 106 Bibliography editKac Mark Ulam Stanislaw 1968 Mathematics and Logic Retrospect and Prospects New York Praeger ISBN 978 0 486 67085 0 OCLC 24847821 Ulam Stanislaw 1974 Beyer W A Mycielski and J Rota G C eds Sets Numbers and Universes selected works Mathematicians of Our Time Vol 9 The MIT Press Cambridge Mass London ISBN 978 0 262 02108 1 MR 0441664 Ulam Stanislaw 1960 A Collection of Mathematical Problems New York Interscience Publishers OCLC 526673 Ulam Stanislaw 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 14391 0 OCLC 1528346 autobiography Ulam Stanislaw 1986 Science Computers and People From the Tree of Mathematics Boston Birkhauser ISBN 978 3 7643 3276 1 OCLC 11260216 Ulam Stanislaw Ulam Francoise 1990 Analogies Between Analogies The Mathematical Reports of S M Ulam and his Los Alamos Collaborators Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05290 1 OCLC 20318499 See also editList of Polish mathematicians List of Polish physicists List of things named after Stanislaw Ulam Timeline of Polish science and technology Biopic about Stanislaw Ulam based on his autobiography starring Jakub Gierszal 107 References edit Mathematics Genealogy Project Stanislaw Marcin Ulam Mathematics Genealogy Project Retrieved 2022 05 17 Chartrand Gary Zhang Ping 2013 05 20 A First Course in Graph Theory Courier Corporation p 78 ISBN 978 0 486 29730 9 a b Sullivan Walter 15 May 1984 Stanislaw Ulam Theorist on Hydrogen Bomb New York Times Retrieved 30 May 2013 Stanislaw Ulam Biography Facts amp Spiral Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 04 11 a b c Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 9 15 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Ulam Adam Bruno 2002 Understanding the Cold War a historian s personal reflections New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers p 19 ISBN 9780765808851 OCLC 48122759 Retrieved 28 December 2011 Ulam Molly June 25 2000 Ulam Family of Lwow Auerbachs of Vienna Genforum Retrieved 10 October 2011 Genealogy of Michael Ulam GENi 24 May 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k Ulam Francoise 1987 Vita Excerpts from Adventures of a Mathematician PDF Los Alamos National Laboratory Archived from the original PDF on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 7 October 2011 a b c d Ciesielski Kryzystof Thermistocles Rassias 2009 On Stan Ulam and His Mathematics PDF Australian Journal of Mathematical Analysis and Applications Retrieved 10 October 2011 v 6 nr 1 pp 1 9 2009 a b Andrzej M Kobos 1999 Medrzec wiekszy niz zycie A Sage Greater Than Life Zwoje in Polish 3 16 Archived from the original on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 10 May 2013 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 56 60 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Ulam Stanislaw November 2002 Preface to the Scottish Book Turnbull WWW Server School of Mathematical and Computational Sciences University of St Andrews Retrieved 11 September 2012 Mauldin R Daniel 1981 The Scottish Book Birkhauser p 268 ISBN 9783764330453 OCLC 7553633 Retrieved 4 December 2011 Obituary for John C Oxtoby The New York Times 5 January 1991 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Obituary for Adam Ulam Harvard University Gazette 6 April 2000 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Volsky George 23 December 1963 Letter about Jozef Ulam Anxiously from Lwow Adam Ulam Archived from the original on 17 May 2013 Retrieved 24 May 2013 Lwow lives on at Leopolis Press The Hook 14 November 2002 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Budrewicz Olgierd 1977 The melting pot revisited twenty well known USers of Polish background Interpress p 36 Retrieved 11 September 2012 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 125 130 174 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 143 147 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 a b Staff biography of Stanislaw Ulam Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 22 October 2011 a b Hoddeson Lillian Henriksen Paul W Meade Roger A Westfall Catherine L 1993 Critical Assembly A Technical History of Los Alamos During the Oppenheimer Years 1943 1945 New York Cambridge University Press pp 130 137 ISBN 978 0 521 44132 2 OCLC 26764320 Supercomputing History Los Alamos Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 24 October 2011 a b From Calculators to Computers History Los Alamos Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 24 October 2011 Frisch Otto April 1974 Somebody Turned the Sun on with a Switch Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 30 4 17 Bibcode 1974BuAtS 30d 12F doi 10 1080 00963402 1974 11458102 Retrieved May 29 2013 Lehmann Christopher 4 March 2002 Obituary of David Hawkins The New York Times Retrieved 14 October 2011 Hawkins D S Ulam 14 November 1944 Theory of Multiplicative Processes PDF LANL report LA 171 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Ulam S Everett C J 7 June 1948 Multiplicative Systems in Several Variables I II III LANL reports University of California Press Retrieved 13 October 2011 Hewlett Richard G Anderson Oscar E 1962 The New World 1939 1946 PDF University Park Pennsylvania State University Press pp 304 307 ISBN 978 0 520 07186 5 OCLC 637004643 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 152 153 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 162 157 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 a b Erdos Paul 1985 Ulam the man and the mathematician PDF Journal of Graph Theory 9 4 445 449 doi 10 1002 jgt 3190090402 Rota Gian Carlo Stan Ulam The Lost Cafe PDF Los Alamos Science No 15 1987 Retrieved 22 October 2011 a b c d Ulam Francoise 1991 Postscript to Adventures of a Mathematician Berkeley CA University of California ISBN 978 0 520 07154 4 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 184 187 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 a b Metropolis Nicholas 1987 The Beginnings of the Monte Carlo Method PDF Los Alamos Science No 15 Retrieved 22 October 2011 Eckhardt Roger 1987 Stan Ulam John von Neumann and the Monte Carlo method PDF Los Alamos Science No 15 Retrieved 22 October 2011 Richtmyer D J Pasta S Ulam 9 April 1947 Statistical Methods in Neutron Diffusion PDF LANL report LAMS 551 Retrieved 23 October 2011 Metropolis Nicholas Stanislaw Ulam 1949 The Monte Carlo method PDF Journal of the American Statistical Association 44 247 335 341 doi 10 1080 01621459 1949 10483310 JSTOR 2280232 PMID 18139350 Retrieved 21 November 2011 Hewlett Richard G Duncan Francis 1969 Atomic Shield Volume II 1947 1952 A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press pp 406 409 ISBN 978 0 520 07187 2 Rhodes Richard 1995 Dark Sun The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb New York Simon amp Schuster p 248 ISBN 978 0 684 80400 2 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 pp 380 385 ISBN 978 0 520 07187 2 OCLC 3717478 Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 215 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Peter Galison 1996 5 Computer Simulations and the Trading Zone In Peter Galison David J Stump ed The Disunity of Science Boundaries Contexts and Power Stanford University Press p 135 ISBN 9780804725620 Rhodes Richard 1995 Dark Sun The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb New York Simon amp Schuster pp 422 424 ISBN 978 0 684 80400 2 a b Staff biography of J Carson Mark Los Alamos National Laboratory Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Retrieved 22 October 2011 a b Teller E Ulam S 9 March 1951 On Heterocatalytic Detonations I Hydrodynamic Lenses and Radiation Mirrors PDF Los Alamos National Laboratory LAMS 1225 Archived from the original PDF on 1 March 2012 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Teller E 4 April 1951 A New Thermonuclear device Technical Report LAMS 1230 Los Alamos National Laboratory Rhodes Richard 1995 Dark Sun The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb New York Simon amp Schuster pp 455 464 ISBN 978 0 684 80400 2 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 pp 554 556 ISBN 978 0 520 07187 2 OCLC 3717478 a b Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 220 224 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Bethe Hans A Fall 1982 Reprinting of 1954 article Comments on the History of the H Bomb PDF Los Alamos Science No 6 Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 3 November 2011 Uchii Soshichi 22 July 2003 Review of Edward Teller s Memoirs PHS Newsletter 52 Retrieved 13 August 2012 Schweber S S 2000 In the Shadow of the Bomb Bethe Oppenheimer and the Moral Responsibility of the Scientist Princeton Princeton University Press pp 166 ISBN 978 0 691 04989 2 Pasta John S Ulam 9 March 1953 Heuristic studies in problems of mathematical physics PDF LANL report LA 1557 Retrieved 21 November 2011 Dauxois Thierry 2008 Fermi Pasta Ulam and a mysterious lady PDF Physics Today 6 1 55 57 arXiv 0801 1590 Bibcode 2008PhT 61a 55D doi 10 1063 1 2835154 S2CID 118607235 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Fermi E J Pasta S Ulam May 1955 Studies of Nonlinear Problems I PDF LANL report LA 1940 Retrieved 21 November 2011 a b c Porter Mason A Zabusky Norman J Hu Bambi Campbell David K May Jun 2009 Fermi Pasta Ulam and the Birth of Experimental Mathematics PDF American Scientist 97 3 214 221 doi 10 1511 2009 78 214 Retrieved 20 November 2011 Lindley David February 8 2013 Focus Landmarks Computer Simulations Led to Discovery of Solitons Physics 6 15 15 Bibcode 2013PhyOJ 6 15L doi 10 1103 Physics 6 15 Longmier C F Reines S Ulam August 1955 Some Schemes for Nuclear Propulsion PDF LANL report LAMS 2186 Retrieved 24 November 2011 a b Ulam S M 1983 Adventures of a Mathematician New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 249 250 ISBN 9780684143910 OCLC 1528346 Schreiber R E Ulam Stanislaw M Bradbury Norris 1958 US Congress Joint Committee on Atomic Energy hearing on 22 January 1958 Outer Space Propulsion by Nuclear Energy US Government Printing Office p 47 Retrieved 25 November 2011 Everett C J S M Ulam August 1955 On a Method of Propulsion of Projectiles by Means of External Nuclear Explosions PDF LANL report LAMS 1955 Retrieved 24 November 2011 History of Project Orion The Story of Orion OrionDrive com 2008 2009 Retrieved 7 October 2011 Dyson Freeman 9 July 1965 Death of a Project Science 149 3680 141 144 Bibcode 1965Sci 149 141D doi 10 1126 science 149 3680 141 PMID 17734490 S2CID 39761976 Ulam S M 1961 On Some Statistical Properties of Dynamical Systems Proceedings of the 4th Berkeley Symposium on Mathematical Statistics and Probability Berkeley CA University of California Press Abraham Ralph 9 July 2011 Image Entropy for Discrete Dynamical Systems PDF University of California Santa Cruz Retrieved 30 May 2013 Stein P R Stanislaw M Ulam March 1959 Quadratic Transformations Part I PDF LANL report LA 2305 Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 26 November 2011 a b Stanislaw Ulam American Institute of Physics Archived from the original on 2 July 2015 Retrieved 14 May 2013 Stanislaw Marcin Ulam American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 2022 09 21 S M Ulam www nasonline org Retrieved 2022 09 21 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2022 09 21 Schrandt Robert G Stanislaw M Ulam December 1970 Some Elementary Attempts at Numerical Modeling of Problems Concerning Rates of Evolutionary Processes PDF LANL report LA 4246 Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 26 November 2011 Beyer William A Temple F Smith M L Stein Stanislaw M Ulam August 1972 Metrics in Biology an Introduction PDF LANL report LA 4973 Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 26 November 2011 Komunikat o nadaniu Orderu Odrodzenia Polski PDF Dziennik Ustaw Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej s 23 nr 6 z December 31 1976 Archived from the original PDF on April 24 2018 Retrieved July 25 2023 Stanislaw M Ulam Papers American Philosophical Society Retrieved 14 May 2013 Francoise Ulam Obituary Santa Fe New Mexican 30 April 2011 Retrieved 12 December 2011 Stanislaw Ulam PDF in French Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 29 October 2015 Comparative Advantage World Trade Organisation Retrieved 10 March 2021 The Collected Scientific Papers of Paul A Samuelson vol iii p 683 MIT Press 1966 Publications of Stanislaw M Ulam PDF Los Alamos Science No 15 1987 Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 6 December 2011 The Day After Trinity at IMDb Eckhardt Roger 1987 Stan Ulam John von Neumann and the Monte Carlo Method PDF Los Alamos Science Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 11 Mar 2016 Casey Thomas M June 2011 Course description Monte Carlo Methods for Social Scientists Inter University Consortium for Political and Social Research University of Michigan Retrieved 9 December 2011 Poulter Susan R Winter 1998 Monte Carlo Simulation in Environmental Risk Assessment PDF Risk Health Safety amp Environment University of New Hampshire Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 06 Retrieved 13 September 2012 Klein Sheldon 23 May 1966 Historical Change in Language Using Monte CarloTechniques PDF Mechanical Translation and Computational Linguistics 9 3 and 4 67 81 Archived from the original PDF on 16 October 2011 Retrieved 9 December 2011 Earl M A L M Ma 12 March 2002 Dose Enhancement of electron beams subject to external magnetic fields A Monte Carlo Study Medical Physics 29 4 484 492 Bibcode 2002MedPh 29 484E doi 10 1118 1 1461374 PMID 11991119 Retrieved 9 December 2011 Ludwig John November 2011 A Monte Carlo Simulation of the Big10 race ludwig com Retrieved 9 December 2011 Campbell Donald H 17 March 2010 The Birth of Nonlinear Science PDF Americal Physical Society Retrieved 8 December 2011 CNLS apprecion of Martin Kruskal and Alwyn Scott Los Alamos National Laboratory 2007 Retrieved 8 December 2011 History of the Center for Nonlinear Studies Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 8 December 2011 Ulam Scholars at CNLS Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 8 December 2011 Focus Issue The Fermi Pasta Ulam Problem The First 50 Years Chaos 15 1 March 2005 Archived from the original on 2012 05 03 Retrieved 9 December 2011 50 Years of the Fermi Pasta Ulam Problem Legacy Impact and Beyond CLNS 25th International Conference Los Alamos National Laboratory May 16 20 2005 Retrieved 9 December 2011 Home Page for Ulam Quarterly University of Florida Retrieved 24 December 2011 Dix Julio G June 25 27 2004 Some Aspects of Running a Free Electronic Journal PDF in Becker Hans ed New Developments in Electronic Publishing Stockholm European Congress of Mathematicians ECM4 Satellite Conference pp 41 43 ISBN 978 3 88127 107 3 retrieved 5 January 2013 List of Ulam Colloquium Speakers University of Florida Dept of Mathematics Retrieved 24 December 2011 Ulam Centennial Conference University of Florida March 10 11 2009 Archived from the original on 24 April 2012 Retrieved 24 December 2011 Goad Walter B 1987 Sequence Analysis Contributions of Ulam to Molecular Genetics PDF Los Alamos Science Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 28 December 2011 Sankoff David 2000 The early introduction of dynamic programming into computational biology Bioinformatics 16 1 41 47 doi 10 1093 bioinformatics 16 1 41 PMID 10812476 Beyer William A Peter H Sellers Michael S Waterman 1985 Stanislaw M Ulam s Contributions to Theoretical Biology PDF Letters in Mathematical Physics 10 2 3 231 242 Bibcode 1985LMaPh 10 231B CiteSeerX 10 1 1 78 4790 doi 10 1007 bf00398163 S2CID 2791811 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 5 December 2011 Cooper Necia Grant Stanislaw Ulam 1909 1984 Los Alamos Science No 15 1987 Los Alamos National Laboratory Retrieved 6 December 2011 Ulam S M 1990 A R Bednarek Francoise Ulam eds Analogies Between Analogies Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05290 1 Retrieved 24 December 2011 Cramer Maria 13 August 2023 N Y P D s New Intelligence Chief Takes Reins of Secretive Unit New York Times Retrieved 13 August 2023 POLICE COMMISSIONER CABAN APPOINTS REBECCA WEINER AS NYPD DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INTELLIGENCE AND COUNTERTERRORISM www nyc gov 19 July 2023 Retrieved 2023 08 13 Epstein Sonia 29 June 2017 Adventures of a Mathematician Sloan Science amp Film External links edit1979 Audio Interview with Stanislaus Ulam by Martin Sherwin Voices of the Manhattan Project 1965 Audio Interview with Stanislaus Ulam by Richard Rhodes Voices of the Manhattan Project Publications of Stanislaw M Ulam PDF Los Alamos Science Special Issue 313 1987 ISSN 0273 7116 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Von Neumann The Interaction of Mathematics and Computing on YouTube 1976 lecture on The First International Research Conference on the History of Computing Portals nbsp World War II nbsp Nuclear technology nbsp Mathematics nbsp History of science nbsp Biography nbsp PolandStanislaw Ulam at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stanislaw Ulam amp oldid 1183224634, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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