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Walther Bothe

Walther Wilhelm Georg Bothe (German pronunciation: [ˈvaltɐ ˈboːtə] ; 8 January 1891 – 8 February 1957)[2] was a German nuclear physicist, who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954 with Max Born.

Walther Bothe
Walther Bothe in the 1950s
Born(1891-01-08)8 January 1891
Died8 February 1957(1957-02-08) (aged 66)
NationalityGerman
Alma materUniversity of Berlin
Known forCoincidence circuit
Neutron transport theory
SpouseBarbara Below[1]
AwardsNobel Prize for Physics (1954)
Max Planck Medal (1953)
Pour le Mérite for Sciences and Arts (1952)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics, mathematics, chemistry
InstitutionsUniversity of Berlin
University of Giessen
University of Heidelberg
Max Planck Institute for Medical Research
Doctoral advisorMax Planck
Signature

In 1913, he joined the newly created Laboratory for Radioactivity at the Reich Physical and Technical Institute (PTR), where he remained until 1930, the latter few years as the director of the laboratory. He served in the military during World War I from 1914, and he was a prisoner of war of the Russians, returning to Germany in 1920. Upon his return to the laboratory, he developed and applied coincidence methods to the study of nuclear reactions, the Compton effect, cosmic rays, and the wave–particle duality of radiation, for which he would receive the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954.

In 1930 he became a full professor and director of the physics department at the University of Giessen. In 1932, he became director of the Physical and Radiological Institute at the University of Heidelberg. He was driven out of this position by elements of the deutsche Physik movement. To preclude his emigration from Germany, he was appointed director of the Physics Institute of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research (KWImF) in Heidelberg. There, he built the first operational cyclotron in Germany. Furthermore, he became a principal in the German nuclear energy project, also known as the Uranverein (Uranium Club), which was started in 1939 under the supervision of the Army Ordnance Office.

In 1946, in addition to his directorship of the Physics Institute at the KWImf, he was reinstated as a professor at the University of Heidelberg. From 1956 to 1957, he was a member of the Nuclear Physics Working Group in Germany.

In the year after Bothe's death, his Physics Institute at the KWImF was elevated to the status of a new institute under the Max Planck Society and it then became the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics. Its main building was later named Bothe laboratory.

Education Edit

Bothe was born to Friedrich Bothe and Charlotte Hartung. From 1908 to 1912, Bothe studied at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität (today, the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin). In 1913, he was Max Planck's teaching assistant. He was awarded his doctorate, in 1914, under Planck.[3][4]

Career Edit

Early years Edit

In 1913, Bothe joined the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt (PTR, Reich Physical and Technical Institute; today, the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt), where he stayed until 1930. Hans Geiger had been appointed director of the new Laboratory for Radioactivity there in 1912. At the PTR, Bothe was an assistant to Geiger from 1913 to 1920, a scientific member of Geiger's staff from 1920 to 1927, and from 1927 to 1930 he succeeded Geiger as director of the Laboratory for Radioactivity.[3][4][5][6]

In May 1914, Bothe volunteered for service in the German cavalry. He was taken prisoner by the Russians and incarcerated in Russia for five years. While there, he learned the Russian language and worked on theoretical physics problems related to his doctoral studies. He returned to Germany in 1920, with a Russian bride.[5]

On his return from Russia, Bothe continued his employment at the PTR under Hans Geiger in the Laboratory for Radioactivity there. In 1924, Bothe published on his coincidence method. Then and in the following years, he applied this method to the experimental study of the nuclear reactions, the Compton effect, and the wave–particle duality of light. Bothe's coincidence method and his applications of it earned him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954.[6][7][8][9]

In 1925, while still at the PTR, Bothe became a Privatdozent at the University of Berlin, which means that he had completed his Habilitation, and, in 1929, he became an ausserordentlicher Professor there.[3][4]

In 1927, Bothe began the study of the transmutation of light elements through bombardment with alpha particles. From a joint investigation with H. Fränz and Heinz Pose in 1928, Bothe and Fränz correlated reaction products of nuclear interactions to nuclear energy levels.[5][6][9]

In 1929, in collaboration with Werner Kolhörster and Bruno Rossi who were guests in Bothe's laboratory at the PTR, Bothe began the study of cosmic rays.[10] The study of cosmic radiation would be conducted by Bothe for the rest of his life.[6][9]

In 1930, he became an ordentlicher Professor and director of the physics department at the Justus Liebig-Universität Gießen. That year, Bothe and his collaborator Herbert Becker bombarded beryllium, boron, and lithium with alpha particles from polonium and observed a new form of penetrating radiation.[11] In 1932, James Chadwick identified this radiation as the neutron.[3][4][5]

Heidelberg Edit

 
Walther Bothe

In 1932, Bothe had succeeded Philipp Lenard as Director of the Physikalische und Radiologische Institut (Physical and Radiological Institute) at the University of Heidelberg. It was then that Rudolf Fleischmann became a teaching assistant to Bothe. When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany on 30 January 1933, the concept of Deutsche Physik took on more favor as well as fervor; it was anti-Semitic and against theoretical physics, especially against modern physics, including quantum mechanics and both atomic and nuclear physics. As applied in the university environment, political factors took priority over the historically applied concept of scholarly ability,[12] even though its two most prominent supporters were the Nobel Laureates in Physics Philipp Lenard[13] and Johannes Stark.[14] Supporters of Deutsche Physik launched vicious attacks against leading theoretical physicists. While Lenard was retired from the University of Heidelberg, he still had significant influence there. In 1934, Lenard had managed to get Bothe relieved of his directorship of the Physical and Radiological Institute at the University of Heidelberg, whereupon Bothe was able to become the Director of the Institut für Physik (Institute for Physics) of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institut für medizinische Forschung (KWImF, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research; today, the Max-Planck Institut für medizinische Forschung), in Heidelberg, replacing Karl W. Hauser, who had recently died. Ludolf von Krehl, Director of the KWImF, and Max Planck, President of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft (KWG, Kaiser Wilhelm Society, today the Max Planck Society), had offered the directorship to Bothe to ward off the possibility of his emigration. Bothe held the directorship of the Institute for Physics at the KWImF until his death in 1957. While at the KWImF, Bothe held an honorary professorship at the University of Heidelberg, which he held until 1946. Fleischmann went with Bothe and worked with him there until 1941. To his staff, Bothe recruited scientists including Wolfgang Gentner (1936–1945), Heinz Maier-Leibnitz (1936 – ?) – who had done his doctorate with the Nobel Laureate James Franck and was highly recommended by Robert Pohl and Georg Joos, and Arnold Flammersfeld (1939–1941). Also included on his staff were Peter Jensen and Erwin Fünfer.[3][4][5][15][16][17][18]

In 1938, Bothe and Gentner published on the energy dependence of the nuclear photo-effect. This was the first clear evidence that nuclear absorption spectra are accumulative and continuous, an effect known as the dipolar giant nuclear resonance. This was explained theoretically a decade later by physicists J. Hans D. Jensen, Helmut Steinwedel, Peter Jensen, Michael Goldhaber, and Edward Teller.[5]

Also in 1938, Maier-Leibniz built a Wilson cloud chamber. Images from the cloud chamber were used by Bothe, Gentner, and Maier-Leibniz to publish, in 1940, the Atlas of Typical Cloud Chamber Images, which became a standard reference for identifying scattered particles.[5][9]

First German cyclotron Edit

By the end of 1937, the rapid successes Bothe and Gentner had with the building and research uses of a Van de Graaff generator had led them to consider building a cyclotron. By November, a report had already been sent to the President of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft (KWG, Kaiser Wilhelm Society; today, the Max Planck Society), and Bothe began securing funds from the Helmholtz-Gesellschaft (Helmholtz Society; today, the Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres), the Badischen Kultusministerium (Baden Ministry of Culture), I.G. Farben, the KWG, and various other research oriented agencies. Initial promises led to ordering a magnet from Siemens in September 1938, however, further financing then became problematic. In these times, Gentner continued his research on the nuclear photoeffect, with the aid of the Van de Graaff generator, which had been upgraded to produce energies just under 1 MeV. When his line of research was completed with the 7Li (p, gamma) and the 11B (p, gamma) reactions, and on the nuclear isomer 80Br, Gentner devoted his full effort to the building of the planned cyclotron.[19]

To facilitate the construction of the cyclotron, at the end of 1938 and into 1939, with the help of a fellowship from the Helmholtz-Gesellschaft, Gentner was sent to Radiation Laboratory of the University of California (today, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) in Berkeley, California. As a result of the visit, Gentner formed a cooperative relationship with Emilio G. Segrè and Donald Cooksey.[19]

After the armistice between France and Germany in the summer of 1940, Bothe and Gentner received orders to inspect the cyclotron Frédéric Joliot-Curie had built in Paris. While it had been built, it was not yet operational. In September 1940, Gentner received orders to form a group to put the cyclotron into operation. Hermann Dänzer from the University of Frankfurt participated in this effort. While in Paris, Gentner was able to free both Frédéric Joliot-Curie and Paul Langevin, who had been arrested and detained. At the end of the winter of 1941/1942, the cyclotron was operational with a 7-MeV beam of deuterons. Uranium and thorium were irradiated with the beam, and the byproducts were sent to Otto Hahn at the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institut für Chemie (KWIC, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry, today, the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry), in Berlin. In mid-1942, Gentner's successor in Paris, was Wolfgang Riezler [de] from Bonn.[19][20][21]

It was during 1941 that Bothe had acquired all the necessary funding to complete construction of the cyclotron. The magnet was delivered in March 1943, and the first beam of deuteron was emitted in December. The inauguration ceremony for the cyclotron was held on 2 June 1944. While there had been other cyclotrons under construction, Bothe's was the first operational cyclotron in Germany.[4][19]

Uranium Club Edit

The German nuclear energy project, also known as the Uranverein (Uranium Club), began in the spring of 1939 under the auspices of the Reichsforschungsrat (RFR, Reich Research Council) of the Reichserziehungsministerium (REM, Reich Ministry of Education). By 1 September, the Heereswaffenamt (HWA, Army Ordnance Office) squeezed out the RFR and took over the effort. Under the control of the HWA, the Uranverein had its first meeting on 16 September. The meeting was organized by Kurt Diebner, advisor to the HWA, and held in Berlin. The invitees included Walther Bothe, Siegfried Flügge, Hans Geiger, Otto Hahn, Paul Harteck, Gerhard Hoffmann, Josef Mattauch, and Georg Stetter. A second meeting was held soon thereafter and included Klaus Clusius, Robert Döpel, Werner Heisenberg, and Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker. With Bothe being one of the principals, Wolfgang Gentner, Arnold Flammersfeld, Rudolf Fleischmann, Erwin Fünfer, and Peter Jensen were soon drawn into work for the Uranverein. Their research was published in the Kernphysikalische Forschungsberichte (Research Reports in Nuclear Physics); see below the section Internal Reports.

For the Uranverein, Bothe, and up to 6 members from his staff by 1942, worked on the experimental determination of atomic constants, the energy distribution of fission fragments, and nuclear cross sections. Bothe's erroneous experimental results on the absorption of neutrons in graphite were central in the German decision to favor heavy water as a neutron moderator. His value was too high; one conjecture being that this was due to air between the graphite pieces with the nitrogen having high neutron absorption. However the experimental setup involved a sphere of Siemens electro-graphite submerged in water, no air being present. The error in fast neutron cross-section was due to impurities in the Siemens product: "even the Siemens electro-Graphite contained Barium and Cadmium, both ravenous neutron-absorbers."[22] In any event, there were so few staff or groups that they could not repeat experiments to check results,[23][24][25][26] although in fact a separate group at Gottingen, led by Wilhelm Hanle, determined the cause of Bothe's error: "Hanle's own measurements would show that carbon, properly prepared, would in fact work perfectly well as a moderator, but at a cost of production in industrial quantities ruled prohibitive by [German] Army Ordnance".[27]

By late 1941 it was apparent that the nuclear energy project would not make a decisive contribution to ending the war effort in the near term. HWA control of the Uranverein was relinquished to the RFR in July 1942. The nuclear energy project thereafter maintained its kriegswichtig (important for the war) designation and funding continued from the military. However, the German nuclear power project was then broken down into the following main areas: uranium and heavy water production, uranium isotope separation, and the Uranmaschine (uranium machine, i.e., nuclear reactor). Also, the project was then essentially split up between nine institutes, where the directors dominated the research and set their own research agendas. Bothe's Institut für Physik was one of the nine institutes. The other eight institutes or facilities were: the Institute for Physical Chemistry at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, the HWA Versuchsstelle (testing station) in Gottow, the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Chemie, the Physical Chemistry Department of the University of Hamburg, the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Physik, the Second Experimental Physics Institute at the Georg-August University of Göttingen, the Auergesellschaft, and the II. Physikalisches Institut at the University of Vienna.[25][28][29][30]

Post–WW II Edit

From 1946, to 1957, in addition to his position at the KWImF, Bothe was an ordentlicher Professor at the University of Heidelberg.[3][4]

At the end of World War II, the Allies had seized the cyclotron at Heidelberg. In 1949, its control was returned to Bothe.[3]

During 1956 and 1957, Bothe was a member of the Arbeitskreis Kernphysik (Nuclear Physics Working Group) of the Fachkommission II "Forschung und Nachwuchs" (Commission II "Research and Growth") of the Deutschen Atomkommission (DAtK, German Atomic Energy Commission). Other members of the Nuclear Physics Working Group in both 1956 and 1957 were: Werner Heisenberg (chairman), Hans Kopfermann (vice-chairman), Fritz Bopp, Wolfgang Gentner, Otto Haxel, Willibald Jentschke, Heinz Maier-Leibnitz, Josef Mattauch, Wolfgang Riezler [de], Wilhelm Walcher, and Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker. Wolfgang Paul was also a member of the group during 1957.[30]

At the end of 1957, Gentner was in negotiations with Otto Hahn, President of the Max-Planck Gesellschaft (MPG, Max Planck Society, successor of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Gesellschaft), and with the Senate of the MPG to establish a new institute under their auspices. Essentially, Walther Bothe's Institut für Physik at the Max-Planck Institut für medizinische Forschung, in Heidelberg, was to be spun off to become a full fledged institute of the MPG. The decision to proceed was made in May 1958. Gentner was named the director of the Max-Planck Institut für Kernphysik (MPIK, Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics) on 1 October, and he also received the position as an ordentlicher Professor at the University of Heidelberg. Bothe had not lived to see the final establishment of the MPIK, as he had died in February of that year.[19][31]

Bothe was a German patriot who did not give excuses for his work with the Uranverein. However, Bothe's impatience with Nazi policies in Germany brought him under suspicion and investigation by the Gestapo.[5]

Personal Edit

As a result of his incarceration in Russia during World War I as a prisoner of war, he met Barbara Below, whom he married in 1920. They had two children. She preceded him in death by some years.[9]

Bothe was an accomplished painter and musician; he played the piano.[9]

Honors Edit

Bothe was awarded a number of honors:[9]

Works Edit

Internal reports Edit

The following reports were published in Kernphysikalische Forschungsberichte (Research Reports in Nuclear Physics), an internal publication of the German Uranverein. The reports were classified Top Secret, they had very limited distribution, and the authors were not allowed to keep copies. The reports were confiscated under the Allied Operation Alsos and sent to the United States Atomic Energy Commission for evaluation. In 1971, the reports were declassified and returned to Germany. The reports are available at the Karlsruhe Nuclear Research Center and the American Institute of Physics.[32][33]

  • Walther Bothe Die Diffusionsläge für thermische Neutronen in Kohle G12 (7 June 1940)
  • Walther Bothe Die Abmessungen endlicher Uranmaschinen G-13 (28 June 1940)
  • Walther Bothe Die Abmessungen von Maschinen mit rücksteuendem Mantel G-14 (17 July 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Wolfgang Gentner Die Energie der Spaltungsneutronen aus Uran G-17 (9 May 1940)
  • Walther Bothe Einige Eigenschaften des U und der Bremsstoffe. Zusammenfassender Bericht über die Arbeiten G-66 (28 March 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Die Wirkungsquerschnitte von 38[34] für thermische Neutronen aus Diffusionsmessungen G-67 (20 January 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Resonanzeinfang an einer Uranoberfläche G-68 (8 March 1940)
  • Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Messungen an einem Gemisch von 38-Oxyd und –Wasser; der Vermehrungsfakto K unde der Resonanzeinfang w. G-69 (26 May 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Die Neutronenvermehrung bei schnellen und langsamen Neutronen in 38 und die Diffusionslänge in 38 Metall und Wasser G-70 (11 July 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Peter Jensen Die Absorption thermischer Neutronen in Elektrographit G-71 (20 January 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Peter Jensen Resonanzeinfang an einer Uranoberfläche G-72 (12 May 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Versuche mit einer Schichtenanordnung von Wasser und Präp 38 G-74 (28 April 1941)
  • Walther Bothe and Erwin Fünfer Absorption thermischer Neutronen und die Vermehrung schneller Neutronen in Beryllium G-81 (10 October 1941)
  • Walther Bothe Maschinen mit Ausnutzung der Spaltung durch schnelle Neutronen G-128 (7 December 1941)
  • Walther Bothe Über Stahlenschutzwäne G-204 (29 June 1943)
  • Walther Bothe Die Forschungsmittel der Kernphysik G-205 (5 May 1943)
  • Walther Bothe and Erwin Fünfer Schichtenversuche mit Variation der U- und D2O-Dicken G-206 (6 December 1943)
  • Fritz Bopp, Walther Bothe, Erich Fischer, Erwin Fünfer, Werner Heisenberg, O. Ritter, and Karl Wirtz Bericht über einen Versuch mit 1.5 to D2O und U und 40 cm Kohlerückstreumantel (B7) G-300 (3 January 1945)

Selected literature Edit

  • Walther Bothe and Hans Geiger Ein Weg zur experimentellen Nachprüfung der Theorie von Bohr, Kramers und Slater, Z. Phys. Volume 26, Number 1, 44 (1924)
  • Walther Bothe Theoretische Betrachtungen über den Photoeffekt, Z. Phys. Volume 26, Number 1, 74–84 (1924)
  • Walther Bothe and Hans Geiger Experimentelles zur Theorie von Bohr, Kramers und Slater, Die Naturwissenschaften Volume 13, 440–441 (1925)
  • Walther Bothe and Hans Geiger Über das Wesen des Comptoneffekts: ein experimenteller Beitrag zur Theories der Strahlung, Z. Phys. Volume 32, Number 9, 639–663 (1925)
  • W. Bothe and W. Gentner Herstellung neuer Isotope durch Kernphotoeffekt, Die Naturwissenschaften Volume 25, Issue 8, 126–126 (1937). Received 9 February 1937. Institutional affiliation: Institut für Physik at the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institut für medizinische Forschung.
  • Walther Bothe The Coincidence Method, The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954, Nobelprize.org (1954)

Books Edit

  • Walther Bothe Der Physiker und sein Werkzeug (Gruyter, 1944)
  • Walther Bothe and Siegfried Flügge Kernphysik und kosmische Strahlen. T. 1 (Dieterich, 1948)
  • Walther Bothe Der Streufehler bei der Ausmessung von Nebelkammerbahnen im Magnetfeld (Springer, 1948)
  • Walther Bothe and Siegfried Flügge (editors) Nuclear Physics and Cosmic Rays FIAT Review of German Science 1939–1945, Volumes 13 and 14 (Klemm, 1948)[35]
  • Walther Bothe Theorie des Doppellinsen-b-Spektrometers (Springer, 1950)
  • Walther Bothe Die Streuung von Elektronen in schrägen Folien (Springer, 1952)
  • Walther Bothe and Siegfried Flügge Kernphysik und kosmische Strahlen. T. 2 (Dieterich, 1953)
  • Karl H. Bauer and Walther Bothe Vom Atom zum Weltsystem (Kröner, 1954)

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954".
  2. ^ Walther Bothe at the Encyclopædia Britannica
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Hentschel, Appendix F; see the entry for Bothe.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Mehra, Jagdish, and Helmut Rechenberg (2001) The Historical Development of Quantum Theory. Volume 1 Part 2 The Quantum Theory of Planck, Einstein, Bohr and Sommerfeld 1900–1925: Its Foundation and the Rise of Its Difficulties. Springer, ISBN 0-387-95175-X. p. 608
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Walther Bothe and the Physics Institute: the Early Years of Nuclear Physics, Nobelprize.org.
  6. ^ a b c d Bothe, Walther (1954) The Coincidence Method, The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954, Nobelprize.org.
  7. ^ Hentschel, Appendix F; see the entry for Geiger.
  8. ^ Fick, Dieter and Kant, Horst Walther Bothe's contributions to the understanding of the wave-particle duality of light.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Walther Bothe Biography, The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954, Nobelprize.org.
  10. ^ Bonolis, Luisa Walther Bothe and Bruno Rossi: The birth and development of coincidence methods in cosmic-ray physics
  11. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954". nobelprize.org. Retrieved 23 March 2023. In 1930 Bothe, in collaboration with H. Becker, bombarded beryllium of mass 9 (and also boron and lithium) with alpha rays derived from polonium, and obtained a new form of radiation ...
  12. ^ Beyerchen, pp. 141–167.
  13. ^ Beyerchen, pp. 79–102.
  14. ^ Beyerchen, pp. 103–140.
  15. ^ Hentschel, Appendix F; see the entry of Fleischmann.
  16. ^ Das Physikalische und Radiologische Institut der Universität Heidelberg, Heidelberger Neueste Nachrichten Volume 56 (7 March 1913).
  17. ^ States, David M. (28 June 2001) A History of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research: 1929–1939: Walther Bothe and the Physics Institute: The Early Years of Nuclear Physics, Nobelprize.org.
  18. ^ Landwehr, Gottfried (2002) Rudolf Fleischmann 1.5.1903 – 3.2.2002, Nachrufe – Auszug aus Jahrbuch pp. 326–328.
  19. ^ a b c d e Ulrich Schmidt-Rohr Wolfgang Gentner: 1906–1980 (Universität Heidelberg).
  20. ^ Jörg Kummer Hermann Dänzer: 1904–1987 (University of Frankfurt).
  21. ^ Powers, Thomas (1993) Heisenberg's War: The Secret History of the German Bomb. Knopf. ISBN 0306810115. p. 357.
  22. ^ Dahl, Per F (1999). Heavy water and the wartime race for nuclear energy. Bristol: Institute of Physics Publishing. pp. 138–140. ISBN 07-5030-6335. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  23. ^ Ermenc, Joseph J, ed. (1989). Atomic Bomb Scientists: Memoirs, 1939-1945. Westport, CT & London: Meckler. pp. 27, 28. ISBN 0-88736-267-2.
  24. ^ Hentschel, pp. 363–364 and Appendix F; see the entries for Diebner and Döpel. See also the entry for the KWIP in Appendix A and the entry for the HWA in Appendix B.
  25. ^ a b Macrakis, Kristie (1993). Surviving the Swastika: Scientific Research in Nazi Germany. Oxford. pp. 164–169. ISBN 0195070100.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  26. ^ Mehra, Jagdish and Rechenberg, Helmut (2001) The Historical Development of Quantum Theory. Volume 6. The Completion of Quantum Mechanics 1926–1941. Part 2. The Conceptual Completion and Extension of Quantum Mechanics 1932–1941. Epilogue: Aspects of the Further Development of Quantum Theory 1942–1999. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-95086-0. pp. 1010–1011.
  27. ^ Dahl, Per F (1999). Heavy water and the wartime race for nuclear energy. Bristol: Institute of Physics Publishing. p. 141. ISBN 07-5030-6335. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  28. ^ Hentschel, see the entry for the KWIP in Appendix A and the entries for the HWA and the RFR in Appendix B. Also see p. 372 and footnote No. 50 on p. 372.
  29. ^ Walker, pp. 49–53.
  30. ^ a b Kant, Horst (2002) Werner Heisenberg and the German Uranium Project / Otto Hahn and the Declarations of Mainau and Göttingen. Max-Planck Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte.
  31. ^ Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, Innovations Report.
  32. ^ Hentschel, Appendix E; see the entry for Kernphysikalische Forschungsberichte.
  33. ^ Walker, 268–274.
  34. ^ Präparat 38, 38-Oxyd, and 38 were the cover names for uranium oxide; see Deutsches Museum.
  35. ^ There were 50-odd volumes of the FIAT Reviews of German Science, which covered the period 1930 to 1946 – cited by Max von Laue in Document 117, Hentschel, 1996, pp. 393–395. FIAT: Field Information Agencies, Technical.

Bibliography Edit

  • Beyerchen, Alan D. (1977). Scientists Under Hitler: Politics and the Physics Community in the Third Reich. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-01830-4.
  • Hentschel, Klaus; Hentschel, Ann M., eds. (1996). Physics and National Socialism: An Anthology of Primary Sources. Birkhäuser. ISBN 0-8176-5312-0.
  • Walker, Mark (1993). German National Socialism and the Quest for Nuclear Power 1939–1949. Cambridge. ISBN 0-521-43804-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links Edit

  • Walther Bothe The Coincidence Method, The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954, Nobelprize.org (1954). Due to Bothe's illness, this lecture was not delivered orally.
    • Walther Bothe and the Physics Institute: the Early Years of Nuclear Physics, Nobelprize.org.
    • Walther Bothe on Nobelprize.org  
  • Annotated Bibliography for Walter Bothe from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues

walther, bothe, walther, wilhelm, georg, bothe, german, pronunciation, ˈvaltɐ, ˈboːtə, january, 1891, february, 1957, german, nuclear, physicist, shared, nobel, prize, physics, 1954, with, born, 1950sborn, 1891, january, 1891oranienburg, german, empiredied8, f. Walther Wilhelm Georg Bothe German pronunciation ˈvaltɐ ˈboːte 8 January 1891 8 February 1957 2 was a German nuclear physicist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954 with Max Born Walther BotheWalther Bothe in the 1950sBorn 1891 01 08 8 January 1891Oranienburg German EmpireDied8 February 1957 1957 02 08 aged 66 Heidelberg West GermanyNationalityGermanAlma materUniversity of BerlinKnown forCoincidence circuitNeutron transport theorySpouseBarbara Below 1 AwardsNobel Prize for Physics 1954 Max Planck Medal 1953 Pour le Merite for Sciences and Arts 1952 Scientific careerFieldsPhysics mathematics chemistryInstitutionsUniversity of Berlin University of GiessenUniversity of Heidelberg Max Planck Institute for Medical ResearchDoctoral advisorMax PlanckSignatureIn 1913 he joined the newly created Laboratory for Radioactivity at the Reich Physical and Technical Institute PTR where he remained until 1930 the latter few years as the director of the laboratory He served in the military during World War I from 1914 and he was a prisoner of war of the Russians returning to Germany in 1920 Upon his return to the laboratory he developed and applied coincidence methods to the study of nuclear reactions the Compton effect cosmic rays and the wave particle duality of radiation for which he would receive the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954 In 1930 he became a full professor and director of the physics department at the University of Giessen In 1932 he became director of the Physical and Radiological Institute at the University of Heidelberg He was driven out of this position by elements of the deutsche Physik movement To preclude his emigration from Germany he was appointed director of the Physics Institute of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research KWImF in Heidelberg There he built the first operational cyclotron in Germany Furthermore he became a principal in the German nuclear energy project also known as the Uranverein Uranium Club which was started in 1939 under the supervision of the Army Ordnance Office In 1946 in addition to his directorship of the Physics Institute at the KWImf he was reinstated as a professor at the University of Heidelberg From 1956 to 1957 he was a member of the Nuclear Physics Working Group in Germany In the year after Bothe s death his Physics Institute at the KWImF was elevated to the status of a new institute under the Max Planck Society and it then became the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics Its main building was later named Bothe laboratory Contents 1 Education 2 Career 2 1 Early years 2 2 Heidelberg 2 3 First German cyclotron 2 4 Uranium Club 2 5 Post WW II 3 Personal 4 Honors 5 Works 5 1 Internal reports 5 2 Selected literature 5 3 Books 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEducation EditBothe was born to Friedrich Bothe and Charlotte Hartung From 1908 to 1912 Bothe studied at the Friedrich Wilhelms Universitat today the Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin In 1913 he was Max Planck s teaching assistant He was awarded his doctorate in 1914 under Planck 3 4 Career EditEarly years Edit In 1913 Bothe joined the Physikalisch Technische Reichsanstalt PTR Reich Physical and Technical Institute today the Physikalisch Technische Bundesanstalt where he stayed until 1930 Hans Geiger had been appointed director of the new Laboratory for Radioactivity there in 1912 At the PTR Bothe was an assistant to Geiger from 1913 to 1920 a scientific member of Geiger s staff from 1920 to 1927 and from 1927 to 1930 he succeeded Geiger as director of the Laboratory for Radioactivity 3 4 5 6 In May 1914 Bothe volunteered for service in the German cavalry He was taken prisoner by the Russians and incarcerated in Russia for five years While there he learned the Russian language and worked on theoretical physics problems related to his doctoral studies He returned to Germany in 1920 with a Russian bride 5 On his return from Russia Bothe continued his employment at the PTR under Hans Geiger in the Laboratory for Radioactivity there In 1924 Bothe published on his coincidence method Then and in the following years he applied this method to the experimental study of the nuclear reactions the Compton effect and the wave particle duality of light Bothe s coincidence method and his applications of it earned him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1954 6 7 8 9 In 1925 while still at the PTR Bothe became a Privatdozent at the University of Berlin which means that he had completed his Habilitation and in 1929 he became an ausserordentlicher Professor there 3 4 In 1927 Bothe began the study of the transmutation of light elements through bombardment with alpha particles From a joint investigation with H Franz and Heinz Pose in 1928 Bothe and Franz correlated reaction products of nuclear interactions to nuclear energy levels 5 6 9 In 1929 in collaboration with Werner Kolhorster and Bruno Rossi who were guests in Bothe s laboratory at the PTR Bothe began the study of cosmic rays 10 The study of cosmic radiation would be conducted by Bothe for the rest of his life 6 9 In 1930 he became an ordentlicher Professor and director of the physics department at the Justus Liebig Universitat Giessen That year Bothe and his collaborator Herbert Becker bombarded beryllium boron and lithium with alpha particles from polonium and observed a new form of penetrating radiation 11 In 1932 James Chadwick identified this radiation as the neutron 3 4 5 Heidelberg Edit nbsp Walther BotheIn 1932 Bothe had succeeded Philipp Lenard as Director of the Physikalische und Radiologische Institut Physical and Radiological Institute at the University of Heidelberg It was then that Rudolf Fleischmann became a teaching assistant to Bothe When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany on 30 January 1933 the concept of Deutsche Physik took on more favor as well as fervor it was anti Semitic and against theoretical physics especially against modern physics including quantum mechanics and both atomic and nuclear physics As applied in the university environment political factors took priority over the historically applied concept of scholarly ability 12 even though its two most prominent supporters were the Nobel Laureates in Physics Philipp Lenard 13 and Johannes Stark 14 Supporters of Deutsche Physik launched vicious attacks against leading theoretical physicists While Lenard was retired from the University of Heidelberg he still had significant influence there In 1934 Lenard had managed to get Bothe relieved of his directorship of the Physical and Radiological Institute at the University of Heidelberg whereupon Bothe was able to become the Director of the Institut fur Physik Institute for Physics of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur medizinische Forschung KWImF Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research today the Max Planck Institut fur medizinische Forschung in Heidelberg replacing Karl W Hauser who had recently died Ludolf von Krehl Director of the KWImF and Max Planck President of the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft KWG Kaiser Wilhelm Society today the Max Planck Society had offered the directorship to Bothe to ward off the possibility of his emigration Bothe held the directorship of the Institute for Physics at the KWImF until his death in 1957 While at the KWImF Bothe held an honorary professorship at the University of Heidelberg which he held until 1946 Fleischmann went with Bothe and worked with him there until 1941 To his staff Bothe recruited scientists including Wolfgang Gentner 1936 1945 Heinz Maier Leibnitz 1936 who had done his doctorate with the Nobel Laureate James Franck and was highly recommended by Robert Pohl and Georg Joos and Arnold Flammersfeld 1939 1941 Also included on his staff were Peter Jensen and Erwin Funfer 3 4 5 15 16 17 18 In 1938 Bothe and Gentner published on the energy dependence of the nuclear photo effect This was the first clear evidence that nuclear absorption spectra are accumulative and continuous an effect known as the dipolar giant nuclear resonance This was explained theoretically a decade later by physicists J Hans D Jensen Helmut Steinwedel Peter Jensen Michael Goldhaber and Edward Teller 5 Also in 1938 Maier Leibniz built a Wilson cloud chamber Images from the cloud chamber were used by Bothe Gentner and Maier Leibniz to publish in 1940 the Atlas of Typical Cloud Chamber Images which became a standard reference for identifying scattered particles 5 9 First German cyclotron Edit By the end of 1937 the rapid successes Bothe and Gentner had with the building and research uses of a Van de Graaff generator had led them to consider building a cyclotron By November a report had already been sent to the President of the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft KWG Kaiser Wilhelm Society today the Max Planck Society and Bothe began securing funds from the Helmholtz Gesellschaft Helmholtz Society today the Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres the Badischen Kultusministerium Baden Ministry of Culture I G Farben the KWG and various other research oriented agencies Initial promises led to ordering a magnet from Siemens in September 1938 however further financing then became problematic In these times Gentner continued his research on the nuclear photoeffect with the aid of the Van de Graaff generator which had been upgraded to produce energies just under 1 MeV When his line of research was completed with the 7Li p gamma and the 11B p gamma reactions and on the nuclear isomer 80Br Gentner devoted his full effort to the building of the planned cyclotron 19 To facilitate the construction of the cyclotron at the end of 1938 and into 1939 with the help of a fellowship from the Helmholtz Gesellschaft Gentner was sent to Radiation Laboratory of the University of California today the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley California As a result of the visit Gentner formed a cooperative relationship with Emilio G Segre and Donald Cooksey 19 After the armistice between France and Germany in the summer of 1940 Bothe and Gentner received orders to inspect the cyclotron Frederic Joliot Curie had built in Paris While it had been built it was not yet operational In September 1940 Gentner received orders to form a group to put the cyclotron into operation Hermann Danzer from the University of Frankfurt participated in this effort While in Paris Gentner was able to free both Frederic Joliot Curie and Paul Langevin who had been arrested and detained At the end of the winter of 1941 1942 the cyclotron was operational with a 7 MeV beam of deuterons Uranium and thorium were irradiated with the beam and the byproducts were sent to Otto Hahn at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur Chemie KWIC Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry today the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Berlin In mid 1942 Gentner s successor in Paris was Wolfgang Riezler de from Bonn 19 20 21 It was during 1941 that Bothe had acquired all the necessary funding to complete construction of the cyclotron The magnet was delivered in March 1943 and the first beam of deuteron was emitted in December The inauguration ceremony for the cyclotron was held on 2 June 1944 While there had been other cyclotrons under construction Bothe s was the first operational cyclotron in Germany 4 19 Uranium Club Edit The German nuclear energy project also known as the Uranverein Uranium Club began in the spring of 1939 under the auspices of the Reichsforschungsrat RFR Reich Research Council of the Reichserziehungsministerium REM Reich Ministry of Education By 1 September the Heereswaffenamt HWA Army Ordnance Office squeezed out the RFR and took over the effort Under the control of the HWA the Uranverein had its first meeting on 16 September The meeting was organized by Kurt Diebner advisor to the HWA and held in Berlin The invitees included Walther Bothe Siegfried Flugge Hans Geiger Otto Hahn Paul Harteck Gerhard Hoffmann Josef Mattauch and Georg Stetter A second meeting was held soon thereafter and included Klaus Clusius Robert Dopel Werner Heisenberg and Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker With Bothe being one of the principals Wolfgang Gentner Arnold Flammersfeld Rudolf Fleischmann Erwin Funfer and Peter Jensen were soon drawn into work for the Uranverein Their research was published in the Kernphysikalische Forschungsberichte Research Reports in Nuclear Physics see below the section Internal Reports For the Uranverein Bothe and up to 6 members from his staff by 1942 worked on the experimental determination of atomic constants the energy distribution of fission fragments and nuclear cross sections Bothe s erroneous experimental results on the absorption of neutrons in graphite were central in the German decision to favor heavy water as a neutron moderator His value was too high one conjecture being that this was due to air between the graphite pieces with the nitrogen having high neutron absorption However the experimental setup involved a sphere of Siemens electro graphite submerged in water no air being present The error in fast neutron cross section was due to impurities in the Siemens product even the Siemens electro Graphite contained Barium and Cadmium both ravenous neutron absorbers 22 In any event there were so few staff or groups that they could not repeat experiments to check results 23 24 25 26 although in fact a separate group at Gottingen led by Wilhelm Hanle determined the cause of Bothe s error Hanle s own measurements would show that carbon properly prepared would in fact work perfectly well as a moderator but at a cost of production in industrial quantities ruled prohibitive by German Army Ordnance 27 By late 1941 it was apparent that the nuclear energy project would not make a decisive contribution to ending the war effort in the near term HWA control of the Uranverein was relinquished to the RFR in July 1942 The nuclear energy project thereafter maintained its kriegswichtig important for the war designation and funding continued from the military However the German nuclear power project was then broken down into the following main areas uranium and heavy water production uranium isotope separation and the Uranmaschine uranium machine i e nuclear reactor Also the project was then essentially split up between nine institutes where the directors dominated the research and set their own research agendas Bothe s Institut fur Physik was one of the nine institutes The other eight institutes or facilities were the Institute for Physical Chemistry at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich the HWA Versuchsstelle testing station in Gottow the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur Chemie the Physical Chemistry Department of the University of Hamburg the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur Physik the Second Experimental Physics Institute at the Georg August University of Gottingen the Auergesellschaft and theII Physikalisches Institutat the University of Vienna 25 28 29 30 Post WW II Edit From 1946 to 1957 in addition to his position at the KWImF Bothe was an ordentlicher Professor at the University of Heidelberg 3 4 At the end of World War II the Allies had seized the cyclotron at Heidelberg In 1949 its control was returned to Bothe 3 During 1956 and 1957 Bothe was a member of the Arbeitskreis Kernphysik Nuclear Physics Working Group of the Fachkommission II Forschung und Nachwuchs Commission II Research and Growth of the Deutschen Atomkommission DAtK German Atomic Energy Commission Other members of the Nuclear Physics Working Group in both 1956 and 1957 were Werner Heisenberg chairman Hans Kopfermann vice chairman Fritz Bopp Wolfgang Gentner Otto Haxel Willibald Jentschke Heinz Maier Leibnitz Josef Mattauch Wolfgang Riezler de Wilhelm Walcher and Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker Wolfgang Paul was also a member of the group during 1957 30 At the end of 1957 Gentner was in negotiations with Otto Hahn President of the Max Planck Gesellschaft MPG Max Planck Society successor of the Kaiser Wilhelm Gesellschaft and with the Senate of the MPG to establish a new institute under their auspices Essentially Walther Bothe s Institut fur Physik at the Max Planck Institut fur medizinische Forschung in Heidelberg was to be spun off to become a full fledged institute of the MPG The decision to proceed was made in May 1958 Gentner was named the director of the Max Planck Institut fur Kernphysik MPIK Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics on 1 October and he also received the position as an ordentlicher Professor at the University of Heidelberg Bothe had not lived to see the final establishment of the MPIK as he had died in February of that year 19 31 Bothe was a German patriot who did not give excuses for his work with the Uranverein However Bothe s impatience with Nazi policies in Germany brought him under suspicion and investigation by the Gestapo 5 Personal EditAs a result of his incarceration in Russia during World War I as a prisoner of war he met Barbara Below whom he married in 1920 They had two children She preceded him in death by some years 9 Bothe was an accomplished painter and musician he played the piano 9 Honors EditBothe was awarded a number of honors 9 Member of the Academy of Sciences of Gottingen Member of the Academy of Sciences of Heidelberg Corresponding Member of the Saxon Academy of Sciences Leipzig Grand Cross of the Order for Federal Services 1952 Knight of the Order of Merit for Sciences and the Arts 1953 Max Planck Medaille of the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics for the coincidence method and his discoveries made therewith Bothe received half of the prize the other half was awarded to Max Born 19178 Walterbothe asteroid named after him Works EditInternal reports Edit The following reports were published in Kernphysikalische Forschungsberichte Research Reports in Nuclear Physics an internal publication of the German Uranverein The reports were classified Top Secret they had very limited distribution and the authors were not allowed to keep copies The reports were confiscated under the Allied Operation Alsos and sent to the United States Atomic Energy Commission for evaluation In 1971 the reports were declassified and returned to Germany The reports are available at the Karlsruhe Nuclear Research Center and the American Institute of Physics 32 33 Walther Bothe Die Diffusionslage fur thermische Neutronen in Kohle G12 7 June 1940 Walther Bothe Die Abmessungen endlicher Uranmaschinen G 13 28 June 1940 Walther Bothe Die Abmessungen von Maschinen mit rucksteuendem Mantel G 14 17 July 1941 Walther Bothe and Wolfgang Gentner Die Energie der Spaltungsneutronen aus Uran G 17 9 May 1940 Walther Bothe Einige Eigenschaften des U und der Bremsstoffe Zusammenfassender Bericht uber die Arbeiten G 66 28 March 1941 Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Die Wirkungsquerschnitte von 38 34 fur thermische Neutronen aus Diffusionsmessungen G 67 20 January 1941 Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Resonanzeinfang an einer Uranoberflache G 68 8 March 1940 Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Messungen an einem Gemisch von 38 Oxyd und Wasser der Vermehrungsfakto K unde der Resonanzeinfang w G 69 26 May 1941 Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Die Neutronenvermehrung bei schnellen und langsamen Neutronen in 38 und die Diffusionslange in 38 Metall und Wasser G 70 11 July 1941 Walther Bothe and Peter Jensen Die Absorption thermischer Neutronen in Elektrographit G 71 20 January 1941 Walther Bothe and Peter Jensen Resonanzeinfang an einer Uranoberflache G 72 12 May 1941 Walther Bothe and Arnold Flammersfeld Versuche mit einer Schichtenanordnung von Wasser und Prap 38 G 74 28 April 1941 Walther Bothe and Erwin Funfer Absorption thermischer Neutronen und die Vermehrung schneller Neutronen in Beryllium G 81 10 October 1941 Walther Bothe Maschinen mit Ausnutzung der Spaltung durch schnelle Neutronen G 128 7 December 1941 Walther Bothe Uber Stahlenschutzwane G 204 29 June 1943 Walther Bothe Die Forschungsmittel der Kernphysik G 205 5 May 1943 Walther Bothe and Erwin Funfer Schichtenversuche mit Variation der U und D2O Dicken G 206 6 December 1943 Fritz Bopp Walther Bothe Erich Fischer Erwin Funfer Werner Heisenberg O Ritter and Karl Wirtz Bericht uber einen Versuch mit 1 5 to D2O und U und 40 cm Kohleruckstreumantel B7 G 300 3 January 1945 Selected literature Edit Walther Bothe and Hans Geiger Ein Weg zur experimentellen Nachprufung der Theorie von Bohr Kramers und Slater Z Phys Volume 26 Number 1 44 1924 Walther Bothe Theoretische Betrachtungen uber den Photoeffekt Z Phys Volume 26 Number 1 74 84 1924 Walther Bothe and Hans Geiger Experimentelles zur Theorie von Bohr Kramers und Slater Die Naturwissenschaften Volume 13 440 441 1925 Walther Bothe and Hans Geiger Uber das Wesen des Comptoneffekts ein experimenteller Beitrag zur Theories der Strahlung Z Phys Volume 32 Number 9 639 663 1925 W Bothe and W Gentner Herstellung neuer Isotope durch Kernphotoeffekt Die Naturwissenschaften Volume 25 Issue 8 126 126 1937 Received 9 February 1937 Institutional affiliation Institut fur Physik at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institut fur medizinische Forschung Walther Bothe The Coincidence Method The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 Nobelprize org 1954 Books Edit Walther Bothe Der Physiker und sein Werkzeug Gruyter 1944 Walther Bothe and Siegfried Flugge Kernphysik und kosmische Strahlen T 1 Dieterich 1948 Walther Bothe Der Streufehler bei der Ausmessung von Nebelkammerbahnen im Magnetfeld Springer 1948 Walther Bothe and Siegfried Flugge editors Nuclear Physics and Cosmic Rays FIAT Review of German Science 1939 1945 Volumes 13 and 14 Klemm 1948 35 Walther Bothe Theorie des Doppellinsen b Spektrometers Springer 1950 Walther Bothe Die Streuung von Elektronen in schragen Folien Springer 1952 Walther Bothe and Siegfried Flugge Kernphysik und kosmische Strahlen T 2 Dieterich 1953 Karl H Bauer and Walther Bothe Vom Atom zum Weltsystem Kroner 1954 See also EditElastic recoil detection German inventors and discoverersNotes Edit The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 Walther Bothe at the Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d e f g Hentschel Appendix F see the entry for Bothe a b c d e f g Mehra Jagdish and Helmut Rechenberg 2001 The Historical Development of Quantum Theory Volume 1 Part 2 The Quantum Theory of Planck Einstein Bohr and Sommerfeld 1900 1925 Its Foundation and the Rise of Its Difficulties Springer ISBN 0 387 95175 X p 608 a b c d e f g h Walther Bothe and the Physics Institute the Early Years of Nuclear Physics Nobelprize org a b c d Bothe Walther 1954 The Coincidence Method The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 Nobelprize org Hentschel Appendix F see the entry for Geiger Fick Dieter and Kant Horst Walther Bothe s contributions to the understanding of the wave particle duality of light a b c d e f g Walther Bothe Biography The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 Nobelprize org Bonolis Luisa Walther Bothe and Bruno Rossi The birth and development of coincidence methods in cosmic ray physics The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 nobelprize org Retrieved 23 March 2023 In 1930 Bothe in collaboration with H Becker bombarded beryllium of mass 9 and also boron and lithium with alpha rays derived from polonium and obtained a new form of radiation Beyerchen pp 141 167 Beyerchen pp 79 102 Beyerchen pp 103 140 Hentschel Appendix F see the entry of Fleischmann Das Physikalische und Radiologische Institut der Universitat Heidelberg Heidelberger Neueste Nachrichten Volume 56 7 March 1913 States David M 28 June 2001 A History of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Medical Research 1929 1939 Walther Bothe and the Physics Institute The Early Years of Nuclear Physics Nobelprize org Landwehr Gottfried 2002 Rudolf Fleischmann 1 5 1903 3 2 2002 Nachrufe Auszug aus Jahrbuch pp 326 328 a b c d e Ulrich Schmidt Rohr Wolfgang Gentner 1906 1980 Universitat Heidelberg Jorg Kummer Hermann Danzer 1904 1987 University of Frankfurt Powers Thomas 1993 Heisenberg s War The Secret History of the German Bomb Knopf ISBN 0306810115 p 357 Dahl Per F 1999 Heavy water and the wartime race for nuclear energy Bristol Institute of Physics Publishing pp 138 140 ISBN 07 5030 6335 Retrieved 12 July 2019 Ermenc Joseph J ed 1989 Atomic Bomb Scientists Memoirs 1939 1945 Westport CT amp London Meckler pp 27 28 ISBN 0 88736 267 2 Hentschel pp 363 364 and Appendix F see the entries for Diebner and Dopel See also the entry for the KWIP in Appendix A and the entry for the HWA in Appendix B a b Macrakis Kristie 1993 Surviving the Swastika Scientific Research in Nazi Germany Oxford pp 164 169 ISBN 0195070100 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mehra Jagdish and Rechenberg Helmut 2001 The Historical Development of Quantum Theory Volume 6 The Completion of Quantum Mechanics 1926 1941 Part 2 The Conceptual Completion and Extension of Quantum Mechanics 1932 1941 Epilogue Aspects of the Further Development of Quantum Theory 1942 1999 Springer ISBN 978 0 387 95086 0 pp 1010 1011 Dahl Per F 1999 Heavy water and the wartime race for nuclear energy Bristol Institute of Physics Publishing p 141 ISBN 07 5030 6335 Retrieved 12 July 2019 Hentschel see the entry for the KWIP in Appendix A and the entries for the HWA and the RFR in Appendix B Also see p 372 and footnote No 50 on p 372 Walker pp 49 53 a b Kant Horst 2002 Werner Heisenberg and the German Uranium Project Otto Hahn and the Declarations of Mainau and Gottingen Max Planck Institut fur Wissenschaftsgeschichte Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics Innovations Report Hentschel Appendix E see the entry for Kernphysikalische Forschungsberichte Walker 268 274 Praparat 38 38 Oxyd and 38 were the cover names for uranium oxide see Deutsches Museum There were 50 odd volumes of the FIAT Reviews of German Science which covered the period 1930 to 1946 cited by Max von Laue in Document 117 Hentschel 1996 pp 393 395 FIAT Field Information Agencies Technical Bibliography EditBeyerchen Alan D 1977 Scientists Under Hitler Politics and the Physics Community in the Third Reich Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 01830 4 Hentschel Klaus Hentschel Ann M eds 1996 Physics and National Socialism An Anthology of Primary Sources Birkhauser ISBN 0 8176 5312 0 Walker Mark 1993 German National Socialism and the Quest for Nuclear Power 1939 1949 Cambridge ISBN 0 521 43804 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Walther Bothe Walther Bothe The Coincidence Method The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 Nobelprize org 1954 Due to Bothe s illness this lecture was not delivered orally Walther Bothe and the Physics Institute the Early Years of Nuclear Physics Nobelprize org Walther Bothe on Nobelprize org nbsp Annotated Bibliography for Walter Bothe from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walther Bothe amp oldid 1172920720, wikipedia, 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