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The
New York Times reacted to experiments like those by Cockcroft and
Walton with enthusiasm...
NEWS
ARTICLE: "Science has obtained conclusive proof from recent experiments
that the innermost citadel of matter, the nucleus of the atom, can be smashed,
yielding tremendous amounts of energy and probably vast new stores of gold,
radium and other valuable minerals."
But the Cockcroft-Walton workand every other nuclear physics experiment
during the thirtiesused up far more energy than it released. So physicists
doubted that nuclear energy could be put to practical use anytime soon,
if ever. Rutherford made this opinion public in 1933 at a scientific meeting,
and his remarks were published in the scientific journal Nature:
NEWS
ARTICLE: "These transformations of the atom are of extraordinary
interest to scientists but we cannot control atomic energy to an extent
which would be of any value commercially, and I believe we are not likely
ever to be able to do so... Our interest in the matter is purely scientific,
and the experiments which are being carried out will help us to a better
understanding of the structure of matter."
A few physicists were not so sure that nuclear energy could never be controlled.
Leo Szilard thought of a possible way to do it. If he could find some sort
of nucleus that would emit two neutrons whenever it was bombarded
with one neutron, he might be able to set off a chain reaction. Szilard
wanted to investigate various elements, including uranium. But he was not
able to get money to do experiments.
It was only in 1938 that many scientists began to focus their attention on uranium, the heaviest of known elements. Leading the pack were two German chemists, Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann. For over thirty years, Hahn had been working with another talented scientist, Lise Meitner. However, Meitner was of Jewish ancestry, and had to flee Nazi Germany. Otto Hahn recalls...
HAHN:
Miss MeitnerProfessor Meitnerhad left our laboratory on July
1938 on account of these Hitler regime things and she had to go to Sweden.
And
Strassmann and myself, we had to work alone again and in the autumn of '38
we found strange results.
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