The Manhattan Project: Big Science and the Atom Bomb
Jeff Hughes
Venduto da Revaluation Books, Exeter, Regno Unito
Venditore AbeBooks dal 6 gennaio 2003
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Aggiungere al carrelloVenduto da Revaluation Books, Exeter, Regno Unito
Venditore AbeBooks dal 6 gennaio 2003
Condizione: Nuovo
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungere al carrello176 pages. 7.00x4.50x0.50 inches. In Stock.
Codice articolo xi0231131526
In the twentieth century, almost every aspect of science changed: it spread from insular universities to government, industry, and the military; new disciplines emerged, the boundaries between old ones blurred; and a dizzying array of new products and processes changed people's lives. But perhaps the greatest change was science's growth in scale, scope, and cost, as it was transformed from an activity in which small groups or individuals conducted experiments into "Big Science"--a large-scale enterprise that is carried out by multidisciplinary and multinational groups of researchers, costs enormous sums, demands massive institutions of its own, and often represents a significant fraction of national budgets.
These changes have often been ascribed to the Manhattan Project, the allies'project during the Second World War to build the atomic bomb. Established at Los Alamos and several other sites, the Manhattan Project brought together American, British, Canadian, and refugee European scientists to design and build the bombs that ultimately destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. At its height, the project was equivalent in size to the entire American automobile industry, employing 130,000 people and costing a total of $2 billion. Its outcome conferred new prestige to science and scientists, and it is widely deemed responsible for the massive growth and militarization of postwar science.
But the Manhattan Project did not represent a radical break in the development of twentieth-century science. According to Jeff Hughes, it accelerated developments already underway. Drawing on recent scholarship, Hughes offers a lively reinterpretation of these epic events and considers the dramatic role the military and industry played in shaping not just the Manhattan Project, but the whole of twentieth-century science.
Jeff Hughes is a lecturer in the history of science and technology at the University of Manchester.
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