Everything about Robert Serber totally explained
Robert Serber (
March 14 1909 -
June 1 1997) was an
American physicist who participated in the
Manhattan Project.
Robert Serber was born in Philadelphia. He earned his B.S. in Engineering Physics from
Lehigh University in 1930, his PhD from the
University of Wisconsin-Madison with
John Van Vleck in 1934, after which he was initially going to begin postdoctorate work at
Princeton University with
Eugene Wigner but, en route, changed his plans and went to work with
Robert Oppenheimer at the
University of California, Berkeley (and shuttled with Oppenheimer between Berkeley and the
California Institute of Technology). In 1938 he took a job at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he stayed until he was recruited for the
Manhattan Project. He later became a Professor and Chair of the physics department at
Columbia University.
He was recruited for the Manhattan Project in 1941, and was in
Project Alberta on the dropping of the bomb. When the Los Alamos lab was first being organised a decision was made by Oppenheimer to not compartmentalize the technical information among different departments. This increased the effectiveness of the technical workers in problem solving, and emphasized the urgency of the project in their minds, now they knew what they were working on. So it fell to Serber to give a series of lectures explaining the basic principles and goals of the project. These lectures were printed and supplied to all incoming scientific staff, and became know as
The Los Alamos Primer, LA-1. It was declassified in 1965. . Serber developed the first good theory of bomb disassembly hydrodynamics.
Serber created the code-names for all three design projects, the "
Little Boy" (uranium gun), "
Thin Man" (plutonium gun), and "
Fat Man" (plutonium implosion), according to his reminiscences (1998). The names were based on their design shapes; the "Thin Man" would be a very long device, and the name came from the
Dashiell Hammett detective novel and
series of movies of the same name; the "Fat Man" bomb would be round and fat and was named after
Sidney Greenstreet's character in
The Maltese Falcon. "Little Boy" would come last and be named only to contrast to the "Thin Man" bomb. This differs from the alternative theory that "Fat Man" was named after Churchill and "Thin Man" after Roosevelt (see Links).
Serber was to go on the camera plane for the Nagasaki mission,
Big Stink, but it left without him when Major Hopkins ordered him off the plane as he'd forgotten his parachute, reportedly after the B-29 had already taxied onto the runway. Since Serber was the only crew member who knew how to operate the high-speed camera, Hopkins had to be instructed by radio from Tinian on its use.
Serber was with the first American team to enter
Hiroshima and
Nagasaki to assess the results of the atomic bombing of the two cities.
In 1948, he'd to defend himself against anonymous accusations of disloyalty, mostly due to the fact that his wife's family were Jewish intellectuals with Socialist leanings, and also because he tried to remove politics from discussions of the feasibility of the fusion bomb, leading to arguments with
Edward Teller.
Serber went on to be consultant to numerous labs, businesses and commissions.
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