"She penned passionate descriptions of black holes and supernovas."
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/12/26/magazine/2010lives.html#view=joan_hinton
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Sunday, December 19, 2010
The Bra Mask
"Treating victims of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986, the Ukrainian scientist Elena Bodnar realized that her patients could have drastically reduced their radiation poisoning if they’d had immediate access to even a crude air filter. This fall she commercially introduced the Emergency Bra, whose cups can be separated and converted into face masks." — Alexa Vaughn
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/19/magazine/19Ideas.html?ref=todayspaper
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/19/magazine/19Ideas.html?ref=todayspaper
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Civil Defense Throwback!
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/16/science/16terror.html?_r=1&ref=todayspaper
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Nuclear Convoy Experts Filled with Liquid Courage
"Federal agents hired to transport nuclear weapons and components sometimes got drunk while on convoy missions, the Energy Department’s assistant inspector general said Monday. Last year, the police detained two agents who went to a bar during an assignment, and in 2007, an agent was arrested for public intoxication. The report did not identify the locations for either incident."
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/23/us/23brfs-NUCLEARCONVO_BRF.html?ref=todayspaper
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/23/us/23brfs-NUCLEARCONVO_BRF.html?ref=todayspaper
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
sex bomb
"Has the atom become the aphrodisiac of the twentieth century? Or have the technologies of destruction become so thoroughly infused with eroticism that the orgiastic frenzy of the atom bomb is no longer an aphrodisiac or even a metaphor for sex, but sex itself?"
- J. Veitch, "Doctor Strangelove's Cabinet of Wonder"
- J. Veitch, "Doctor Strangelove's Cabinet of Wonder"
Strangelovian 4-H Club
April 15, 1955: Nevada
The Met test series: "In one experiment four dozen White Chester swine - - dubbed 'atomic pigs' - - were tethered at various distances from the explosion, dressed in the uniforms of Chinese and Soviet troops. This perverse game of cross-dressing sounds as if it was conceived by a Strangelovian 4-H Club. In fact, it was designed by Los Alamos scientists to study how different types of enemy clothing might affect the absorption of radiation by the skin."
- J. Veitch, "Doctor Strangelove's Cabinet of Wonder: Sifting through the Atomic Ruins at the Nevada Test Site"
The Met test series: "In one experiment four dozen White Chester swine - - dubbed 'atomic pigs' - - were tethered at various distances from the explosion, dressed in the uniforms of Chinese and Soviet troops. This perverse game of cross-dressing sounds as if it was conceived by a Strangelovian 4-H Club. In fact, it was designed by Los Alamos scientists to study how different types of enemy clothing might affect the absorption of radiation by the skin."
- J. Veitch, "Doctor Strangelove's Cabinet of Wonder: Sifting through the Atomic Ruins at the Nevada Test Site"
Friday, October 22, 2010
Manhattan Project Codes
top = atom
boat = bomb
urchin fashion = uranium fission
spinning = smashing
igloo of urchin = isotope of uraium
“The word for U-235 was tenure…You see…two and
three and five and five make ten. Right? O.K., that’s where the ‘ten’ comes in.
The ‘ure’ stands for uranium. So, ‘ten’ plus ‘ure’ equals ‘tenure.’ A cinch.’
Daniel Lang, Early Tales of the Atomic Age, 19
boat = bomb
urchin fashion = uranium fission
spinning = smashing
igloo of urchin = isotope of uraium
“The word for U-235 was tenure…You see…two and
three and five and five make ten. Right? O.K., that’s where the ‘ten’ comes in.
The ‘ure’ stands for uranium. So, ‘ten’ plus ‘ure’ equals ‘tenure.’ A cinch.’
Daniel Lang, Early Tales of the Atomic Age, 19
shut it
"DON'T BE A BLABOTEUR" - read signs around the Manhattan Project
Daniel Lang, Early Tales of the Atomic Age, 17Tuesday, September 14, 2010
My beau
Oppenheimer on long rides into the desert would pack nothing but a jar of peanut butter and a bottle of whiskey.
File under: man after my own heart.
File under: man after my own heart.
Images from How to Photograph an Atomic Bomb: by Peter Kuran
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/09/14/science/20100914_atom.html?ref=science
Thursday, July 22, 2010
see through bones
After witnessing atomic bomb tests some marines who were forced to march toward the epicenter remembered seeing through their bones.
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Atomic Oil Spill?!?!
In further proof that no one knows how to shore up these slippery dinosaur remnants choking the gulf - some advocate an atomic solution!
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/03/us/03nuke.html?ref=todayspaper
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/03/us/03nuke.html?ref=todayspaper
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Counterspy
Counterspy Radio Program - Episode "Statue of Death"August 16, 1949 - takes place in Oak Ridge obviously, although it is not mentioned by name.
Dagwood Splits the Atom
Monday, May 24, 2010
5,113
The Obama administration announces for the first time the number of nuclear weapons we have:
5,113.
5,113.
Atomic Slaves
From a 1946 Socialist Party pamphlet: "The slaves of the machine must not now become the slaves of the atom."
Quoted in Boyer (1994:143)
Quoted in Boyer (1994:143)
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Atomic Taxi
John W. Campbell provided a cautionary voice to those who imagined an atomic Utopia:
"If an atomic-powered taxi hit an atomic-powered streetcar at Forty-second and Lex, it would completely destroy the whole Grand Central area."
Quoted in Boyer, 115
"If an atomic-powered taxi hit an atomic-powered streetcar at Forty-second and Lex, it would completely destroy the whole Grand Central area."
Quoted in Boyer, 115
New York Attacked!
Philip Morrison's scenario of an atomic bomb attack on Manhattan:
"There was no one of the eight million who had not his story to tell. The man who saw the blast through the netting of the monkey cage in Central Park, and bore for days on the unnatural ruddy tan of his face the white imprint of the shadow of the netting, was famous. The amateurs who collected radioactive souvenirs from the strong patch of radioactivity which sickened Greenwich Villagers fir weeks were matched by those who found scorched shadow patterns in the wallpaper and plasterboard of a thousand wrecked homes.
New York City had thus suffered under one bomb, and the story is unreal in only one way: The bombs will never again, as in Japan, come in ones or twos. They will come in hundreds, even in thousands. Even if, by means as yet unknown, we are able to stop as many as 90 percent of these missiles, their number will still be large. If the bomb gets out of hand, if we do not learn to live together so that science will be our help and no our hurt, there is only one sure future. The cities of men on earth will perish."
From "If the Bomb Gets out of Hand" in One World or None (2007:15).
"There was no one of the eight million who had not his story to tell. The man who saw the blast through the netting of the monkey cage in Central Park, and bore for days on the unnatural ruddy tan of his face the white imprint of the shadow of the netting, was famous. The amateurs who collected radioactive souvenirs from the strong patch of radioactivity which sickened Greenwich Villagers fir weeks were matched by those who found scorched shadow patterns in the wallpaper and plasterboard of a thousand wrecked homes.
New York City had thus suffered under one bomb, and the story is unreal in only one way: The bombs will never again, as in Japan, come in ones or twos. They will come in hundreds, even in thousands. Even if, by means as yet unknown, we are able to stop as many as 90 percent of these missiles, their number will still be large. If the bomb gets out of hand, if we do not learn to live together so that science will be our help and no our hurt, there is only one sure future. The cities of men on earth will perish."
From "If the Bomb Gets out of Hand" in One World or None (2007:15).
Saturday, May 22, 2010
What to expect when you are expecting an atomic bomb
Federal Civil Defense Act's pamphlet 'Survival under Atomic Attack' (1951).
Naturally, there is also a movie version.
Naturally, there is also a movie version.
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Lone Ranger Atomic Bomb Ring
Atomic Cocktail
Within hours of the announcement of the atomic bombing of Japan, the bar at the Washington Press Club began offering an 'Atomic Cocktail' consisting of Pernod & gin.
Boyer (1994:10)
Boyer (1994:10)
Prometheus, American citizen
Life magazine's August 20, 1945 issue:
"Prometheus, the subtle artificer and friend of man, is still an American citizen."
O! the grand hubris of the USA!
"Prometheus, the subtle artificer and friend of man, is still an American citizen."
O! the grand hubris of the USA!
Space, Time, the Bomb
Paul Boyer suggest that "the Bomb has become one of those categories of Being, like Space and Time, that, according to Kant, are built into the very structure of our minds, giving shape and meaning to all our perceptions. Am I alone in this feeling? I think not."
- By the Bomb's Early Light (1994:xx)
- By the Bomb's Early Light (1994:xx)
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Degeneration
"I remember so plainly, we all knew and all suspected what we were doing, but we didn't call it the atom bomb. We called it degeneration."
- Betsy Stuart, troubleshooter for Du Pont at Hanford
In Sanger, p.170
- Betsy Stuart, troubleshooter for Du Pont at Hanford
In Sanger, p.170
By the way...
"By the way, have you ever held a piece of plutonium in your hand? Well, you want to do that because there is something it does for you. People at Los Alamos gave me a piece to hold. It was shpaed like a half of a hollow sphere. It was nickel-placted so that the alpha particles from it would not reach the skin. But the marvelous thing about it was the temperature of it. Here, day in day out, producting enough heat to keep itself quite warm, not for 10 years, not for a hundred years, but for thousands of years. It gives you an immediate sense of energy capacity."
- -John Wheeler, chief physicist at Hanford.
From Sanger, p.159.
- -John Wheeler, chief physicist at Hanford.
From Sanger, p.159.
Plutonium Romance
"Hanford is a song that hasn't been sung properly. there was a great romance about it. The way to gt the feel of that romance is to put yourself back at that meetin gin Wilmington, when we had a map of the United States spread out in fornt of us, and differnet possibilities there for where this plant might be sited. Great expanses of land, it was almost as if you were Columbus deciding where you would go exploring, or as if you were setting up a new respublic. Then, to pick that particular place, a most fantastic place. Whoever thingks of that northern state of Washington having a hot desert in its middle.That's onestory one person in a hundred knows. And that beautiful, bright blue, ice cold Columbia River coming down through it, from the ice fields of Canada. Then, the history of the place, the pioneer settlers who had desperately tried to irrigate it, and had irrigated it. Then pouring in, all this caravan, all different ways of getting there during the war. Railroad, airplanes, cars. The variety of people there, that too was romantic. Those Okies and Arkies coming in, several hundred a night, being unloaded there at Pasco. Those beer joints with windows close to ground level so that tear gas could be squirted in. The immense mess halls, accomodating those thousands of people. To see all those table, table after table of people. Gobble, gobble, gobble."
- John Wheeler, leading physicist in residence at Hanford
From Sanger Working on the Bomb, 157-158
- John Wheeler, leading physicist in residence at Hanford
From Sanger Working on the Bomb, 157-158
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Sins of the Father
"I was the daughter of a radiation monitor" - Debora Gregor
* From the poem 'Adam's Daughter' in the collection Desert Fathers, Uranium Daughters
* From the poem 'Adam's Daughter' in the collection Desert Fathers, Uranium Daughters
Richland High School
The poetics of plutonium
Nuclear physicist, John Wheeler looking back on the Manhattan Project in 1982:
"An observer from afar, looking upon the scene in 1944, would have been convinced that he was looking at one alchemist's dream inside another. It was preposterous enough to think that dead uranium, put into regularly-spaced crannies in tons of dead black graphite, would come alive. It was still more preposterous to imagine this life, this silent darting back and forth of invisible neutrons, as producing in the course of time not merely a few atoms of plutonium, but billions upon billions of them, the philosopher's dream of synthesizing a new element achieved in kilogram amounts."
Quoted in Sanger, Working on the Bomb, 148.
"An observer from afar, looking upon the scene in 1944, would have been convinced that he was looking at one alchemist's dream inside another. It was preposterous enough to think that dead uranium, put into regularly-spaced crannies in tons of dead black graphite, would come alive. It was still more preposterous to imagine this life, this silent darting back and forth of invisible neutrons, as producing in the course of time not merely a few atoms of plutonium, but billions upon billions of them, the philosopher's dream of synthesizing a new element achieved in kilogram amounts."
Quoted in Sanger, Working on the Bomb, 148.
Obsession with Dimes
Tech Area Show and Tell: July 17 & 18, 1955
To commemorate the ten year anniversary of the Trinity test, Los Alamos opened up its 'Tech Area' to visitors - thousands of people came.
One exhibit was called 'cooking your dimes'. Here visitors placed their dimes in a counter that measured radioactivity. The units of measurement were 'rare, medium, or well-done' depending on how much radioactivity they had soaked up (it was never explained just how the dimes became radioactive in the first place).
- Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, 188-189.
To commemorate the ten year anniversary of the Trinity test, Los Alamos opened up its 'Tech Area' to visitors - thousands of people came.
One exhibit was called 'cooking your dimes'. Here visitors placed their dimes in a counter that measured radioactivity. The units of measurement were 'rare, medium, or well-done' depending on how much radioactivity they had soaked up (it was never explained just how the dimes became radioactive in the first place).
- Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, 188-189.
Cold War Games - Operation Alert
In the early 1950s, the Federal Civil Defense Administration (FCDA) initiated a program called 'Alert America'. A key element of this campaign was called 'Operation Alert', which staged mock atomic bomb attacks on hundreds of American cities in order to determine civilian preparedness.
At the end of the annual drills the FCDA would issue a report. In 1956 the organization estimated that 8 million 'died', 6 million were 'injured,' and 24 million 'left homeless'.
- Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, 179
At the end of the annual drills the FCDA would issue a report. In 1956 the organization estimated that 8 million 'died', 6 million were 'injured,' and 24 million 'left homeless'.
- Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, 179
Intercourse through the fence
In Hanford Washington, otherwise known as secret 'site W' the women's barracks were surrounded by a fence.
As one site worker, Sam Campbell described the situation: "Some of the women were prostitutes, or making a little side money. There was quite a bit of that. I have heard of cases of intercourse done through the fences around the women's barracks. I do think we had some bush business along the river." (Sanger, Working on the Bomb, 125).
I am skeptical about this claim.
In Sanger's oral history, former Hanford worker, Jane Jone Hutchins recalled: "I look back now and realize this was a free country but we were living behind barbed wire at Hanford, all to protect womanhood. I know that where women were concerned, Hanford could either make you or break you. Gals who had never had male attention before were, you know, popular. You could either become a slut, I suppose, if you wanted to, or you could become very strong, and be able to say 'No'." (143)
As one site worker, Sam Campbell described the situation: "Some of the women were prostitutes, or making a little side money. There was quite a bit of that. I have heard of cases of intercourse done through the fences around the women's barracks. I do think we had some bush business along the river." (Sanger, Working on the Bomb, 125).
I am skeptical about this claim.
In Sanger's oral history, former Hanford worker, Jane Jone Hutchins recalled: "I look back now and realize this was a free country but we were living behind barbed wire at Hanford, all to protect womanhood. I know that where women were concerned, Hanford could either make you or break you. Gals who had never had male attention before were, you know, popular. You could either become a slut, I suppose, if you wanted to, or you could become very strong, and be able to say 'No'." (143)
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Church of the SAC (Strategic Air Command)
Does Virilio know about this?!
"...the Strategic Air Command Memorial Chapel at Offutt Air Force Base was built in 1956. It includes a sanctuary with seating for 360 people, stained glass windows and an educational-administrative center...The stained glass window on the north wall of the narthex, or vestibule, features words from the Air Force hymn, and the seals of the Department of the Air Force and the Strategic Air Command. Windows on the east wall depict significant events of duties associated with the Second, Eighth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth Air Forces. A detail from the Sixteenth Air Force window shows the famous Red Telephone, symbolic of the Strategic Air Command's global alert readiness. Small windows near the chapel's main entrance and on the west wall represent specific air divisions and wings within the Strategic Air Command. The windows reflect the cold war missions of the 389th Strategic Missile Wing, the 72d bombardment Wing, the 451st Strategic Missile Wing, and the 99th Bombardment Wing. The stained glass windows of SAC's Memorial Chapel depict the duality of its mission — messages of hope and guidance are mixed with the grim imagery of global nuclear warfare."
http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0900/frameset_reset.html?http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0900/stories/0901_0130.html
"...the Strategic Air Command Memorial Chapel at Offutt Air Force Base was built in 1956. It includes a sanctuary with seating for 360 people, stained glass windows and an educational-administrative center...The stained glass window on the north wall of the narthex, or vestibule, features words from the Air Force hymn, and the seals of the Department of the Air Force and the Strategic Air Command. Windows on the east wall depict significant events of duties associated with the Second, Eighth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth Air Forces. A detail from the Sixteenth Air Force window shows the famous Red Telephone, symbolic of the Strategic Air Command's global alert readiness. Small windows near the chapel's main entrance and on the west wall represent specific air divisions and wings within the Strategic Air Command. The windows reflect the cold war missions of the 389th Strategic Missile Wing, the 72d bombardment Wing, the 451st Strategic Missile Wing, and the 99th Bombardment Wing. The stained glass windows of SAC's Memorial Chapel depict the duality of its mission — messages of hope and guidance are mixed with the grim imagery of global nuclear warfare."
http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0900/frameset_reset.html?http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0900/stories/0901_0130.html
Fear of Ellipses
Originally, scientists felt that fallout from nuclear weapons would be relatively contained. Once they realized that this was not the case and that radioactive particles could travel great distances, they began to develop maps suggesting what area would be affected based on wind patterns. These maps were composed of a series of dots (assumed targets) and ellipses (assumed fallout patterns). They were cartographic representations aimed at guessing the size of the bruise after a punch.
Nuclear Nebraska Take 2
Just found this excellent resource: http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0900/frameset_reset.html?http://www.nebraskastudies.org/0900/stories/0901_0130.html
Complete with interactive maps so that you can bomb the hell out of Nebraska and then figure out how to escape!
Complete with interactive maps so that you can bomb the hell out of Nebraska and then figure out how to escape!
Nuclear Nebraska

STRATCOM - US Strategic Command, which is the nation's control center for its nuclear arsenal is located in a teensy town called Bellevue in Nebraska of all places.
Not only this - Nebraska in the 1960s led the civil defense effort in the creation of public shelters in case of nuclear attack. And because we know that nothing makes us snacky like the threat of nuclear Armageddon a special munchie was created called Nebraskits!
Saturday, May 15, 2010
People of the Bomb
"The bomb first was our weapon. Then it became our diplomacy. Next it became our economy. Now it's become our culture. We've become the people of the bomb." - E. L. Doctorow
Monday, May 10, 2010
The Manufacture vs. Joe 1
The Soviets called their first atomic bomb 'The Manufacture". The US nicknamed their first atomic test Joe-1.
Los Arzamas
The Soviets, just like the US, had lots of cheeky names for their secret sites and atomic projects. Their original main site was Sarov, a former monastery, yet it was called Base-112, Centre-300, Arzamas-16, or sometimes 'Los Arzamas'.
Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, 153
Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, 153
Vegetable Wars
According to John Hunner in Inventing Los Alamos, at the time of the Bikini tests the cloud was referred to not as mushroom, but rather cauliflower.
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Its My Party
When Oppie expressed his reservations about the Bikini Tests, President Truman put pen to paper and in a letter to his Under Secretary of State, Dean Acheson called my boyfriend a "cry-baby scientist."
The Gall!
- - Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (New York: Knopf, 2005), pp. 349-350.
The Gall!
- - Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (New York: Knopf, 2005), pp. 349-350.
Friday, May 7, 2010
Insane, indeed
After learning of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, spontaneous parties broke out in Los Alamos, one resident, Phyllis Fisher, in a letter to her mother, wrote: "By comparison the excitement on the Hill today [August 6, 1945] has put that of July 16 [date of the Trinity test] far down on the scale of insane rejoicing."
Quoted in Hunner, p.77
Quoted in Hunner, p.77
Testes, testes, 1, 2, 3?
July 16, 1945: The countdown to the world's first atomic bomb test is underway. A local radio station's broadcast intrudes the wave length the Trinity site was using; the result an interspersing of numerical lessening with Tchaikovsky's Nutcraker Suite.
Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, p. 68.
Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos, p. 68.
Oppenheimer, zombie?
During the staging of 'Arsenic and Old Lace' at the Los Alamos' Little Theater Group, "Oppenheimer surprised the audience when he appeared as the first corpse, followed by corpses played by Nobel Prize-winner Enrico Fermi, theoretical physicist Hans Bethe, and other men prominent in the Tech Area."
- John Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos p. 57
- John Hunner, Inventing Los Alamos p. 57
Thursday, May 6, 2010
My Boyfriend's Brother
Violence Against Women
"There are 140 times more U-238 atoms than U-235 atoms in natural uranium, and separating these 'sisters' would be necessary before a bomb could be made. Since the two isotopes were of the same element, separation could not be done chemically, only physically."
- S. L. Sanger, Working on the Bomb: An Oral History of WWII Hanford, p.11-12
- S. L. Sanger, Working on the Bomb: An Oral History of WWII Hanford, p.11-12
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
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