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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $65.00

Format:
Hardback
320 pp.
24 b/w illustrations, 168 mm x 240 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199687183

Publication date:
February 2014

Imprint: OUP UK


Nuclear Dawn

F. E. Simon and the Race for Atomic Weapons in World War II

Kenneth D. McRae

This book provides a rounded biography of Franz (later Sir Francis) Simon, his early life in Germany, his move to Oxford in 1933, and his experimental contributions to low temperature physics approximating absolute zero. After 1939 he switched his research to nuclear physics, and is credited with solving the problem of uranium isotope separation by gaseous diffusion for the British nuclear programme Tube Alloys.

The volume is distinctive for its inclusion of source materials not available to previous researchers, such as Simon's diary and his correspondence with his wife, and for a fresh, well-informed insider voice on the five-power nuclear rivalry of the war years.

The work also draws on a relatively mature nuclear literature to attempt a comparison and evaluation of the five nuclear rivals in wider political and military context, and to identify the factors, or groups of factors, that can explain the results.

Readership : Suitable for the general reader interested in the history of the Second World War, wartime science, and weapons development. Historians of physics, especially low temperature research.

Preface: A House in Oxford
1. Growing Up into a World at War
2. Berlin 1919-1930
3. Breslau 1931-1933
4. Oxford 1933-1939
5. Any Capable Physicist 1939-1941
6. Industrial Plants ... Heretofore Deemed Impossible 1942-1945
7. Why Manhattan?
8. Something Reasonable Again
9. Security Lapses
10. Germany in the Balance
11. A Rounded Life

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Kenneth D. McRae is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Carleton University, Ottawa. He has written or edited seven other volumes, including monographs on selected West European democracies (Belgium, Finland, Switzerland) and a volume of readings in the same area.He is a son-in-law of Sir Francis and Lady Simon. For this volume he has had full access to Simon's personal letters, papers, diaries, and event calendars, as well as to the scientific correspondence and documents deposited in the Simon Papers at the Royal Society Library and in the Cherwell Papers at Nuffield College, Oxford.

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Special Features

  • Rounded biography of Sir Francis Simon.
  • Includes new material not available to earlier researchers.
  • Description of life in London during the Blitz.
  • An insider view of British and American nuclear programmes.
  • Pioneering work in comparing and evaluating five wartime competing nuclear rivals.