Difference between revisions of "Manhattan Project"

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[[Image:Pupinatom.jpg|thumb|right|A subterranean Pupin lab during Manhattan Project research]]
  
 
The '''Manhattan Project''' was the US attempt to construct a nuclear weapon during World War II. As its name suggests (it is not a code word), the project originated in Manhattan, and some of the initial research took place in [[Pupin]] and [[Schermerhorn Hall]]s. This research centered on efforts to first split the atom, and involved some initial cyclotron and reactor designs. One of the old cyclotrons resides in Pupin's basement to this day.
 
The '''Manhattan Project''' was the US attempt to construct a nuclear weapon during World War II. As its name suggests (it is not a code word), the project originated in Manhattan, and some of the initial research took place in [[Pupin]] and [[Schermerhorn Hall]]s. This research centered on efforts to first split the atom, and involved some initial cyclotron and reactor designs. One of the old cyclotrons resides in Pupin's basement to this day.

Revision as of 18:21, 30 October 2007

See also Wikipedia's article about "Manhattan Project".
A subterranean Pupin lab during Manhattan Project research

The Manhattan Project was the US attempt to construct a nuclear weapon during World War II. As its name suggests (it is not a code word), the project originated in Manhattan, and some of the initial research took place in Pupin and Schermerhorn Halls. This research centered on efforts to first split the atom, and involved some initial cyclotron and reactor designs. One of the old cyclotrons resides in Pupin's basement to this day.

Columbia physicists also worked on a project to convert uranium into fuel for bombs by concentrating the easily splittable, but rare, 235 isotope of the element.

700 people were employed on the project at Columbia in its peak years. The football team was among them, enlisted to carry uranium across campus, meaning it was once useful for something, at least.

External links