The nuclear engineer emerged as a new form of recognised technical professional between 1940 and the early 1960s as nuclear fission, the chain reaction and their applications were explored. The institutionalization of nuclear engineering channelled into new national laboratories and corporate design offices during the decade after the war, and hurried into academic venues thereafter proved unusually dependent on government definition and support. This paper contrasts the distinct histories of the new discipline in the USA and UK (and, more briefly, Canada). In the segregated and influential environments of institutional laboratories and factories, historical actors such as physicist Walter Zinn in the USA and industrial chemist Christopher ...
The Independent Nuclear State: The United States, Britain and the Military Atom is a chronological a...
To address the lack of familiarity with nuclear history common among nuclear engineers and physicist...
At the end of the war it became apparent that the teamwork of government and scientific institutions...
The nuclear engineer emerged as a new form of recognised technical professional between 1940 and the...
The nuclear engineer emerged in distinct forms in the first three countries in which atomic energy w...
During five wartime years and the following post-war decade, atomic energy was a subject shrouded in...
Canada, as one of the three Allied nations collaborating on atomic energy development during the Sec...
Communities of nuclear workers have evolved in distinctive contexts. During the Manhattan Project th...
Between 1942 and the late 1950s, atomic piles (nuclear chain-reactors) were industrialized, initiall...
Atomic energy developed from 1940 as a subject shrouded in secrecy. Identified successively as a cru...
This book follows nuclear engineers, specialists in a field described by early administrators as a ‘...
The discipline of nuclear engineering is described, giving some historical background toexplain the ...
This account tracks the Allied atomic energy experts who emerged from the Manhattan Project to explo...
There was no special governmental partnership between Britain and America during the Second World Wa...
The Independent Nuclear State: The United States, Britain and the Military Atom is a chronological a...
To address the lack of familiarity with nuclear history common among nuclear engineers and physicist...
At the end of the war it became apparent that the teamwork of government and scientific institutions...
The nuclear engineer emerged as a new form of recognised technical professional between 1940 and the...
The nuclear engineer emerged in distinct forms in the first three countries in which atomic energy w...
During five wartime years and the following post-war decade, atomic energy was a subject shrouded in...
Canada, as one of the three Allied nations collaborating on atomic energy development during the Sec...
Communities of nuclear workers have evolved in distinctive contexts. During the Manhattan Project th...
Between 1942 and the late 1950s, atomic piles (nuclear chain-reactors) were industrialized, initiall...
Atomic energy developed from 1940 as a subject shrouded in secrecy. Identified successively as a cru...
This book follows nuclear engineers, specialists in a field described by early administrators as a ‘...
The discipline of nuclear engineering is described, giving some historical background toexplain the ...
This account tracks the Allied atomic energy experts who emerged from the Manhattan Project to explo...
There was no special governmental partnership between Britain and America during the Second World Wa...
The Independent Nuclear State: The United States, Britain and the Military Atom is a chronological a...
To address the lack of familiarity with nuclear history common among nuclear engineers and physicist...
At the end of the war it became apparent that the teamwork of government and scientific institutions...