We are honored to have once again Dr. David Levy as guest blogger to our blogs.
Skyward
Trinity
May 2019
As the world prepared for war
in 1939, a group of physicists was studying how to reproduce the behavior of a
star on Earth: to split an atom, either
quietly to provide a virtually unlimited source of power, or explosively to
create a weapon of mass destruction.
Worried that the Germans might develop an atomic bomb first,
astrophysicist Leo Szilard wrote a
letter to President Roosevelt suggesting that the Americans should develop the
bomb first. Thinking that the letter
would have more impact if it were signed by the foremost scientist of that
time, Szilard made two visits to Albert Einstein’s summer home in Cutchogue, on
Long Island, New York. They persuaded
him to sign the letter.
Einstein’s letter had an
immediate and powerful impact on Roosevelt.
He immediately set in place the initial research that led to the start
of the Manhattan project in June of 1942.
Within three years, the first plutonium nuclear device was test
detonated near Socorro, New Mexico in the Jornada del Muerto (ironically
translated to Dead Man’s Journey) desert.
J. Robert Oppenheimer named the actual test site Trinity, after the
first lines in John Donne’s Holy Sonnet 14:
Batter my heart, three-person'd God, for you
As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend;
That I may rise and stand, o'erthrow me, and bend
Your force to break, blow, burn, and make me new.
Picture 2: remains of a footing from the tower that
supported the bomb and which was incinerated that day.
Picture 3: The Schmidt-McDonald house, where the bomb
was assembled. All photographs were taken by David Levy.
On July 16, 1945, at 5:29:45 am, the nuclear
device detonated and the atomic age began.
Just one month later, two bombs were exploded over Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, Japan, and the Second World
War came to a sudden end.
It is now 73 years
later. On April 6 our daughter Nannette,
son-in-law Mark, grandson Matthew, friend David Rossetter, and Wendee and I visited
Trinity Site. It was a special and
emotional experience for us. We felt
the shudder and silence of those who witnessed the blinding flash of light that
turned dawn into noon across that lonely desert. The power and force of the detonation
reinforced the feeling of scientists there that this weapon was not a joke. It was used in combat twice, and it is now a
part of history. We visited that day to
experience the effect on people who felt the shock wave from 160 miles away and
who had to replace broken windows in Albuquerque, where our family lives today.
We didn’t see much trinitite there, as the army did an excellent job removing
the radioactive glass. We did not get
much exposure to radiation either; according to Army statistics, our one hour
visit to Ground zero gave us at most one millrem of radiation exposure,
compared to an average annual dose of 620 millrems from medical and natural
sources.
As we left the site we passed
a protest going on at the entrance.
After all these decades, what happened that rainy July day in 1945 still
has a profound effect on the people who lived and live in the atomic age. For a second that day, humanity witnessed the
process of a star here on Earth. And
when I got home that night and looked up at the peaceful stars, I shuddered
again.
Picture 1: Inscription on the obelisk at Ground zero.
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