Synopses & Reviews
This a paperback edition of Professor Walker's full-scale examination of the German efforts to harness the economic, military and political power of nuclear fission between 1939 and 1949. The book explains clearly, in terms that the non-specialist can understand, what was involved in the Germans' quest, and in what ways the German scientists succeeded or failed in the development of 'the bomb'.
Review
"Mark Walker's new history of the German bomb program...offers a revision of earlier accounts which is backed up by a great deal of original research in German archives...The result is a meticulous account of the German bureaucratic landscape in which a few dozen scientists and officials generated paper about proposals to build a bomb...Walker has resolved many confusions in the history of the German bomb project." The Atlantic"...informative and well-researched...In general, this is a well-concieved and well-presented book." Peter Hayes, Science"Walker provides a valuable new version of the story of the German quest for nuclear power before 1950." Raymond G. Stokes, American Journal of Physics"...this book is as good as any written about nuclear power in World War II, and better than most. It raises questions which should be asked not just of German physics, but of science in other national traditions and under less fearsome governments." Bruce Hevly, Foundations of Physics"This is an excellent book: intensely researched, well written, and balanced in its judgments. Its focus on the German scientists is novel, and its discussion of the position of science in a modern state is well worth pondering." Modern Europe"...Walker maps a part of the German scientific community with reference to its ideological and political, as well as its scientific and technological, bearings. His survey is thorough, and he guides the reader surely to a better comprehension of this crucial episode in the history of modern science." Robert W. Seidel, Isis
Synopsis
This is a paperback edition of Professor Walker's full-scale examination of the German efforts to harness the economic, military and political power of nuclear fission between 1939 and 1949. It argues that the German decision not to attempt the production of nuclear weapons during World War II came as a result of economic and political developments, not scientific or moral considerations, and was at the time a perfectly reasonable policy. Professor Walker also places nuclear fission research in the contexts of the war effort and German cultural imperialism, including the plunder and exploitation of "Greater Germany," the German slave labor economy, and the ambivalent interaction between the Nazi party and the German physicists.
The book begins at the height of the Empire, and carries the story through to the founding of the two postwar republics in order to emphasize continuity before and after the Third Reich, and to compare the scientists' activity during the war and after the shock of Hiroshima and the Nuremberg trials. Throughout, Professor Walker explains clearly, in terms that the non-specialist can understand, what was involved in the Germans' quest, and in what ways the German scientists succeeded or failed in the development of "the bomb."
Synopsis
According to this analysis, Germany's decision not to pursue nuclear weaponry during the Second World War came about as a result of economic and political developments, not scientific or moral considerations, and was at the time--a perfectly reasonable policy.
Table of Contents
Introduction; Part I. Lightning War: Nuclear fission; The German nuclear power project; Moderators, isotope separation, and uranium machines; Nuclear power and lightning war; Part II. The War Slows Down: The end of the lightning war; Nuclear power conferences; National Socialism and German physics; Progress and infighting; Part III. The War Comes Home: Wonder weapons; Uranium machines in Berlin-gottow; Greater Germany and cultural imperialism; Death from above and betrayal from within; Part IV. The War is Lost: Evacuation and self-preservation; The heavy water dries up; Harteck's circle, centrifuges, and special experiments; Uranium machines and rock cellars; Part V. The German Achievement in the American Shadow: The Alsos MIssion; Farm Hall; The Smyth Report; Part VI. The Legacy of German National Socialism: The occupation of Germany; Nazification and denazification; The Goudsmit/Heisenberg controversy; Part VII. The Myth of the German Atomic Bomb: Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; Index.