[edit]Reactor
A labor strike prevented construction of the pile at the
Argonne National Laboratory, so Fermi and his associates
Martin Whittaker and
Walter Zinn set about building the pile (the term "nuclear reactor" was not used until 1952) in a
rackets court under the abandoned west stands of the university's Stagg Field.
[8] The pile consisted of uranium pellets as a neutron-producing "core", separated from one another by graphite blocks
to slow the neutrons. Fermi himself described the apparatus as "a crude pile of black bricks and wooden timbers." The controls consisted of
cadmium-coated rods that absorbed neutrons. Withdrawing the rods would increase neutron activity in the pile, leading to a self-sustaining chain reaction. Re-inserting the rods would dampen the reaction.
[edit]First nuclear reaction
On December 2, 1942, CP-1 was ready for a demonstration. Before a group of dignitaries, a young scientist named
George Weil worked the final control rod while Fermi carefully monitored the neutron activity. The pile reached "criticality" or a self-sustaining reaction at 15:25. Fermi shut it down 28 minutes later.
After the first self-sustained nuclear chain reaction was achieved, a coded phone call was made by one of the physicists,
Arthur Compton, to
James Conant, chairman of the National Defense Research Committee. The conversation was in impromptu code:
| “ |
- Compton: The Italian navigator has landed in the New World.
- Conant: How were the natives?
- Compton: Very friendly.[9]
| ” |
Unlike most reactors that have been built since, this first one had no radiation shielding and no cooling system of any kind. Fermi had convinced Arthur Compton that his calculations were reliable enough to rule out a runaway chain reaction or an explosion, but, as the official historians of the Atomic Energy Commission later noted, the "gamble" remained in conducting "a possibly catastrophic experiment in one of the most densely populated areas of the nation!"
[10]
[edit]Significance and commemoration
- ^ a b c d "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 2010-07-09.
- ^ a b c d "Site of the First Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved 2008-06-11.
- ^ a b "Site of the First Self-Sustaining Controlled Nuclear Chain Reaction". City of Chicago Department of Planning and Development, Landmarks Division. 2003. Retrieved March 31, 2007.
- ^ Chicago Pile 1, Argonne National Laboratory
- ^ Atoms Forge a Scientific Revolution, Argonne National Laboratory
- ^ Natural nuclear reactors existed approx. 1.5 billion years ago in Oklo, Africa.
- ^ a b Fermi E (1946). "The Development of the first chain reaction pile". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 90: 20–24. [1].
- ^ Zug, James (2003). Squash, A History of the Game. Scribner. pp. 135–136. ISBN 978-0-7432-2990-6. The space is commonly misidentified as having been a squash court.
- ^ "http://www.ne.anl.gov/About/legacy/italnav.shtml". Argonne National Laboratory. November 18, 1942.
- ^ "CP-1 GOES CRITICAL Met Lab (December 2, 1942) Events: The Plutonium Path to the Bomb, 1942-1944". The Manhattan Project An Interactive History. US Dept of Energy. Retrieved 2012-04-12.
[edit]External links
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