Wired Top Stories -
1 days and 3 hours ago
pstrongDec. 2: /strongIt's a double milestone for nuclear energy. The first man-made sustained
nuclear chain reaction was created this day in 1942. And just 15 years later, the first full-scale
nuclear power plant went online. /pp strong1942: /strong Enrico Fermi, Leo Szilard and their
colleagues achieve a successful, controlled chain reaction in a squash court underneath the
football grandstand of the University of Chicago's Stagg Field. It lays the groundwork for the a
href="http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/07/dayintech_0716"first atomic bombs/a.
/pp a
href="http://www.anl.gov/Science_and_Technology/History/Anniversary_Frontiers/unisci.html"Fermi and
Szilard/a had been working on nuclear fission at Columbia University in New York, when Einstein
wrote of their work to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Einstein feared that German nuclear
researchers might gain an unbeatable lead in the field and develop an atomic weapon that could win
the war. /pp The Roosevelt administration responded with the then-secret, now-famous Manhattan
Project. Top U.S. atomic scientists soon gathered in Chicago to see just how feasible it was to
start a nuclear chain reaction, starting with a emcontrolled/em rather than explosive one. /pp The
original idea was to build a nuclear pile at a location in the Argonne Forest about 30 miles
outside Chicago, but there were construction problems. Remarkably, the experiment was relocated to
the University of Chicago campus inside city limits. /pp Construction began Nov. 16, 1942. The team
got uranium from an Iowa State University researcher and Westinghouse Electric. Staffers worked
around the clock to build a wooden structure on which they placed a lattice of 57 layers,
comprising six tons of a
href="http://www.anl.gov/Science_and_Technology/History/Anniversary_Frontiers/piglet.html"uranium
metal and 40 tons of uranium oxide/a embedded in 380 tons of graphite blocks. /pp The whole
apparatus was encased in a custom square balloon built by Goodyear Tire. The Chicago Pile-1 cost
$2.7 million (about $36 million in today's money). /pp The Dec. 2 experiment began at 9:45 a.m.
with more than 50 people in attendance. A three-man "suicide squad" was ready to douse the reactor
in case it threatened to get out of control. Besides the main On/Off switch, there was a weighted
safety rod that would automatically trip if neutron intensity got too high, a hand-operated backup
safety rod, and "SCRAM" mdash; the safety control rod ax-man, a top staffer wielding an ax to cut a
rope to drop the safety rod, if all else failed. /pp The suicide squad wasn't needed. The pile
achieved a sustained nuclear reaction at 3:25, and Fermi shut it down at 3:53. Those 28 minutes
changed the world. /pp a
href="http://www.anl.gov/Science_and_Technology/History/Anniversary_Frontiers/italnav.html"So
secret was the project/a that at a party a few days later, the scientists' spouses didn't know what
the all the congratulations were about. They wouldn't find out what had happened and a
href="http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2007/08/dayintech_0806"where the technology was
headed/a for another two-and-a-half years. And then, the world knew./a /pp strong1957: /strongThe
light-water breeder reactor at Shippingport, Pennsylvania mdash; the first in the United States
mdash; goes to full power on the anniversary of Chicago Pile-1. /pp An experimental breeder reactor
devised by Chicago Pile-1 veteran Walter Zinn had created the a
href="http://www.todayinsci.com/12/12_20.htm"first nuclear-generated electricity/a in 1951.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower broke ground for the first commercial plant, to be operated by
Pittsburgh's Duquesne Light Company, in 1954. /pp Westinghouse Electric designed the plant in
conjunction with the Atomic Energy Commission. When it was in operation, nuclear fission heated
water, which transferred its heat to convert the water in a secondary system into steam, which
drove the turbine that created the electricity. /pp Shippingport shipped its first power into the
Pittsburgh grid Dec. 18, 1957. Eisenhower returned to formally dedicate the plant the following May
26. /pp The plant was decomissioned in 1982 after a quarter-century of use. In the first complete
U.S. decontamination, the reactor vessel was shipped to a low-level waste disposal facility at the
Hanford Site in Richland, Washington. /pp After the Shippingport site was cleaned, the a
href="http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/doe_shippingport_01.htm"government released it for unrestricted
use/a in 1987, suitable for picnicking or a children's playground. The American Society of
Mechanical Engineers designated the plant as a landmark, and it's now open to visitors. /pp
emSources: Argonne National Laboratory, American Society of Mechanical Engineers/em /pbr
style="clear: both;"/ a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:d04b7d88f530e39194bc599220676652:PJ1Tngm9vQKgPkYwgsdlZMKccPpHfssntBumRI0rx%2FirE1WcaNkmankQFrbfNv58Rb6L%2F%2FpmvvokFg%3D%3D'img
border='0' title='Add to Facebook' alt='Add to Facebook'
src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/facebook.gif'//a a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:3c978e96ae3430e21a50a098f75521f4:uhdwzLVz3iXtNorICmjTMItbOhTRHsguMmlo3433VtAYdxUIKl%2FOvF64uOqPFZODa2Bk6Pd%2FiCBK'img
border='0' title='Add to Reddit' alt='Add to Reddit'
src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/reddit.png'//a a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:8ff5bbf35e4fa9163de15e8ba131a6c6:%2BPph8ER7ESfXl6uSNutvk4wFzUZFZ%2B8S1Wv0qoUCU76FuXSHOJyDL8N2WQBkGK3Z19%2BziZKkUB16'img
border='0' title='Add to digg' alt='Add to digg' src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/digg.gif'//a
a style='font-size: 10px; color: maroon;'
href='http://www.pheedo.com/hostedMorselClick.php?hfmm=v3:c431e0cb48973aad5d57cca4d636af51:j9NJglfHKB7U4E9YgwIVKjdjgEnffbi1Mtap1KKFxmQFGgGPD7d61Qba5bpQSGKI9TEDPpXB6%2B4p'img
border='0' title='Add to Google' alt='Add to Google'
src='http://www.pheedo.com/images/mm/google.png'//a br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=2969bdd972653259f70ee05049c1e412p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=2969bdd972653259f70ee05049c1e412p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=2969bdd972653259f70ee05049c1e412" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/ pa
href="http://feeds.wired.com/~a/wired/index?a=XBHz7a"img
src="http://feeds.wired.com/~a/wired/index?i=XBHz7a" border="0"/img/a/pimg
src="http://feeds.wired.com/~r/wired/index/~4/472101286" height="1" width="1"/

|