![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() From Rec.Humor.Funny, talk about topical Edward Teller, the ultra-hawkish father of the hydrogen bomb, died earlier this week. Defending his work in an interview with Scientific American a few years back, Teller averred that if the U.S. had not developed the H-bomb, we'd all be speaking Russian now. The interviewer refrained from pointing out that had we pursued most of Teller's other nuclear programs by now, we'd all be speaking cockroach. -- Selected by Jim Griffith. MAIL your joke (jokes ONLY) to . If you see a problem with an RHF posting, reply to the poster please, not to us. Ask the poster to forward comments back to us if this is necessary. For the full RHF guidelines, see http://www.netfunny.com/rhf/ This joke's link: http://www.netfunny.com/rhf/jokes/03/Sep/teller.html Dave Kearton |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
hooray the most evil person ever to exist in the world is now dead
![]() Dave Kearton wrote: From Rec.Humor.Funny, talk about topical Edward Teller, the ultra-hawkish father of the hydrogen bomb, died earlier this week. Defending his work in an interview with Scientific American a few years back, Teller averred that if the U.S. had not developed the H-bomb, we'd all be speaking Russian now. The interviewer refrained from pointing out that had we pursued most of Teller's other nuclear programs by now, we'd all be speaking cockroach. -- Selected by Jim Griffith. MAIL your joke (jokes ONLY) to . If you see a problem with an RHF posting, reply to the poster please, not to us. Ask the poster to forward comments back to us if this is necessary. For the full RHF guidelines, see http://www.netfunny.com/rhf/ This joke's link: http://www.netfunny.com/rhf/jokes/03/Sep/teller.html Dave Kearton |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Subject: RIP Edward Teller
From: Aerophotos Date: 9/12/03 7:54 PM Pacific Daylight Time hooray the most evil person ever to exist in the world is now dead ![]() He could have stayed in Germany and given Hitler the atom bomb. Be thankful for little things. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pretty smart guy. Thy said it was impossibe to make an X-Ray LASER (XASER? or
gamma ray LASER, GRAZER) till he showed then how. -- Charlie Springer |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Teller wasn't one of the major players in the Manhattan project. I doubt
his presence in Germany would have materially effected a half-hearted effort to achieve the bomb. His fatherhood of the H-bomb is somewhat exaggerated. Certainly he was a big proponent of the weapon, but it was Hans Ulam who figured out the concepts that made the bomb practical and scaleable. When Teller and his group splintered off from Los Alamos to develop weapons to his theoretical designs, the results were not spectacular. R / John He could have stayed in Germany and given Hitler the atom bomb. Be thankful for little things. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Subject: RIP Edward Teller
From: "John Carrier" Date: 9/13/03 4:42 AM Pacific Daylight Time Teller wasn't one of the major players in the Manhattan project. I doubt his presence in Germany would have materially effected a half-hearted effort to achieve the bomb. His You doubt? Is that strong enough to risk it? What if you are wrong, which you must admit is a possibility. And if you are wrong, we would all be speaking echt deutch heute. .. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "ArtKramr" wrote in message ... Subject: RIP Edward Teller From: "John Carrier" Date: 9/13/03 4:42 AM Pacific Daylight Time Teller wasn't one of the major players in the Manhattan project. I doubt his presence in Germany would have materially effected a half-hearted effort to achieve the bomb. His You doubt? Is that strong enough to risk it? What if you are wrong, which you must admit is a possibility. And if you are wrong, we would all be speaking echt deutch heute. Playing "what if" with history is a game for idiots and for those with lots of idle time on their hands, but even If Germany had had all of the USA's nuclear scientists, they still did not have the industrial capacity to pull off the job in a reasonable time. As it was, the USA barely managed to field a couple of weapons before the war was over. Vaughn |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Teller wasn't one of the major players in the Manhattan project. I doubt
his presence in Germany would have materially effected a half-hearted effort to achieve the bomb. His You doubt? Is that strong enough to risk it? What if you are wrong, which you must admit is a possibility. And if you are wrong, we would all be speaking echt deutch heute. Considering the overwhelming intellectual and industrial effort made to develop the bomb, the movement of one mind (not a particularly critical one at that) would have had no material effect on either a US (delayed) or German (advanced) ability to develop the bomb. So I'll retract my original statement. His presence in Germany (vice the USA) would have had no material impact on their ability to develop an atomic weapon. Similarly his absence wouldn't have been a show-stopper for the Manhattan project. Germany and Japan had not expended enough effort in research to even begin to develop an appreciation for the commitment required for a weapon's development. Neither had the industrial or economic capacity to construct the plants required to enrich uranium or generate plutonium WHILE simultaneously supporting the war effort with conventional weapons manufacture. Add the reality of the harassing effect of strategic bombing, and it was even more hopeless. Germany had an outstanding group of theoretical physicists. They had access to a limited amount of uranium ore. Never the less, they did not succeed in producing a sustained nuclear reaction by war's end (we did it in 1942 at U of Chicago). We WERE concerned that Germany had a bomb program. We directed missions to hamper it (bombed heavy water production plants). When we got the right people on the ground in Germany, we were amazed by their lack of progress. Needless to say, this is hindsight. Things looked a lot different with Great Britain on the edge and the Pacific Fleet battle line resting in the Pearl Harbor mud. R / John |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"John Carrier" wrote: Teller wasn't one of the major players in the Manhattan project. I doubt his presence in Germany would have materially effected a half-hearted effort to achieve the bomb. His fatherhood of the H-bomb is somewhat exaggerated. Certainly he was a big proponent of the weapon, but it was Hans Ulam who figured out the concepts that made the bomb practical and scaleable. When Teller and his group splintered off from Los Alamos to develop weapons to his theoretical designs, the results were not spectacular. Teller spent a lot of time being annoyed at journalists and others who referred to him as the "father of the H-bomb". I suspect he'd not argue with you. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Teller was not German, but a Hungarian Jew. He fled from the facists
ruling Hungary in 1926, at age of 17. He obtained his Ph.D. in Germany in 1930 and wrote many papers on quantum mechanics there. No atomic bomb work, as the fission reaction was then still unknown. Once the Nazis took over, he knew he had to get out ASAP. He left around 1935. So, Teller was long gone by the time nuclear fission was discovered (1939), and it's most unlikely he'd have told the Nazis how to make a bomb. This is from Richard Rhodes' book, "The Making of the Atomic Bomb." Mark ArtKramr wrote: Subject: RIP Edward Teller From: Aerophotos Date: 9/12/03 7:54 PM Pacific Daylight Time hooray the most evil person ever to exist in the world is now dead ![]() He could have stayed in Germany and given Hitler the atom bomb. Be thankful for little things. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|