Neil Alden Armstrong
Special theory of relativity
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- 1932 Neutron is discovered
- 1932 Cockcroft teams Walton to split the atom
- 1937 5-million-volt Van de Graaff generator built
- 1939 Uranium atoms are split
- 1939-1945 Manhattan Project
- 1942 First controlled, self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction
- 1945 Hiroshima and Nagasaki
- 1946 First nuclear-reactor-produced radioisotopes for peacetime civilian use
- 1948 Plans to commercialize nuclear power
- 1951 Experimental Breeder Reactor 1
- 1953 First of a series of Boiling Reactor Experiment reactors
1905 Special theory of relativity German-born physicist Albert Einstein introduces his special theory of relativity, which states that the laws of nature are the same for all observers and that the speed of light is not dependent on the motion of its source. The most celebrated result of his work is the mathematical formula E=mc2, or energy equals mass multiplied by the speed of light squared, which demonstrates that mass can be converted into energy. Einstein wins the Nobel Prize in physics in 1921 for his work on the photoelectric effect. 1932 Neutron is discovered English physicist and Nobel laureate James Chadwick exposes the metal beryllium to alpha particles and discovers the neutron, an uncharged particle. It is one of the three chief subatomic particles, along with the positively charged proton and the negatively charged electron. Alpha particles, consisting of two neutrons and two protons, are positively charged, and are given off by certain radioactive materials. His work follows the contributions of New Zealander Ernest Rutherford, who demonstrated in 1919 the existence of protons. Chadwick also studies deuterium, known as heavy hydrogen, an isotope of hydrogen used in nuclear reactors.1932 Cockcroft teams Walton to split the atom British physicist John Cockcroft teams with Ernest Walton of Ireland to split the atom with protons accelerated to high speed. Their work wins them the Nobel Prize in physics in 1951.1937 5-million-volt Van de Graaff generator built The Westinghouse Corporation builds the 5-million-volt Van de Graaff generator. Named for its inventor, physicist Robert Van de Graaff, the generator gathers and stores electrostatic charges. Released in a single spark and accelerated by way of a magnetic field, the accumulated charge, equivalent to a bolt of lightning, can be used as a particle accelerator in atom smashing and other experiments.
1945 Hiroshima and Nagasaki To force the Japanese to surrender and end World War II, the United States drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima, an important army depot and port of embarkation, and Nagasaki, a coastal city where the Mitsubishi torpedoes used in the attack on Pearl Harbor were made.
1953 First of a series of Boiling Reactor Experiment reactors BORAX-I, the first of a series of Boiling Reactor Experiment reactors, is built at INEEL. The series is designed to test the theory that the formation of steam bubbles in the reactor core does not cause an instability problem. BORAX-I proves that steam formation is, in fact, a rapid, reliable, and effective mechanism for limiting power, capable of protecting a properly designed reactor against "runaway" events.
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