J. Robert Oppenheimer might be the most important physicist to have ever lived. He never won a Nobel Prize, but he changed the world more
than most Nobel Prize winners. Under his leadership, the best physicists of the 20th century built the atomic bomb forever changing the course of history. - If there is another world war, this civilization may go under. - [Derek] He has affected every war waged and every peace settled since
the end of World War ii. He also created a way for
humanity to destroy itself. - Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds. - [Derek] This video is about
how to build an atomic bomb, the life of Oppenheimer, and why serious scientists were
worried about the explosion setting fire to the atmosphere, ending all life on earth. Part of this video is
brought to you by Wren. When J. Robert Oppenheimer was 21, he placed an apple laced
with toxic chemicals on the desk of his physics tutor. The tutor, Patrick Blackett, was an experimentalist
and he had hounded Robert to do more of what he thought Robert wasn't very good
at, experimental work. Oppenheimer had already been
spending his days in a corner of JJ Thompson's basement laboratory, attempting to make thin
films of beryllium, which were used to study electrons. But Oppenheimer was clumsy
and not good at this work. He was soon avoiding
his duties in the lab, spending his time listening to lectures and reading physics journals. It was 1925 and the 21 year
old Oppenheimer was becoming fascinated by the new
field of quantum mechanics. Despite being surrounded
by brilliant physicists like Rutherford and Chadwick, Oppenheimer was deeply unhappy. He wrote, "I'm having a pretty bad time. The lab work is a terrible bore, and I'm so bad at it that
it's impossible to feel that I'm learning anything." A friend walked in on him, lying on the floor of his room, which he called "A miserable hole", groaning and rolling from side
to side in emotional anguish. It was in this state that Robert attempted to poison Blackett. The specifics are lost to history. There are conflicting reports
if Oppenheimer used cyanide or something he found in the lab, which would've just made Blackett sick. This story sounds unbelievable, but Oppenheimer himself confirmed it. Luckily, Blackett did not eat the apple, but the attempted poisoning became known to the Cambridge University authorities. Robert's parents were visiting their son from the US at the time, and Julius Oppenheimer
successfully lobbied Cambridge not to press criminal charges.
Due to his family's wealth, Robert wasn't even expelled from Cambridge on the condition that he had
periodic counseling sessions with a psychiatrist in London. (train horn blaring) In the summer of 1926, Robert traveled to the
University of Göttingen. The chairman of the
department was Max Born, who just two years earlier
had coined the term, "Quantum Mechanics". Born was reportedly a
thoughtful and gentle teacher and had nurtured the work
of Werner Heisenberg, Wolfgang Pauli, Enrico Fermi, and Eugene Wigner, basically the who's who
of quantum mechanics. The class that Oppenheimer
was in was also extraordinary, including luminaries like Paul
Dirac and John Von Neumann, where the academic culture
at Cambridge focused on experimental physics. Göttingen was all about
theoretical physics, and under Max Born's mentorship, Oppenheimer thrived. His mental health improved, and he found a community
of people who were as obsessed with physics as he was. On November 14th, 1926, Robert wrote to Frank,
his younger brother, "You would like Göttingen. I find the work hard, thank God, and almost pleasant." Robert was thriving and his
talent was being recognized. Born later wrote, "He was a man of great
talent and he was conscious of his superiority in a
way which was embarrassing and led to trouble." When Oppenheimer was 23, he graduated with his PhD in physics. He wrote his thesis in
German on the quantum theory of continuous spectra. All in all, he published more than a dozen papers in the two years he was at Göttingen. Many of them expanded upon
the work of Werner Heisenberg, who was just three years
older than Oppenheimer. The two eventually met in 1927, the same year Heisenberg
published his groundbreaking paper on the Quantum uncertainty principle. By all accounts, the pair got along well. There was no way to know
that just 15 years later, they would be deadly
rivals attempting to build the first nuclear bomb. Oppenheimer for the USA and Heisenberg for Nazi Germany. At the time, it was thought that getting
significant amounts of energy out of radioactive atoms was impossible. Ever since the discovery of radioactivity by Henri Becquerel, Marie Curie, and Pierre Curie in the late 1890s, it was known that radioactivity
was a passive process. Unstable atoms would just decay at random, unpredictable times, and surely there was
no way to control that. In 1933, Ernest Rutherford, Oppenheimer's old boss
from Cambridge wrote that, "Anyone who expects a source of power from the transformations of these atoms is talking moonshine." That same year, Albert Einstein said, "That there is not the
slightest indication that nuclear energy
will ever be obtainable. It would mean that the atom would have to be shattered at will." So how would you break an atomic nucleus? Well, you could take a proton and accelerate it through
a large electric field and then smash it into a nucleus. This is exactly what John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton did in 1932. They accelerated protons
into lithium nuclei, breaking them apart. The pair would later win a
Nobel Prize for this work, but a proton is positively charged, so it's repelled by all nuclei, which are also positively charged. So to give them a hope of
overcoming this barrier, Cockcroft and Walton
had to use 250,000 volts to accelerate the protons. Even then, only about
one in a billion protons actually hit and split a lithium nucleus, so this would not be an
effective way to get energy. But there is another way. In 1932, the neutron was discovered this subatomic particle that's about 0.1% heavier than a proton, and it has no electric charge, so a neutron would not be
repelled from a nucleus. And in 1933, Leo Szilard was thinking about
how you could use neutrons to split nuclei. "It suddenly occurred to me
that if we could find an element which is split by neutrons and
which would emit two neutrons when it absorbed one neutron, such an element if assembled
sufficiently large mass, could sustain a nuclear chain reaction." But the thing is, nobody knew if there was an element that had a kind of nucleus
that would do that. On the 29th of January, 1939, Louise Alvarez, a
promising young physicist, was getting a haircut while reading "The San Francisco Chronicle", and suddenly he got outta the chair halfway through the haircut and
ran to Oppenheimer's office. Alvarez read an article about
how two German chemists, Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann had successfully split an atom of uranium by bombarding it with neutrons. Oppenheimer was not impressed. "That's impossible." He reportedly told the Young Alvarez proceeding to mathematically
prove on his blackboard why fission could never be achieved. But the next day, Alvarez had repeated the experiment and invited Oppenheimer to see it. Alvarez later recalled that, "In less than 15 minutes, he not only agreed that
the reaction was authentic, but also speculated that in the process, extra neutrons would boil off. That could be used to
split more uranium atoms and thereby generate power or make bombs." When a single atom of
uranium-235 splits apart, it loses a little bit of mass, which is released as energy. Following Einstein's
mass energy equivalence. That is a tiny amount of energy, about 20 times less
than the amount required to raise a grain of sand, the thickness of a piece of paper. But atoms are also tiny. In a one kilogram lump of uranium, there are about a
trillion, trillion atoms, so the energy quickly adds up. Soon, almost everyone was
convinced in August of 1939, Einstein, who just six years earlier believed that nuclear
bombs were impossible, signed his name to a letter addressed to President Franklin Roosevelt. The letter actually written
by Szilard warned Roosevelt of the possibility of nuclear weapons. It also pointed out that
Germany had access to uranium from the mines in Czechoslovakia, which was recently
taken over by the Nazis. Roosevelt began an
informal uranium committee to discuss this topic, but then for two years, nothing happened. In 1941, Roosevelt upgraded the informal uranium committee to the S-1 committee, which would report directly
to the White House. The explicit goal was to
develop an atomic bomb, and in May, 1942, Oppenheimer was hired onto the committee to be the coordinator of rapid rupture. So why was he selected? (dramatic music) Well, after completing his PhD, Oppenheimer became a physics professor, first at UC Berkeley, and then at Caltech, the brilliance he had shown under Max Born's tutelage didn't fade. Indeed, it blossomed into a remarkable but strange physics career. In the 15 years after finishing his PhD, Oppenheimer made important
contributions to everything from nuclear physics to quantum field theory, and even astrophysics. He had a number of Nobel
Prize winning ideas. One of his students, Willis Lamb, became a Nobel laureate, but Oppenheimer himself
was nominated three times, but never actually won the Nobel Prize. When asked why he thought that Oppenheimer never won the Nobel Prize, Murray Gell-Mann said that, "He didn't have Sitzfleisch" A German word that
translates to sitting flesh. The ability to sit down
in a chair for a long time and do the hard work. "He never wrote a long paper
or did a long calculation. He didn't have the patience for that." Wolfgang Pauli also said, "His ideas are very good, but his calculations are always wrong." But Oppenheimer was amazing with people. He was a natural and charismatic leader, and this combination, his charisma and his ability
to generate great ideas would serve him well in
the next phase of his life. (upbeat music) On the 18th of September, 1942, general Leslie Groves was put in charge of the Manhattan Project. - I was responsible for the
development of the atomic bomb. - [Derek] On day one, he ordered
1200 tons of uranium ore. The next day, he ordered to buy the Oak Ridge site where the ore would be refined. The next month in a surprising move, he chose Oppenheimer to
be the science director of the soon to be established
Los Alamos laboratory. Oppenheimer had just been
selected to be the chief architect of the atomic bomb. The military establishment had concerns. Oppenheimer did not have a Nobel Prize, so would the scientists
hired for the project, respect his opinion, and follow his leadership? Oppenheimer also had no prior
administrative experience over a large project like this. Furthermore, he was a
theoretical physicist, who according to Isidor Rabi, "Was a very impractical fellow. He didn't know anything about equipment." And then there was the problem of Oppenheimer's political stance. He had links to the Communist Party, including his wife, Catherine, who was a member of that party. But Groves was impressed by Oppenheimer. He valued his overwhelming ambition. He also knew that Oppenheimer's
ability to understand problems not just in physics, but chemistry, engineering, and metallurgy would be invaluable. Groves thought that Oppenheimer
was a "Real genius." Saying that why Oppenheimer
knows about everything. "He can talk to you about
anything you bring up. Well, not exactly. He doesn't know anything about sports." The two men couldn't
have been more different. Oppenheimer weighed half as much as Groves despite both of them being
nearly six feet tall. Ideologically, Oppenheimer
was a communist. Groves, a staunch conservative, but Groves was convinced that Oppenheimer would be the person that
would build the atomic bomb before the Nazis, and that was all that mattered. Isador Rabi later commented that, hiring Oppenheimer for this role was "A real stroke of genius on the part of General Groves, who was not generally
considered to be a genius." The Manhattan Project needed a location. Somewhere isolated to
keep the project secret safe from enemy attack. And while no one wanted to admit it, somewhere that was sparsely populated, just in case there was an accident, Oppenheimer proposed
Los Alamos, New Mexico. He had fallen in love with the
harsh desert in the mountains of New Mexico when he was in his twenties. In 1929, Oppenheimer wrote to a friend. "My two great loves are
physics and New Mexico. It's a pity they can't be combined." But Oppenheimer had severely
underestimated the logistical challenge ahead. (gentle music) In 1943, Oppenheimer estimated that he'd need about six scientists supported by a handful of engineers and technicians to make a bomb. He was off by two orders of magnitude. 764 scientists would end up working for the Manhattan Project. 302 of which would work
at the Los Alamos site. Over 600,000 people in total were involved with the making of the atomic bomb. By this point, making the atom
bomb didn't seem impossible. It seemed likely. On the 2nd of December, 1942, a team of physicists at
the University of Chicago led by Enrico Fermi created the world's first artificial nuclear reactor Pile-1. It consisted of 45 tons of
uranium and uranium oxide and 330 tons of graphite blocks. Horrifyingly enough. It was located under the
stands of the football field. It generated about half a watt of power, and if you can make a nuclear power plant, you can make a bomb. The only real difference between the two is how many neutrons hit the next atom, causing it to split and
release more neutrons. If on average that number is one, there will be a stable
self-sustaining chain reaction, but it won't grow. If it's less than one, the reaction will die down, and if it's more than one, the reaction will grow. This is known as the
multiplication factor, K. Nuclear reactions are similar
to pandemics in this way. The simplest way to make a nuclear bomb is to get enough fissile
material close together that it creates a runaway chain reaction. That amount is known as the critical mass. With uranium-235, you need about 52 kilograms. Forming a sphere with a
diameter of 17 centimeters. If you use plutonium-239, the critical mass is much smaller, only around 10 kilograms, which would create a sphere
only 10 centimeters wide. For the first few years, the scientists worked on a
bomb with a gun type design. Inside a gun type bomb, you have two slabs of uranium-235, both of which are below the critical mass. Then using a conventional
explosive like cordite, you rapidly fire one towards the other. So the combined mass is
higher than the critical mass. When the uranium bullet is
about 25 centimeters away, the nuclear chain reaction begins resulting in an atomic explosion. Despite the simple design, it is not very efficient. Only a small percentage of
the uranium undergoes fission, so the total yield of
the bomb is much smaller. You also run into some
unexpected problems, like how do you make sure the uranium slides smoothly through the barrel? Well, you use oil to lubricate the barrel, but all the synthetic
oils the scientists tried would dry up. In the end, the only oil they could
find that would work was the oil from sperm whales. Only about 0.7% of naturally
occurring uranium is U235, the fissile fuel for nuclear bombs. When U235 absorbs a neutron, it briefly becomes U236, and then it rips itself roughly in half and releases on average
2.4 neutrons per fission. But when you get uranium outta the ground, most of it is U238, which doesn't undergo fission. So to make a nuclear bomb, the scientists use
gigantic mass spectrometers to separate out and concentrate the U235, and the resulting substance was uranium with a much higher concentration of U235. In other words, it was enriched. There was another option though. In early 1941, a new element was discovered
or rather synthesized. When a neutron is absorbed
by a nucleus of uranium-238, it turns into uranium-239. U239 is unstable, so it decays into Neptunium, which then becomes plutonium. There are three things
that matter for this story. First is that plutonium-239 is a great fuel for a nuclear bomb. It has a critical mass of
only about 10 kilograms. Second, it is cheaper to make
than to separate uranium-235 and third, it reacts too quickly to be used in a gun type device. It would fizzle, meaning only a tiny fraction of the fuel would undergo fission. But there is a way to make
a bomb using plutonium. Critical mass changes
depending on the density of the material. Under normal pressure conditions, six kilograms of
plutonium-239 won't explode. But if you compress it, the atoms get closer together
and the chance of a stay neutron hitting the nucleus increases. So the higher the density,
the lower the critical mass. So if you set off conventional explosives around a ball of plutonium, you can get it compressed enough to start a nuclear chain reaction. And this was the whole idea behind the implosion bomb design. There are a couple ways to cheat
lowering the critical mass. For one thing, you surround the sphere with
a material that reflects neutrons decreasing the
amount of nuclear fuel you need to start a chain reaction. You can also have a neutron source, something that kick
starts the chain reaction. For the first implosion bomb, scientists created a
device called the urchin, which was a tiny pellet
weighing just seven grams, and it would sit at the heart of the bomb. It was made of beryllium and polonium separated by a layer of nickel and gold. The idea was that when
the explosives detonated, the shockwave would mix the
beryllium and polonium together, and then the alpha particles from polonium would cause the beryllium to
release a flood of neutrons, which would set off the
nuclear chain reaction. At least that was the hope. An atomic bomb had never been made before. Oppenheimer and the rest of
the scientists at Los Alamos needed to act quickly. It was already 1945, and Truman wanted to test the weapon before the start of
the Potsdam conference. That's where Truman, Churchill, and Stalin would come together
to plan the post-war piece. The conference began on the 17th of July. The earliest date that
everything could be ready for the bomb was just one day earlier. So that is when the test was scheduled. It was Codenamed Trinity. The night before Oppenheimer was nervous. There were so many things
that could go wrong. The last test firing of the explosives without the actual plutonium
core was a failure. To calm himself, he recited a stanza
from the Bhagavad Gita, the sacred Hindu poem. He had actually translated
the Gita from the original Sanskrit in himself. In battle, in forest, at the precipice in the mountains, on the dark great sea, in the midst of javelins and arrows in sleep, in confusion, in the depths of shame, the good deeds a man has
done before defend him. Perhaps more terrifying
than the idea of the bomb not working was that
it would work too well. Around 1942, Oppenheimer
discussed with Arthur Compton a terrible possibility that a nuclear test could end the world. The worry was that the nuclear bomb would create temperatures so
hot that fusion would occur. A tiny fraction of the atmosphere, just one part in 2
million is hydrogen gas. But the worry was that at
high enough temperatures and pressures that hydrogen
could fuse to together releasing energy, this energy would fuse more hydrogen. It could also break apart the hydrogen from water vapor causing
that to fuse as well. That would release even more energy causing yet more fusion until the entirety of the Earth's atmosphere would
become a giant fusion bomb. Recalling his conversations
with Oppenheimer in 1959, Compton said, "Nor was this
all that Oppenheimer feared. The nitrogen in the air is also unstable, though in less degree. Might not it, too, be set off by an atomic explosion in the atmosphere." Most of the scientists quickly realized how unlikely this scenario was, and they continued on with the project, so no one took the idea too seriously. But the thought of starting a
fusion reaction with a fission weapon would become very
important after the war. (dramatic music) The Trinity test was scheduled for 4:00 AM but it was delayed due to a storm. So at 5:29 and 21 seconds, the gadget, the world's first nuclear bomb detonated, the high explosive squeezed
the core of plutonium inwards. The shockwave mixed the
beryllium and polonium releasing a flood of neutrons. The urchin worked. It jump started the nuclear reaction, and now there was no way to stop it. Just six kilograms of
plutonium created an explosion that was equivalent to
nearly 25,000 tons of TNT. The New Mexico mountains were illuminated brighter than in daytime. The shockwave was felt from
over 160 kilometers away. The mushroom cloud rose to
12 kilometers into the sky. It was so hot that the desert sand melted into a glassy mineral,
now known as trinitite. Fortunately, the blast did not
set fire to the atmosphere. On August 6th, 1945, the Boeing B29 Flying
Fortress dropped little boy, a gun type nuclear bomb with 64 kilograms of enriched uranium. The nitro cellulose
ignited pushing the slugs of uranium-235 together, tipping it over its critical mass. The blast from the explosion equivalent to 15,000 tons of TNT, killed nearly 70,000 people. Another 70,000 would die from
burns and radiation poisoning in the following months. Three days later, an implosion type bomb, like the gadget, was dropped on Nagasaki killing an estimated 80,000 more people. More than 95% of the 225,000 people killed in the bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki were civilians. Most were women and children. In 1965, recalling the moments
after the Trinity test, Oppenheimer said that he
thought of another verse from the Ghita. - He knew the world would not be the same. Few people laughed, few people cried. Most people were silent. I remembered the line
from the Hindu scripture, the (speaking foreign language). The Vishnu is trying
to persuade the prince that he should do his duty and to impress him takes on
his multi-armed form and says, 'Now I am become death
the destroyer of worlds.' I suppose we all thought
that one way or another. - [Derek] After the war, Oppenheimer was a national hero. His portrait was on the
cover of Time Magazine, and he became a household name. In 1947, he became the director of the Institute of
Advanced Study at Princeton. He also became the chairman of the General Advisory Committee, where he became an
advisor on nuclear weapons related issues. He used his position to
argue for arms control. (dramatic music) In August, 1949, the Soviet Union tested
their first atomic weapon, and the US military quickly decided that the best course of action was to develop a more powerful bomb. The hydrogen bomb, known as "The Super", Oppenheimer was against the development of The Super on ethical grounds and the worry that it
would start an arms race. But Truman's administration
pushed through, and three years later, Ivy Mike, the first hydrogen bomb was
tested in the Marshall Islands. It had a yield of 10.4 megatons of TNT. That's 400 times more powerful
than the Trinity test. A hydrogen bomb is actually
three bombs in one, a conventional bomb, a fission bomb, and a fusion bomb. The conventional explosives
trigger a fission reaction, which increases the
temperature and pressure enough to fuse deuterium
and tritium together, releasing a huge amount of energy. In 1961, the Soviet Union
tested the Tsar Bomba, the most powerful
explosion ever detonated. It was another five times
more powerful than Ivy Mike around 2000 times more
powerful than Trinity. This kind of arms race was exactly what Oppenheimer had feared, in part, due to his opposition
to the hydrogen bomb. And due to his calls to
avert a nuclear arms race, Oppenheimer was essentially put on trial to revoke his security clearance. He had been surveilled
while he was working for the Manhattan Project, but that surveillance
didn't stop after he left. Many of the wiretaps were
illegal and warrantless. Oppenheimer was questioned about his ties to the Communist Party, including his affair with Gene Tatlock, a Communist party member while he was leading the Los Alamos lab. He was essentially accused
of treason and espionage. In December, 1953, Oppenheimer had his security
clearance suspended. His face now grim and in black and white was once again on the cover of time. His security hearings
were international news. In 1964, German playwright
Heinar Kipphardt wrote a play about Oppenheimer's life. Oppenheimer was sent
a copy of this script, and he hated it so much
that he threatened to sue. He especially despised the
final scene where the character of Oppenheimer realizes
the evil of his work. And I quote, "We have been doing
the work of the devil." To Oppenheimer, it was always
more complicated than that. - I think that it probably was assumed, it certainly was always
assumed at Los Alamos that if the war were
not over and not clearly to be brought to a conclusion
by the diplomatic means this weapon would play a part. At the time, the alternative, the campaign of invasion was
certainly much more terrible for everyone concerned. I think that Hiroshima was
far more costly in life and suffering inhumane than
it needed to have been, to have been an effective
argument for ending the war. This is easy to say after the fact. - In 1965, he was asked about
the recent proposal of talks with the Soviet Union to
halt the proliferation of nuclear weapons, and his response was, "It should have been done
the day after Trinity. Later that same year, he was
diagnosed with throat cancer. He was a lifelong smoker, and he died on the 18th
of February, 1967 aged 62. Advances in science and
technology have given humans tremendous power to make
the world better or worse, and nuclear war isn't the only
thing we have to worry about. Human caused climate change
poses a serious threat to ecosystems and the most vulnerable
people around the world. As I record this, we are in
the midst of a heat wave, and my folks up in Canada are suffering in the smoke from wildfires. This is where this video
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