Enrico Fermi (September 29, 1901 – November 28, 1954) was an Italian
physicist, who created the world's first nuclear reactor, the Chicago
Pile-1. He has been called the "architect of the nuclear age" and the
"architect of the atomic bomb". He was one of the few physicists to
excel both theoretically and experimentally.
Fermi held several
patents related to the use of nuclear power, and was awarded the 1938
Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on induced radioactivity by neutron
bombardment and the discovery of transuranic elements. He made
significant contributions to the development of quantum theory, nuclear
and particle physics, and statistical mechanics.
Fermi's first
major contribution was to statistical mechanics. After Wolfgang Pauli
announced his exclusion principle in 1925, Fermi followed with a paper
in which he applied the principle to an ideal gas, employing a
statistical formulation now known as Fermi–Dirac statistics. Today,
particles that obey the exclusion principle are called "fermions". Later
Pauli postulated the existence of an uncharged invisible particle
emitted along with an electron during beta decay, to satisfy the law of
conservation of energy.
Fermi took up this idea, developing a
model that incorporated the postulated particle, which he named the
"neutrino". His theory, later referred to as Fermi's interaction and
still later as weak interaction, described one of the four fundamental
forces of nature. Through experiments inducing radioactivity with
recently discovered neutrons, Fermi discovered that slow neutrons were
more easily captured than fast ones, and developed the Fermi age
equation to describe this.
After bombarding thorium and uranium
with slow neutrons, he concluded that he had created new elements;
although he was awarded the Nobel Prize for this discovery, the new
elements were subsequently revealed to be fission products.
Fermi
left Italy in 1938 to escape new Italian Racial Laws that affected his
Jewish wife Laura Capon. He emigrated to the United States where he
worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II.
Fermi led
the team that designed and built Chicago Pile-1, which went critical on 2
December 1942, demonstrating the first artificial self-sustaining
nuclear chain reaction. He was on hand when the X-10 Graphite Reactor at
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, went critical in 1943, and when the B Reactor at
the Hanford Site did so the next year. At Los Alamos he headed F
Division, part of which worked on Edward Teller's thermonuclear "Super"
bomb. He was present at the Trinity test on 16 July 1945, where he used
his Fermi method to estimate the bomb's yield.
After the war,
Fermi served under J. Robert Oppenheimer on the General Advisory
Committee, which advised the Atomic Energy Commission on nuclear matters
and policy. Following the detonation of the first Soviet fission bomb
in August 1949, he strongly opposed the development of a hydrogen bomb
on both moral and technical grounds.
He was among the scientists
who testified on Oppenheimer's behalf at the 1954 hearing that resulted
in the denial of the latter's security clearance. Fermi did important
work in particle physics, especially related to pions and muons, and he
speculated that cosmic rays arose through material being accelerated by
magnetic fields in interstellar space.
Many awards, concepts,
and institutions are named after Fermi, including the Enrico Fermi
Award, the Enrico Fermi Institute, the Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory, the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, the Enrico Fermi
Nuclear Generating Station, and the synthetic element fermium (one of
just over a dozen elements named after people). Source Wikipedia
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