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Manhattan Project: After a harrowing escape from Nazi-occupied Denmark in 1943, Bohr began consulting on the Manhattan Project. Manhattan Project: Between 1943 and 1944, Muller was a civilian advisor for the Manhattan Project, consulting on experiments studying the effects of radiation. Maria Goeppert Mayer, Nobel Prize in Physics, 1963Maria Goeppert Mayer worked on the Manhattan Project and later won the Nobel Prize in physics. Manhattan Project: Working as an assistant to his father, Niels Bohr, Aage Bohr proved instrumental in interpreting for some members of the Manhattan Project. Manhattan Project: At 18, Glauber was still a student at Harvard when he became one of the youngest scientists to join the Manhattan Project.
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Opinion | The Only Positive of Smokemageddon
  + stars: | 2023-06-09 | by ( Peter Coy | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The rivers of smoke pouring into the United States from Canadian wildfires have lowered temperatures by blocking sunlight from reaching the ground. It may be the only positive aspect of Smokemageddon (or whatever the TV weather forecasters are calling this). Imagine if the opposite happened and wildfires typically raised surface temperatures. “It’s reassuring that there’s not going to be a positive feedback” from forest fires to smoke to more forest fires, Michael Fromm, a meteorologist for the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, told me on Thursday. Fromm told me that wildfires haven’t yet been incorporated into the giant computer models that are used to forecast climate change.
Persons: hasn’t, Michael Fromm, there’s, Fromm Organizations: Naval Research Laboratory Locations: United States, Washington
The first images showing the curvature of Earth from space were not captured on April Fool’s Day in 1960. However, pictures showing Earth’s curvature have been taken from space or near-space orbit since Oct. 24, 1946. There are earlier images taken from other objects in space or near-space orbit that also show the planet’s curvature. Rocket-borne cameras captured the first photos of Earth from roughly 65 miles above the surface on Oct. 24, 1946 (here). Photos from space or near-space orbit show Earth’s curvature years before April 1, 1960.
U.S. scientists have achieved “ignition” — a fusion reaction that produced more energy than it took to create — a critical milestone for nuclear fusion and a step forward in the pursuit of a nearly limitless source of clean energy, Energy Department officials said Tuesday. The process imploded a tiny capsule inside the hohlraum that is filled with deuterium and tritium, creating a fusion reaction. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory"We have taken the first tentative steps toward a clean energy source," said Jill Hruby, the Energy Department's National Nuclear Security Administration. The Inflation Reduction Act provided millions in new funding for fusion projects and the White House this year convened the first fusion summit and developed a 10-year plan to commercialize fusion technology. A technician reviews an optic inside the preamplifier support structure at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, Calif., in 2012.
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