(Jewish Group) The forgotten Jewish woman of nuclear physics who was denied a Nobel Prize
THE CONVERSATION VIA AP the physical process by which very large atoms like uranium split into pairs of smaller atoms is what makes nuclear bombs and nuclear power plants possible. But for many years, physicists believed it energetically impossible for atoms as large as uranium (atomic mass = 235 or 238) to be split into two.
That all changed on February 11, 1939, with a letter to the editor of Nature a premier international scientific journal that described exactly how such a thing could occur and even named it fission. In that letter, physicist Lise Meitner, with the assistance of her young nephew Otto Frisch, provided a physical explanation of how nuclear fission could happen.
It was a massive leap forward in nuclear physics, but today Lise Meitner remains obscure and largely forgotten. She was excluded from the victory celebration because she was a Jewish woman. Her story is a sad one.
What happens when you split an atom
Meitner based her fission argument on the liquid droplet model of nuclear structure a model that likened the forces that hold the atomic nucleus together to the surface tension that gives a water droplet its structure.
She noted that the surface tension of an atomic nucleus weakens as the charge of the nucleus increases, and could even approach zero tension if the nuclear charge was very high, as is the case for uranium (charge = 92+). The lack of sufficient nuclear surface tension would then allow the nucleus to split into two fragments when struck by a neutron a chargeless subatomic particle with each fragment carrying away very high levels of kinetic energy. Meisner remarked: The whole fission process can thus be described in an essentially classical [physics] way. Just that simple, right?
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