The Genius Behind the Bomb (1992)

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  • Опубликовано: 30 окт 2024

Комментарии • 162

  • @ellengeller4832
    @ellengeller4832 Год назад +15

    July 26, 2023. This video is of interest now, upon the release of the movie, “Oppenheimer”. Szilard was pivotal in how events developed.

  • @evynt9512
    @evynt9512 4 года назад +54

    "To succeed in the world you don't have to be more clever than other people you just have to be one day earlier." 7:35

  • @markbrodie2784
    @markbrodie2784 Год назад +29

    As much as we glorify Oppenheimer we should also glorify this brilliant and caring man.

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Год назад +2

      As said in recen Oppenheimer movie - "genius is granted, prerequisite among your people".

    • @lvgaben
      @lvgaben 7 месяцев назад

      Oppeneimer was a great scientist and a good team leader in the Manhattan project. Lea Szilard was one of top 5 scientist in the Manhattan project and in the world at the time

  • @JackRussell021
    @JackRussell021 Год назад +4

    I was a physics grad student at MIT in the 1980's - many of the people in this film were around and working on one thing or another.

  • @telwood15
    @telwood15 Год назад +11

    The motivation and action of this man is something we can all learn from

  • @14147s
    @14147s 4 года назад +15

    Superb documentary and thankyou for posting.

  • @charleschidsey2831
    @charleschidsey2831 Год назад +9

    This is an unusually well crafted documentary. The interviews with Szilard, Teller, Bethe, Weisskopf and Wigner are, themselves, priceless. Ed Asher’s narration is impeccable. Though I have maintained an active interest in the subject matter of this piece for decades, I was unaware of its existence until now. Thank you so very much for posting. I will look forward to any other similar items you may post in the future.

  • @TheKdizzle1971
    @TheKdizzle1971 2 года назад +14

    I am part Welsh and part Hungarian- I guess that makes me Wellhung

  • @marcoschagas9646
    @marcoschagas9646 Год назад +24

    It's a shame the world didn't give him a Nobel Peace Prize

  • @leandrobaluyotjr5181
    @leandrobaluyotjr5181 Год назад +3

    Amazing & excellent video ! I wish people in general and world leaders in particular can learn the wisdom of Leo Szilard in contemporary times. Thank you and more success to your endeavors sirs & madame of this video channel.

  • @jimkluska253
    @jimkluska253 Год назад +7

    This vid is really good! The graphite issue that is discussed is amazing.

  • @applewoodcourt
    @applewoodcourt 3 года назад +13

    There were two trips to visit with Einstein. Teller drove Szilard on the second trip because Wigner could not make it and Szilard did not know how to drive. Teller knew how to drive and he had a car.

  • @robertwilson123
    @robertwilson123 Год назад +3

    Excellent programm. For many years I would daily walk over the road crossing in Southampton Row, Bloomsbury, London where Szilard suddenly thought of the atomic bomb chain reaction.
    Szilard was staying in the Russell Hotel, Russell Square as a refugee. He picked up a copy of the London Times,and read that Lord Ernest Rutherford had said in a lecture ,that Atoms would not provide energy. Annoyed he threw down the newspaper and left the hotel for a walk. The lights prevented him crossing...then they changed to red stopping the traffic. Before he got across to the garden's the other side he had had the brainwave of the atomic chain reaction.

  • @rineric3214
    @rineric3214 Год назад +16

    One clarification: Leo did not make the graphite WITHOUT boron. He was given a very small amount of seed money first and he did the whole thing himself. He even traveled to the factory where he purchased the boron and interviewed them about the boron and then, just as he was getting up to leave, he suddenly thought to ask, "Is the boron PURE?" He was answered no, they mixed it with another chemical and sold it as a popular concrete floor cleaner. He instructed them, "Make this order PURE, with no additives at all." That is why he beat Heisenberg. The crucial step.

    • @channelview8854
      @channelview8854 Год назад +2

      Boron is nothing but a contaminate in graphite to be used in an atomic pile. Graphite slows neutrons, allowing them to split U235. Boron is a very effective neutron absorber, making them unavailable to react. Fermi's early attempts to build a chain-reacting pile were largely because of the graphite impurities, particularly boron.

    • @rineric3214
      @rineric3214 Год назад +1

      @@channelview8854 You are contradicting my memory of the story told in the "Genius In The Shadows". I at first wanted to ask you why Szilard would have traveled to the factory where the boron was produced and asked about its purity if it were "nothing but a contaminate" (I think you meant contaminant) in graphite? But, I think what might have happened is that Szilard used the PURE boron and even pure boron ended up also being a contaminant. The way I remembered it is that this moment of brilliance was what was the crucial step in beating Heisenberg to a critical pile. Heisenberg was using impure boron and that contaminated his pile. But, I see now that it may be that even pure boron was found to be a contaminant after initial attempts to use it. Thank you for the clarification.

    • @channelview8854
      @channelview8854 Год назад +1

      @@rineric3214 see if you can pick up a copy of Richard Rhodes' encyclopedic "The Making of the Atomic Bomb". Rhodes won a Pullitzer Prize for it and from all I have read, it is the most authoritative on the subject. I understand there are some abridged editions on the market so I doubt you would want one. "Contaminate". . .forehead slap.

    • @rineric3214
      @rineric3214 Год назад

      @@channelview8854 I hope you don't mind a windy answer. I have no interest in reading American propaganda again because I've heard it over and over for decades. I'm an amateur theoretical physicist who has his own theory of physics. I have read every biography of famous physicists that I could borrow. Probably all of the biographies on the market. As a result, I may have to insist that I was right actually. Reading the winner's tale is always depressing and invariably full of nationalist obfuscation. I repeat, from "Genius In The Shadows" (about the man who patented the atomic bomb as a military secret patent in 1931), that Leo traveled physically to the factory where he purchased boron. As he was leaving, he asked if the boron was pure and they answered no, it had another chemical added to it. He asked them to sell him just pure boron without any additive of any kind. Heisenberg used the impure boron and it contaminated the graphite so his pile never went critical.

  • @aprameya6623
    @aprameya6623 Год назад +6

    The last line really sums up mankind trials with science and its own destruction, thank you for this video. ❤

  • @jv3331
    @jv3331 Год назад +8

    Nolan’s next film should be about Szilard and his differences with Oppenheimer and Groves … and the near misses re nuclear accidents … Szilard was right

    • @dovbarleib3256
      @dovbarleib3256 Год назад

      No he was not. The 1st bomb on Hiroshima was necessary to avoid an American marine invasion of the home islands where at least 800,000 marines and 800,000 Japanese would have died. The 2nd bomb on Nagasaki could have waited another week to let the Japanese think about what they witnessed. Truman only waited 3 days.

  • @Digibeatle09
    @Digibeatle09 Год назад +4

    Only had a “very fuzzy” grasp of the history of the atomic bomb’s development - then - having sat through 3 hours of a very well made and acted movie - “Oppenheimer” - I thought I was much better informed but then viewed this video - and now I realise that that movie - even with its depiction of a “team effort” - occludes - no doubt for reasons of dramatic licence rather than through any bad motive - the huge contribution Szilard

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Год назад +1

      Movie wasn't about Manhattan project - it was biography of certain man and courtroom drama. They skipped Ulam, von Neumann, Feynmann was barely mentioned....

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Год назад +9

    I met Trude Weiss through a mutual friend while I was a physics grad student at UCSD around 1972 . We drove out to the Anza Borrego desert to see the spring cactus blooms. What a great day that was. One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't realize until later what an important man her husband was, and lost a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to ask her about him. The documentary was particularly interesting to me because it cleared up the Szilards' connection to La Jolla and the Salk Institute.

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 Год назад

    What a remarkable collection of interviews.

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 Год назад +14

    If anyone has access to that Teller Szilard debate from '60 I would very, VERY much like to see it in full.

  • @piotrd.4850
    @piotrd.4850 Год назад +2

    Man, Teller was really giving out Dr Strangelove Vibes in spades....and was portrayed extremally well.

  • @eventfulnonsense
    @eventfulnonsense 4 месяца назад

    I kinda agree from the beginning, Szilard had more contributions to the development of the atom bomb. While Oppenheimer was just a manager, but Fermi and Teller were the engineers on hand. Szilard was the true theorist, was the first to apply the patent of fission and the person that had the idea to persuade Einstein to warn Roosevelr and creation of the Manhattan Project.

  • @paulthomas-hh2kv
    @paulthomas-hh2kv Год назад +1

    Really need to listen to the full interview with Australian Mark Oliphant a lot of information,long but informative

  • @andykeri8370
    @andykeri8370 2 года назад +35

    US Intelligent report on Leo Szilard : The subject frequently goes to a Jewish Delicatessen to buy Kosher Hungarian Salami.

    • @mikebennet7697
      @mikebennet7697 Год назад +8

      Which can create a mini nuclear blast if you eat too much

    • @BluesBoy-ij2rb
      @BluesBoy-ij2rb Год назад

      ​@@mikebennet7697😢😮6yyuu up 9 it up for me or

    • @saltycreole2673
      @saltycreole2673 Год назад

      ​@@mikebennet7697😂😂😂😂😂

    • @borninvincible
      @borninvincible Год назад

      @@mikebennet7697🤣

    • @MrGrace
      @MrGrace Год назад +2

      ​@@mikebennet7697lmao 🤣🤣🤣 I guess he was doing research then lol 😆

  • @litestuffllc7249
    @litestuffllc7249 Год назад +1

    One errror - Fermi and Szliard did not join the Manhatten project until 1944; I typed 1942 in error. Some very knowledgable people say Bohr wrote papers in 1939 with U235 identifed at the key isatope. Seems highly unlikely that this is a correct assessment certainly many would have understood the implications of isolating U235; supposedly no one did until 1942 when the Freish&Peierls paper is revealed to the Americans in 1942? Sounds like Friesh&Peierls were first; no one else.

  • @bpolat
    @bpolat 2 месяца назад +1

    Wonderful documentary

  • @inesborstel5592
    @inesborstel5592 Год назад +1

    THANKS!!!

  • @orobleh77
    @orobleh77 Год назад +4

    What a brilliant mind. The world owes gratitude to the JEWISH scientist who developed the A bomb

    • @gergokiss7544
      @gergokiss7544 Год назад +4

      "Despite having a religious background, Szilard became an agnostic."
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Szilard

    • @dobfeldman5026
      @dobfeldman5026 Год назад +1

      @@gergokiss7544if he stayed in Europe he would have been killed for being Jewish

    • @TheJmkovacs
      @TheJmkovacs Год назад +1

      Teller did not think so. He credited his Hungarian culture. It is sad to bring identity politics to this.

    • @kurtvonfricken6829
      @kurtvonfricken6829 Год назад

      @@TheJmkovacs
      Not really. Most of the Hungarian physicists that worked on the atomic bomb were Jewish, and the all attended the same high school. Make of it what you wish.

    • @TheJmkovacs
      @TheJmkovacs Год назад

      @@kurtvonfricken6829 Yes, in Budapest. They were born at the turn of the 20th century when about 25% of the Budapest population was Jewish. A great Jewish community and culture existed in Hungary then. Only the German invasion in late 1944 brought about real persecution. The Jewish culture then as today, is intertwined with the Hungarian culture. As a matter of fact, many great artists, writers, poets, and scientists were Jewish, the same as today. The large majority consider themselves Hungarians, and this is what matters. We are not used to identity politics here, not yet. People like you will help to become one. Make of it what you wish.

  • @stevefisher2553
    @stevefisher2553 Год назад +3

    Incredible story

  • @pauleohl
    @pauleohl Год назад +1

    The European scientists speak with such a heavy accent that too many words are lost. RUclips CC makes a mess of their words. It's hard to understand why the producers of this documentary failed to load captions.

  • @mikebennet7697
    @mikebennet7697 Год назад +3

    Szilard was not the first one who realised a bomb could be possible, he was just the one worried enough about it to warn the government.

    • @PhilMoskowitz
      @PhilMoskowitz Год назад +2

      Before Szliard scientists thought an Atom Bomb was only as good as a low yield radiation bomb. With chain reaction Szliard realized just how devastating an atomic bomb could be.,

  • @saimounikasudula1747
    @saimounikasudula1747 Год назад +1

    Amazing! I was reading the book, The making of the atomic bomb

    • @Strategory76
      @Strategory76 Год назад +1

      I started the book yesterday and watched this video for background before continuing.

    • @saimounikasudula1747
      @saimounikasudula1747 Год назад

      @@Strategory76 same 😀

  • @hbilha
    @hbilha Год назад +15

    The real father of the atomic bomb, not Oppenheimer.

    • @chinwansang462
      @chinwansang462 Год назад +1

      Yes, not the American.

    • @gaborrajnai6213
      @gaborrajnai6213 Год назад +1

      I think he would be actually happy that he is not remembered as the father of the atomic bomb. He never rivalized with Oppenheimer.

    • @kaublos
      @kaublos Год назад +1

      I disagree, I think it’s more fitting to describe Teller as the father of the H-Bomb

    • @vonfritzpetilla4676
      @vonfritzpetilla4676 Год назад +1

      Teller discovered H-Bomb after Fermi perfect the first nuclear Bomb.

    • @chrisgrom
      @chrisgrom Год назад +2

      ​@@kaublosHe means Leo Szilard not Edward Teller. Leo Szilard was the real father of the atomic bomb.

  • @iitzfizz
    @iitzfizz Месяц назад

    0:42 - Don't wanna be that guy but this is interesting and people might not know or want to check it out. This wasn't the first fission chain reaction on Earth. There is evidence that billions of years ago there was a natural nuclear reactor in Oklo, South Africa when an area rich with uranium deposits became flooded with groundwater which acted as a moderator (just like in our modern reactors) which turned huge amounts of uranium to plutonium. That was the first man made nuclear chain reaction though.

    • @_BhagavadGita
      @_BhagavadGita  Месяц назад

      How can it have been the first man made fission reaction if it happened a billion or so years ago when humans didn't exist back then?

    • @iitzfizz
      @iitzfizz 14 дней назад

      @@_BhagavadGita It didn't say man made it just said "ignited the first nuclear chain reaction on Earth"
      If it would have said first man made nuclear chain reaction on Earth, that would have been correct.

  • @perspellman
    @perspellman 11 месяцев назад

    Has an equally thorough portrait of Edward Teller been made?

  • @JoseFernandez-qt8hm
    @JoseFernandez-qt8hm Год назад

    contested invasion of Japan = 1,000,000 US casualties, a third dead, a third maimed, a whole generation destroyed... tuff shit Leo...

  • @briankistner4331
    @briankistner4331 4 года назад +7

    Teller says HE was the one who drove Szilard to see Einstein. I tend to think Teller lied about a bunch of stuff......

    • @GP-qb9hi
      @GP-qb9hi 3 года назад +5

      He did, read his biography by Hargittai István, it is well documented and researched.

  • @stellarch4986
    @stellarch4986 Год назад +5

    Leo Szilard was NOT the first to understand the possibility of making a bomb of devastating power never ever seen before... That privilege is that of Lisa Meitner who was the first ever to understand that. She worked in the lab run by Otto Hahn. Otto Hahn got the Nobel for this while Lisa Meitner should have been granted that prize... but several decades later she got an element named after her, even more prestigious than the Nobel, namely Meitnerium ( Atomic Number 109 )

    • @mohammadfardinchowdhury177
      @mohammadfardinchowdhury177 5 месяцев назад

      Wrong.szilard figured the theoratical framework of nuclear of fission in 1933 as he learned of rutherfords work before otto hahn discovered it along with meitner in 1938.he had the knowledge of fission before the discovery of fission by otto hahn.you can certainly see it when you dive deep into his biography.meitner helped otto hahn in the story but szilard discovered it earler.he just didnt have the experimental proof at that time until otto hahn did it in 1938.he made the nuclear bomb as manhattan scientistist using his own knowledge.if u ask me who was the most influencial person in nuclear technology after enrico fermi i will definitly say it was szilard

  • @Thenaturehealer
    @Thenaturehealer Год назад

    Superb

  • @jacobcastro1885
    @jacobcastro1885 2 года назад +8

    Teller was a class act.

  • @chinwansang510
    @chinwansang510 Год назад

    Just know the theory is not enough to make the bomb, because the technology is so complicated! And Szilard solved the technical problems, so he became the designer of atomic bomb.

    • @dovbarleib3256
      @dovbarleib3256 Год назад +1

      He needed Fermi's intense technical proficiency. To deal with something so dangerous, Fermi's careful meticulous personality was necessary to assuage American Federal nerves of a sustained nuclear reaction in a city with 10 million people.... underneath the bleachers of a football stadium..

  • @WolfgangFeist
    @WolfgangFeist Год назад

    33:44 Hear Teller mimics Oppenheimer -- you can sense how furvent the "problems" are between these two men

  • @stevedavy2878
    @stevedavy2878 Год назад +1

    The Genius behind the bomb ? Brilliant minds so often are filled with could we, not should we. Look at genetic engineering and AI. We have no idea of the damers we face with these things, and yet the minds that created them , never think " mmm maybe not"

  • @Uncle_Neil
    @Uncle_Neil 2 года назад +3

    Should we use the bomb on Japan? Well you can either ask a scientist who has nothing at stake but his/her sense of guilt, or you can ask a Marine who just lost most of his friends taking Iwo Jima a few square yards at a time. History tells us the Soviets knew about the bomb, would certainty develop their own device and would not give a fig what anyone else thought.

    • @carrauntoohil86
      @carrauntoohil86 2 года назад +6

      Between Hiroshima and Nagasaki over 100'000 people were killed, most instantly and thousands of others suffered the most unimaginable painful deaths that come with radiation poisoning. Of those killed nearly all were civilians, women and children. Untold damage was done to the local environment and nature. I'm glad Leo stuck his neck out and didn't blindly follow orders.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Год назад +1

      @@carrauntoohil86 Sadly, US estimates were 1 million US military deaths in an invasion of Japan and we can safely assume a few times that of Japanese both soldiers and civilians. So the bomb was kind.

    • @carrauntoohil86
      @carrauntoohil86 Год назад +1

      @@alexcarter8807 I've heard this narrative and I understand there were no easy solutions, but dropping a weapon on such magnitude on predominantly civilians without knowing the consequences and long term effects was negligent at best.

    • @Lucky-sh1dm
      @Lucky-sh1dm Год назад

      @@alexcarter8807who cares Lmfao it was war… Soviet’s lost 25 million in their march to victory. USA just didn’t have the stomach for the fight so they condemned all of humanity to this creepy existence along with these weapons…

    • @billyhamlen9610
      @billyhamlen9610 Год назад

      @@carrauntoohil86 If the Japanese goverment were not removed, they will then develop the bomb sometime in the future, that was the argument.

  • @doctorsocrates4413
    @doctorsocrates4413 Год назад +1

    Don't forget the great russian physicist andrey sakharov.

  • @riffraff8020
    @riffraff8020 4 года назад +3

    brilliant man of wprld peace

  • @vancepomerening4794
    @vancepomerening4794 4 года назад +2

    26:10 Sorry, but that is a Joshua Tree, found only in the Mojave Desert, nowhere near Los Alamos.

    • @_BhagavadGita
      @_BhagavadGita  4 года назад +3

      "This monocotyledonous tree is native to the arid southwestern United States, specifically California, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada, and to northwestern Mexico. It is confined mostly to the Mojave Desert between 400 and 1,800 m elevation."
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yucca_brevifolia

    • @vancepomerening4794
      @vancepomerening4794 2 года назад +1

      @@qed100 Yes it does matter because some of us are actually geographically savvy. Another continual faux pas in documentary footage is showing a European train to illustrate an American train movement.

    • @rajveerkanojiya2985
      @rajveerkanojiya2985 2 года назад

      @@_BhagavadGita Acknowledge me ☝️

  • @RAJAT6555
    @RAJAT6555 Год назад

    If you don't mind me asking, are you a practicing Vaishnava? I ask because we Shaivites view the Bhagavad Gita as a philosophical text belonging to the corpus of classical Sanskrit literature, but to Vaishnavites, it's literally the word of God.

  • @joaoluiz1433
    @joaoluiz1433 8 месяцев назад

    Sou fã da Ucrânia e graças a Deus ela perdeu para os Russos, zaporíjia e portanto quebrando dessa maneira, tornando assim ; a existir, impossibilidade de matança na Venezuela, Estado de Rondônia, Acre, e Santa Catarina evitando chantagem de uso dessas armas nucleares, caso alguém queira prender o assassino em série que é suspeito de matar navalny na Rússia. Mas claro gosto do zelensk e acredito que ele não faria isso em hipótese nenhuma.

  • @piotrd.4850
    @piotrd.4850 Год назад

    On one hand, I understand. On other - I think it was hyporcisy. Jews had every right to build bomb against Germans (hell, moral obligation!) but having second thoughts about using them against enemy of their protector, and at that - enemy that was concluding equally vile genocide, just against other people.....

  • @TeslaSpaceXTech
    @TeslaSpaceXTech 4 года назад +1

    Intelligence

  • @PiedFifer
    @PiedFifer Год назад

    53:18 No, the tragedy of the scientist is being bereft of a commensurately advanced philosophy to provide moral guidance. Got Galt?

  • @kipronosangpaul5229
    @kipronosangpaul5229 Год назад

    I wish this potential was never discovered. The world at least there will not be much fear like today! Now how can these be sorted out?! There is fears everywhere now!

  • @banmadabon
    @banmadabon 4 месяца назад

    Fermi was the man...

  • @MrJm323
    @MrJm323 Год назад

    Tosh! .....I'm more interested in the genius in front of the Bomb!

  • @stephenbrown9998
    @stephenbrown9998 Год назад

    Chadwick

  • @camielkotte
    @camielkotte Год назад

    11:20 wardrobe fail?

    • @Agyguta
      @Agyguta Год назад +1

      44:23 bladder cancer

  • @campbeja001
    @campbeja001 Год назад

    Teller disgraced Oppenheimer by petitioning panel Oppenheimer should be denied future security clearance. He wss very ambitious man.

  • @vancepomerening4794
    @vancepomerening4794 4 года назад +6

    17:40 Just think, Trump just would have called it a hoax, or fake news, and we would all be goose stepping now.

    • @TheFastshelby
      @TheFastshelby 3 года назад +1

      How so?

    • @jacobcastro1885
      @jacobcastro1885 2 года назад +5

      TDS. In contrast, Biden would shake hands with the empty chair next to him and mumble to himself about an onion tied to his belt or something.

    • @jerrywatt6813
      @jerrywatt6813 Год назад

      TDS is now a form of anti American propaganda that the Marxist left use an explanation for everything !

    • @PiedFifer
      @PiedFifer Год назад

      With any sunlight, Trump will repatriate you out of your GovJob and back to the merit-based private sector where you will have the opportunity to discover self-esteem and pride in your work.

  • @joerose3531
    @joerose3531 3 года назад

    21:02

  • @stevefisher2553
    @stevefisher2553 Год назад

    trumpsters, are you listening

  • @imskar4990
    @imskar4990 Год назад

    I always thought that the dropping of the A- Bom would be justified because of the extreme hi body count, when the Americans invaded the main island. The formula is simple, you don't need to be a physicist , 1billion dollars (American Tax money) X ( save American soldiers ) = ending the war. Also Teller is saying that he agreed with Szilard not to drop the bom, but went on to develop the nuclear Hydrogen bom. Leave the politics to the politicians, the Army to the generals and physics to the physicist.

  • @georgepbriles696
    @georgepbriles696 Год назад

    Oh yeah the bomb was absolutely genius! Brilliant stuff! They should have been working on a new type of commode!

  • @Lu-pt2bf
    @Lu-pt2bf Год назад

    And the cinema 3 years before.

  • @SammyDanny-tj5vx
    @SammyDanny-tj5vx Год назад

    Szilard looked normal rest mental institution goes to show u

  • @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead
    @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead 4 года назад +1

    Richard Feynman was the most crucial physicist involved with the Manhattan project and without him we would’ve lost the race he developed away to do the math 3x faster than the way they were doing it at first without calculators they had to write everything all the math of the crazy advanced physics they were developing

    • @sluggo3slug
      @sluggo3slug 3 года назад +2

      No he was not the most crucial phycicist in the development of the bomb

    • @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead
      @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead 3 года назад

      sluggo3slug he actually was without Feynman the Germans would’ve definitely beat us in the race to weaponize a atom bomb in fact there’s actually evidence the Germans were the first to test a atom bomb and Feynman came up with a way to do these long ass math equations that was taking 9 months to complete 3 to completing 9 equations in 3 months cuz he was a math genius so yes without him we’d be speaking German

    • @kurtvonfricken6829
      @kurtvonfricken6829 2 года назад +6

      @@tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead
      Germany was never close to developing the bomb.

    • @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead
      @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead 2 года назад

      @@kurtvonfricken6829 that history tells you but there is concrete evidence of a nuclear bomb detonation in the German countryside with eye witness testimony watch Hunting Hitler season 1 or 2 maybe probably season 1

    • @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead
      @tvHTHtv_is_A_Crackhead 2 года назад

      @@kurtvonfricken6829 I mean you can’t detonate a atom bomb without leaving a decades long zone of destruction like I said watch hunting Hitler it’s a fact German had to have tested a atom bomb around or before the same time America did but British commandos actually destroyed the heavy water plant that the Germans were using to develop their atomic bomb and never got a chance to make another but they most likely tested the first atom bomb