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The Neutron Bomb: Political, Technology and Military Issues (1978) By S. T. Cohen

 

​Samuel Theodore Cohen was born on January 25, 1921. He was an American physicist and is known as the father of the neutron bomb. A neutron bomb is an ERW, low yield thermonuclear weapon. They are designed to produce high rates of lethal neutron radiation in the vicinity of the blast. Since 1992, these weapons have been retired.

 

Cohen’s parents were Austrian Jews, who emigrated from London. He was born and raised in Brooklyn. He studied mathematics and physics at the University of California, Los Angeles, graduating in 1943.  

 

He joined the U.S. Army later that year. He was posted to MIT for advanced training in math and physics, before joining the Manhattan Project. In 1944, he arrived at Los Alamos. Here, he worked in the efficiency group, and calculated how neutrons behaved in the “Fat Man” bomb.

After the war he briefly studied at Berkley, before joining the RAND Corporation. During the Vietnam War, Cohen argued for the use of small neutron bombs, believing this could cause a quick end to the war. Many politicians and scientists did not agree. In the early 1970s, he served as a member of the Los Alamos Tactical Nuclear Weapons Panel. In 1978, President Carter delayed the development of the neutron bomb. But, later, President Reagan allowed for the creation of 700 neutron bombs.

 

  • Soft Cover
  • 95 pages
  • In Good Condition

The Neutron Bomb: Political, Technology and Military Issues (1978) By S.T. Cohen

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