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Half Life: the divided life of Bruno Pontecorvo, physicist or spy
F.E. Close

Half Life: the divided life of Bruno Pontecorvo, physicist or spy

the divided life of Bruno Pontecorvo, physicist or spy

Basic Books (Feb 03, 2015)
9780465069989
400 pages | 165 x 249 mm
Dewey 92 PON
LC Classification QC774.P66 .C56 2014
LC Control No. 2014041019

Genre

  • Biography

Subject

  • Nuclear Physicists - Biography. - Italy
  • Nuclear Physicists - Biography. - Soviet Union
  • Pontecorvo, Bruno
  • Spies - Biography. - Italy
  • Spies - Biography. - Soviet Union

Plot

It was at the height of the Cold War, in the summer of 1950, when Bruno Pontecorvo mysteriously vanished behind the Iron Curtain. Who was he, and what caused him to disappear? Was he simply a physicist, or also a spy and communist radical? A protégé of Enrico Fermi, Pontecorvo was one of the most promising nuclear physicists in the world. He spent years hunting for the Higgs boson of his day—the neutrino—a nearly massless particle thought to be essential to the process of particle decay. His work on the Manhattan Project helped to usher in the nuclear age, and confirmed his reputation as a brilliant physicist. Why, then, would he disappear as he stood on the cusp of true greatness, perhaps even the Nobel Prize?In Half-Life, physicist and historian Frank Close offers a heretofore untold history of Pontecorvo’s life, based on unprecedented access to Pontecorvo’s friends and family and the Russian scientists with whom he would later work. Close takes a microscope to Pontecorvo’s life, combining a thorough biography of one of the most important scientsts of the twentieth century with the drama of Cold War espionage. With all the elements of a Cold War thriller—classified atomic research, an infamous double agent, a possible kidnapping by Soviet operatives—Half-Life is a history of nuclear physics at perhaps its most powerful: when it created the bomb.physics at perhaps its most powerful: when it created the bomb.