case against Oppenheimer

and clean bomb

critics of

and espionage

fight against communism

Lawrence and

and Los Alamos spy (“second Fuchs”)

and moratorium idea

obsession with Oppenheimer

and Oppenheimer

and Oppenheimer hearing

recording AEC meetings

report on Oppenheimer hearing

and Russian atomic bomb

and second lab

special assistant for atomic energy

and the Super

and test ban

Strong, George

submarine

ballistic missiles

nuclear

“Super” (the)/superbomb

charge that Oppenheimer delayed

espionage involving

ethical argument against

GAC and

inability to stop

international control of

Livermore

new (radiation implosion)

Oppenheimer opposed

opposition to

postwar research

presentation on status of (1943)

progress toward

proponents of

prospects of

secrets of, compromised

showdown over

simulating explosion of hypothetical

Teller’s work on

Truman’s decision to go ahead with

uncertainties regarding

as way to recover U.S. hegemony

work on

“Super-Gadget Program”

“Super Handbook”

Synchrotron

Szilard, Leo

appeal not to use atomic bomb

Task Force on Nuclear Inspection

see also Project Alpine

Tatlock, Jean

Teapot series (nuclear tests)

technical surveillance (tesur)

Teeple, David

Teller, Edward

and atomic bomb tests

briefs Pentagon officials on H-bomb

and control of atomic energy

and disarmament panel

effect of Oppenheimer case on

FBI interview with (1952)

H-bomb concept

and Hiroshima bombing

history of H-bomb project

hydride bomb

hydrogen bomb

and implosion design (Los Alamos)

Joint Committee interview (1950)

at Los Alamos

at Livermore

and loyalty oath

and Mike test

and moratorium idea

and Oppenheimer hearing

and Oppenheimer’s loyalty

and politics

postwar activities

resignation from Los Alamos

return to Los Alamos

“Russian Atomic Plan, The”

and second lab

seeking vindication

and security strictures

and Soviet bomb

and the Super

and test ban

thermonuclear research

and use of atomic bomb

x-ray laser

Tennessee Eastman Corporation

Tennessee Valley Authority

Tenney, Jack

Tenney Committee

Tesla (test)

test ban

Livermore and

making permanent

opposition to

violation of

test-ban talks

test-ban treaty

tests/testing

atomic bomb

cheating on

clean bomb

control over

detecting

end of

Fat Man

Little Boy

Livermore

moratorium on

safety of

Soviet

thermonuclear

underground

Theoretical Megaton Group (Los Alamos)

thermonuclear reactions

atomic explosion triggering

thermonuclear research/tests

thermonuclear weapons

Thin Man

Thomas, J. Parnell

threshold test ban

Tichvinsky, Leo

Tinian Island

Tolman, Richard

Committee on Postwar Policy (Tolman Committee)

Top Policy Group

Trinity (gadget)

Trinity (test)

tritium

production of

see also Benicia Laboratory

Truman, Harry

atomic monopoly

containment policy

and control of atomic energy

election victory

and Fuchs spy scandal

ignorance of H-bomb

postwar policy

and Soviet atomic bomb

and the Super

Turk (test)

Tuve, Merle

U-235

critical mass

enriched

fissionability of

from gaseous diffusion

production of

shipped to Los Alamos

U-238

Ulam, Stanislaw

Underhill, Robert

United Nations

University of California

army alliance with/funding

Civil Engineering Testing Laboratory (Rad Lab)

contracts with AEC

Faculty Club

LeConte Hall

Oppenheimer at

Personnel Security Boards

security concerns

Soviet spy ring at

University Hospital

see also Berkeley

University of California (UCLA)

University of Chicago

Midway Laboratory

University of Minnesota

uranium

atom splitting

for bomb

contaminants added to (denaturing)

critical mass

moratorium on publication about

shipped to Los Alamos

in superbomb

uranium, enriched/enrichment

given to Russians

production of

uranium bomb

Uranium Committee (Briggs)

uranium gun

see also Little Boy

uranium separation

electromagnetic method

facility for

Urey, Harold

vacuum tube technology/tubes

Van Vleck, John

Vandenberg, Hoyt

Veksler, V. I.

Velde, Harold

Vinograd, Jerome

Volpe, Joseph

Von Kármán, Theodore

von Neumann, John

W-47

Walker, John

Wallace, Henry

Wallace Plan

Walter, James

Weapons Development Committee (Los Alamos)

Weapons Effects Handbook

Weaver, Warren

Weinberg, Joseph (“Joe”)

case against

in Communist Party

identified

investigation of

and Oppenheimer hearing

optics research

Weinberg case

trial

Wheeler, John

Wheeler incident

White, Harry Dexter (Richard)

Whitson, Lish

Wick, Gian Carlo

Wideröe, Rolf

Wigner, Eugene

Wilkes, Dan

Wilson, Carroll

Wilson, Charles

Wilson, Robert

Wilson Tract

Wood, John

Wood, R. W.

Y-12 (Oak Ridge)

postwar

shutting down Calutrons

York, Herbert

clean bomb

at Livermore

test ban

Young Communist League

Zindel, Harold

Zubilin, Vassili (Maxim)

Zuckert, Eugene

Zuni (test)

Also by Gregg Herken

The Winning Weapon: The Atomic Bomb in the Cold War, 1945–1950

Counsels of War

Cardinal Choices: Presidential Science Advising from the Atomic Bomb to SDI

Praise for Brotherhood of the Bomb

“Herken writes with an assurance that enables him to cover a lot of ground swiftly, and to paint the political and scientific landscape in bold strokes.… The story is well-crafted and meticulously researched, drawing on recently declassified FBI files and documents, and it moves at a helter-skelter pace.… A gripping account of three tangled lives.”

—Jennet Conant, The Washington Post Book World

“Immensely readable … a well-written, well-documented, exciting and yet unhappy tale of a crucial encounter between science and politics.”

—David Holloway, Los Angeles Times

“Authoritative … Herken deftly guides us through the scientific-governmental and political-military thicket, explaining how key decisions were made.”

—Roger Bishop, Bookpage

“The power of science and technology is the pivotal story of our times. A bright light is cast on the practical and moral issues by this joint biography of the three physicists most prominent in the rise of nuclear weapons. After half a century, much information once secret has emerged, and Herken has done a thorough job of scouring the archives and contacting witnesses. With his combination of deep research and lively writing, Herken has given us the definitive telling of the story of these extraordinary men in all their conflicts and sad triumphs.”

—Spencer Weart, director, AIP Center for History of Physics

“Herken brings to life a whole world of intrigue, ambition and political passions of every variety.… [It is] smoothly written and notable for its lucid scientific expositions and nice use of human touches … a fresh and original work with much to tell us about the fearsome weapon whose creation, funding and deployment had major social and economic consequences that we live with today.”

—Wendy Smith, Newsweek

“A complete and compelling narrative of the advent of weapons of mass destruction.”

—Science News

“Meticulous and authoritative … might supercede every previous account. A work in league with Richard Rhodes’ Dark Star.”

—Gilbert Taylor, Booklist

“Gregg Herken has written a fine human history of how Lawrence, Teller, and Oppenheimer worked and argued together, and he brings to life the dozen years when they led the world into the nuclear age.”

—Tom Powers, author of Heisenberg’s War: The Secret History of the German Bomb and The Man Who Kept the Secrets: Richard Helms and the CIA

“Exceptionally detailed and thoroughly researched … an extraordinary and revealing examination of the people and atomic issues during and after World War II told with vivid, fast-paced flair … an absorbing history of a perilous time, a political thriller and a moral lesson for the future.”

—David Perlman, San Francisco Chronicle

“Detailed, engrossing … If there was ever a question that politics plays a part in science, this book washes away any doubts.”

—Publishers Weekly

“The dramatic story of physicists who put science at the service of the state, with momentous results for themselves and the world … Thoughtful and important.”

—Kirkus Reviews

“In this engaging and wonderfully researched book, Gregg Herken unveils a new dimension in the American saga of the nuclear scientists who created the world’s first atomic and hydrogen bombs. Here is a suspenseful history of how three brilliant minds overcame daunting obstacles in a time of world crisis. Yet it is not always a pretty story. It is full of troubling insights on Oppenheimer’s flirtation with the Communist Party, Lawrence’s scientific empire-building, and Teller’s compulsion to build bigger and bigger bombs. A timely and thoughtful book.”

—Joseph Albright, coauthor of Bombshell: The Secret Story of America’s Unknown Atomic Spy Conspiracy

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

GREGG HERKEN is a senior historian and curator at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space

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