2011年8月14日星期日

Oppenheimer and Ferm

The Japanese soon surrendered. World War Two ended.

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This Special English program was written by Jerilyn Watson. It was produced by Paul Thompson. I'm Sarah Long.



In Nineteen-Fifty-Four, the Atomic Energy Commission and a special security committee moved against Mister Oppenheimer. They did not question his loyalty to the United States. However, they said his personal life made him a threat to national security.

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J. Robert Oppenheimer was born in New York City on April Twenty-Second, Nineteen-Oh-Four. Even as a boy, he showed he had unusual intelligence. As a young man he attended Harvard University, in the eastern United States, and Cambridge University in England.He earned his doctorate in physics at Gottingen University, Germany, in Nineteen-Twenty-Seven. There he worked with the famous scientist, Max Born. By Nineteen-Thirty, Mister Oppenheimer was teaching at two top universities on the American West Coast. His fame as a teacher spread. Soon he was teaching the best students of physics in the United States.


Mister Fermi directed the building of the first atomic reactor that made the reaction possible. He had invented the method with another scientist, Leo Szilard. The reactor was put together in a squash court under the seats of the university sports center. It contained natural uranium placed in graphite and controlled by pieces of cadmium and boron rods.


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Enrico Fermi was born in Rome, Italy, on September Twenty-Ninth, Nineteen-Oh-One. After his education in Italy, he studied with Max Born in Germany, just as Robert Oppenheimer had.

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And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for People in America in VOA Special English.


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Enrico Fermi died of cancer in Chicago in Nineteen-Fifty-Four. He was fifty-three years old.

Like Mister Oppenheimer, Mister Fermi recognized the dangers of atomic energy. They both worried about the possible use of a hydrogen bomb. With another scientist Mister Fermi wrote a Nineteen-Forty-Seven report to the Atomic Energy Commission. The report opposed creation of the bomb for humane reasons.

By, Nineteen-Forty-Four, Enrico Fermi had become a citizen of the United States. He was asked to help Robert Oppenheimer with the atomic bomb test at Alamogordo.

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Enrico Fermi returned to Italy in Nineteen-Twenty-Four. He became that nation's first professor of theory of physics. At the time there was almost no physics education offered in Italy





Mister Fermi returned to the University of Chicago after the war. There he headed the Institute for Nuclear Studies, now known as the Enrico Fermi Institute.

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2004-11-13


J. Robert Oppenheimer's life and work were affected deeply by Americans intense fear of Communism in the Nineteen-Fifties.

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It is July Sixteenth, Nineteen-Forty-Five. All is quiet in an American desert at Alamogordo, New Mexico. Suddenly there is a terrible explosion. A huge cloud rises from the Earth. The sky turns purple and yellow.


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One year after the bombs were dropped on Japan, he received the Presidential Medal of Merit for his work . In Nineteen-Forty-Seven, he began to direct the Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton University on the East Coast.



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He married Laura Capon, who also was a scientist, in Nineteen-Twenty-Eight. Laura was Jewish. Later the Fermis decided to leave Italy, because the Fascist government had begun oppressing Jews.



Mister Fermi led the team that created the world's first controlled, continued nuclear-fission reaction. It happened on December Second, Nineteen-Forty-Two, at the University of Chicago.

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The first atomic bomb has been exploded. It is a test of the most deadly weapon ever known. American officials are considering using this weapon to try to end World War Two.


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He and his family sailed directly from Stockholm to the United States. If he stayed in Europe, he might have been forced to work for Nazi Germany.

Yet later both Mister Oppenheimer and Mister Fermi spoke against further development of nuclear weapons. Both men opposed the hydrogen bomb.






J. Robert Oppenheimer and Enrico Fermi were two of the greatest scientists of the century. They were both concerned about the results of their discoveries that led the world into the Nuclear Age.


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And I'm Steve Ember with People in America in VOA Special English. Today we report about two scientists, J. Robert Oppenheimer and Enrico Fermi, who helped lead the world into the nuclear age.



J. Robert Oppenheimer is the head of the Los Alamos laboratory. It is the creative center of the secret Manhattan Project, which made the explosion possible. As the cloud rises, Mister Oppenheimer remembers words from the Hindu holy book, the Baghavad Gita. He says: "For I am become death, the destroyer of worlds."

Mister Fermi taught at Columbia University in New York City. He also was part of the American research team for the top secret Manhattan Project

Mister Oppenheimer made an easy target for suspicious critics. His wife had once been a Communist. Some of his friends were former Communists. Years earlier he had suggested sharing nuclear secrets with the Soviets. He opposed developing the hydrogen bomb.



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ACT ONE: TRUMAN READING ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE DROPPING OF THE BOMB AT HIROSHIMA. (15 secs)





Enrico Fermi had worked with Robert Oppenheimer and other top scientists to develop the atom bomb. He won an award for his work in atomic energy from the Atomic Energy Commission in Nineteen-Fifty-Four. It was the first time the award was presented. Later, the honor was named for him. It recognized Mister Fermi as one of the greatest physicists of the Twentieth Century.






He regretted that work was being done to develop the hydrogen bomb. He felt it was bad for both scientific and humanitarian reasons. However, extreme tension existed between the United States and the Soviet Union at the time. So in Nineteen-Forty-Nine President Truman decided that work on nuclear weapons should continue.




Enrico Fermi went to Stockholm, Sweden, to accept a Nobel Prize in Nineteen-Thirty-Eight. He won for producing new radioactive elements beyond uranium. Without knowing it, he had split the atom. However, that fact was not recognized until later.

Less than one month after the test at Alamogordo, the United States dropped atomic bombs on two Japanese cities. President Harry Truman announced to the world about the first bomb:



Mister Oppenheimer had directed one of America's most important secret scientific projects. Now this famous physicist was barred from secret work for the government.


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At the same time, Mister Oppenheimer became chairman of the advisory committee to the United States Atomic Energy Commission. He used the position to try to make the public recognize the dangers of nuclear power as well as its possibilities for good.




J. Robert Oppenheimer died of throat cancer on February Eighteenth, Nineteen-Sixty-Seven. He was sixty-two years old.


In Nineteen-Forty-Two, Mister Oppenheimer joined the American government's project to develop the atomic bomb. He was appointed head of the Los Alamos Laboratory. Many of his former students worked for him on the project.


I'm Sarah Long.

In time Mister Oppenheimer's work in science and teaching made people forget the accusations against him. The government decided to give him the highest award of the Atomic Energy Commission for his work on atomic energy. President Lyndon Johnson presented the honor in late Nineteen-Sixty-Three. It was called the Enrico Fermi Award.

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