And they say fanfic isn't educational
I'm doing a little research on the Manhattan Project for a fic I'm currently working on ... actually, all I really wanted to know was how to spell Harry Daghlian's name (I'm revisiting that scene from Trinity where Rodney visits Sheppard at his quarters late at night and mentions Daghlian) but as usual when I Google for some specific minor detail, I'm kind of getting sucked into reading all the websites on it. Even if the details on what happens to people dying of radiation sickness are ... sort of horrible.
In case anyone else is curious about the guy that Rodney talked about in "Trinity" (complete with the gory details of his demise):
http://members.tripod.com/~Arnold_Dion/Daghlian/bio.html
I'm actually a little surprised that they didn't use Louis Slotin instead of Daghlian in the episode -- Slotin was a Canadian researcher on the Manhattan Project and friend of Daghlian's who died a year later in a similar way. He died a hero, stopping a supercritical experiment before it could kill others in the room. I'm sure Rodney would have thought of him.
http://www.childrenofthemanhattanproject.org/FH/LA/Louis_Slotin_1.htm
In case anyone else is curious about the guy that Rodney talked about in "Trinity" (complete with the gory details of his demise):
http://members.tripod.com/~Arnold_Dion/Daghlian/bio.html
I'm actually a little surprised that they didn't use Louis Slotin instead of Daghlian in the episode -- Slotin was a Canadian researcher on the Manhattan Project and friend of Daghlian's who died a year later in a similar way. He died a hero, stopping a supercritical experiment before it could kill others in the room. I'm sure Rodney would have thought of him.
http://www.childrenofthemanhattanproject.org/FH/LA/Louis_Slotin_1.htm

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I did a little background reading on Trinity, too. I like the story of Sir Joseph Rotblat (also spelled Rothblat). He was kicked off the Manhattan Project because of ethical concerns, but later won the Nobel Peace Prize.
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Kam :)
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I used to read quite a lot of 1930s/40s SF and the treatment of radiation in those stories is interesting -- because they didn't know how it worked, really, or what it could do. It was essentially this magic substance that could do whatever the writer wanted it to do ... kind of like other theoretical scientific ideas are used today (like parallel universes or time travel -- maybe our pop-culture conceptions of these will seem equally ludicrous to readers of classic SF in 2106). But reading about the actual radiation accidents, and especially considering that DNA was still largely a mystery, it's easy to see why radiation was such a giant question mark. Its effects would be so weird and unpredictable if you didn't really understand it.
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But -really- good links. TYK!!!
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