The Lost Notebook of Enrico Fermi: The True Story of the Discovery of Neutron-Induced Radioactivity

Cham: Springer Verlag. Edited by Nadia Robotti (2018)
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Abstract

This book tells the curious story of an unexpected finding that sheds light on a crucial moment in the development of physics: the discovery of artificial radioactivity induced by neutrons. The finding in question is a notebook, clearly written in Fermi's handwriting, which records the frenzied days and nights that Fermi spent experimenting alone, driven by his theoretical ideas on beta decay. The notebook was found by the authors while browsing through documents left by Oscar D'Agostino, the chemist among Fermi's group. From Fermi's notes, they reconstruct with skill and expertise the detailed timeline of the critical days leading up to his vital discovery. While much is already known about the road that led Fermi to his important result, this is the first time that it has been possible to reconstruct precisely when and how the initial evidence of neutron-induced decay was obtained. In relating this fascinating story, the book will be of great interest not only to those with a passion for the history of science but also to a wider audience.

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Chapters

Fermi’s strategic choices

Already in 1933 before he had developed his own theory of beta decay Fermi had taken an interest in the properties of the neutron, showing great confidence in the use of this particle as a projectile with which to bombard nuclei and produce artificial disintegrations. In his talk “The last fundament... see more

The discovery of neutron-induced radioactivity

In the days following the discovery of alpha-particle–induced radioactivity it was planned to repeat Joliot and Curie’s experiments at the Physics Institute in Rome, as was announced in two letters written on the same day by Rasetti to Joliot and by Rasetti and Fermi to D’Agostino respectively.

The discovery of alpha-particle–induced radioactivity

As has been seen, at the Solvay Conference Lise Meitner had severely criticised the Joliot-Curie’s idea according to which, in certain nuclear transmutations produced by alpha particles in aluminium and fluorine nuclei, positrons were also emitted together with neutrons, and so she had aligned herse... see more

The Solvay Conference and Fermi’s theory of beta decay: October-December 1933

Between 22 and 29 October 1933 the Institut International Solvay organised in Brussels the “Septième Conseil de Physique” or, as it would later be remembered, the “Septième Solvay Conference”. In the tradition of these Conferences the theme under discussion, on which the greatest experts in the fiel... see more

New particles and new theories: 1932-1933

While, as we have just seen, experimental activity was beginning to take shape in the Nuclear Physics field in Rome, and more generally in Italy, at an international level already from early 1932 great progress was being made in this field, both experimentally and theoretically. This however does no... see more

Nuclear Physics in Rome after the Rome Conference: 1931-1933

In his closing speech at the Rome Conference, kept at the Accademia dei Lincei, Corbino spoke as follows: “I therefore think that the future course of nuclear physics will be greatly influenced by this week that we have spent together and its most profound results will perhaps be seen in work that w... see more

The beginning of Nuclear Physics in Rome

From 1928, immediately after the formulation of the statistical model of the atom , until nearly the whole of 1932, Fermi was mainly interested in quantum electrodynamics, a cutting edge topic in those years, and studied in particular by Werner Heisenberg , Pascual Jordan , Wolfgang Pauli , P. A. M.... see more

Fermi in Italy: his manuscripts

As is well known, from his time in high school to his departure for Stockholm and then for the United States of America , Enrico Fermi carried out intense and productive scientific research in Italy. The results obtained by Fermi in this “Italian” period are sensational. In a special Section, at the... see more

Introduction

As is well known, in Rome in March 1934 Enrico Fermi discovered neutron-induced radioactivity. For this discovery, and for the connected discovery in October that same year of the effect of the slowing down of neutrons, Fermi was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1938. The motivation read as fo... see more

Erratum to: The Lost Notebook of ENRICO FERMI

Erratum to:F. Guerra and N. Robotti,The Lost Notebook of ENRICO FERMI,10.1007/978-3-319-69254-8In the original version of the book, the translation texts “Translated from Italian by Christine V. Pennison” and “Translation from the Italian language edition: Enrico Fermi e il quaderno ritrovato by F. ... see more

Further developments and conclusions

Immediately after the discovery of radioactivity induced by the bombardment of neutrons in aluminium and fluorine Fermi carried on his research and succeeded in activating other elements too. The congratulations that Lord Rutherford expressed to him in a letter on 23 April 1934, shown in Fig. 65, ex... see more

Pages from the Irpinia notebook and the loose sheets of paper

Here we reproduce some pages of the Irpinia notebook and of the loose pages of paper thanks to the kind permission of the Fondazione Oscar D’Agostino, Avellino.

Fermi at work: chronicle of a discovery

As we indicated in the first chapter, a few years ago we found in the “Oscar D’Agostino” Archive in Avellino, to be precise in the summer of 2002, a notebook of Fermi’s that on the basis of the dates and above all the contents we could also define as the “notebook of the discovery of neutron-induced... see more

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