From Kirkus Reviews
A detailed, technical account of the first 25 years of Brookhaven National Laboratory, describing not only the evolution of several groundbreaking projects, but also the personalities and politics that helped shape this community of scientists. Brookhaven historian Crease (Philosophy/SUNY, Stony Brook) begins his narrative at Columbia University in the months following WWII. I.I. Rabi, the ``driving force'' in the physics department and a key figure in the Manhattan Project, came to the conclusion that funding a research reactor would require both cooperation from several universities and government assistance. This idea, circulated among key individuals from nine universities along the East Coast, quickly became a plan for a national laboratory. By the beginning of 1947, a military site in rural Long Island, deemed ``equally inaccessible to everybody,'' was reluctantly selected, and the work of transforming it into a world-class research facility began. Crease methodically describes four large projects at Brookhaven, from initial design and construction to operation and eventual obsolescence. The narrative explores not only the scientific instruments, but the community of scientists that quickly formed at Brookhaven. As one early community member wrote (to the tune of ``My Darling Clementine''), ``Oh Brookhaven, Oh Brookhaven, / Darling of the AEC / With its peacetime chain reactor / What a fine place it will be. Crease also describes public reaction to the laboratory, which ranged from the hope that the reactor could cure inoperable brain tumors (touted as an ``atomic miracle'' in the press) to farmers who worried that their ducks had become radioactive. Crease's ``biography'' of Brookhaven is not as effective at weaving together the physics, politics, and historical setting as tomes such as Richard Rhodes's The Making of the Atomic Bomb. Instead, Crease provides a well written, more narrowly focused account of the research and community of Brookhaven suitable for those interested in studying the heyday of big physics. (77 b&w photos, 5 maps, 12 illustrations, not seen) --
Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Product Description
From Nobel Prize-winning work in atomic physics to community concerns over radiation leaks, Brookhaven National Laboratory's ups and downs track the changing fortunes of "big science" in the United States since World War II. But Brookhaven is also unique; it was the first major national laboratory built specifically for basic civilian research. In
Making Physics, Robert P. Crease brings to life the people, the instruments, the science, and the politics of Brookhaven's first quarter-century.
Making Physics crackles with the experimental energy of Brookhaven's researchers, competing among themselves as well as with other laboratories around the world. Drawing on a wide variety of sources, from oral interviews and internal memos to lab notebooks and transcripts of security clearance hearings, Crease recounts the difficult founding and siting of Brookhaven, the successful resolution of immense engineering and technical problems in the design and construction of experimental apparatus, and changing relations with the surrounding Long Island community. But most of all, Crease tells fascinating stories of Brookhaven's scientists and their research, which has included detailed descriptions of the structure of the nucleus, early attempts at radiotherapy for inoperable tumors, and studies of strange particles and the weak and strong interactions.
At a time when federal funding for large scientific projects is more controversial than ever before, Crease's biography of Brookhaven has special significance. It will interest anyone concerned with the making of physics, from historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science to physicists and students of public policy.