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Military guns are simple in design and a known quantity
by virtue of their long use by the armies and navies of the world. The
decision to use a gun to assemble active material in a fission bomb
came about because gun technology is so well known.
During the July 1942 conference hosted by J. Robert
Oppenheimer at Berkeley, Calif., it was taken for granted that a large
caliber gun would be used to shoot two pieces of uranium into a
supercritical assembly. After the discovery of plutonium, the use of
guns became more problematic. Light element impurities could cause
predetonation if sufficient assembly velocity was not achieved.
Despite this concern, the elegant simplicity of gun technology gave
Oppenheimer cause for optimism as Los Alamos came into existence. And
despite the simplicity of gun assembly, a great deal of uncertainty
remained about the nuclear materials and what the final product would
look like.
Because of such uncertainty, Oppenheimer took
personal control of gun development. As he noted, "At the present time
our estimates are so ill founded that I think it better for me to take
responsibility for putting them [design specifications] forward." With
two types of fissile material to use, Oppenheimer faced a crucial
first decision. Should the Laboratory develop a gun capable of using
plutonium, the more difficult material to use, and adjust the gun to
use uranium? Or, should two different guns be developed
simultaneously?
Oppenheimer chose to develop the plutonium gun, code
named "Thin Man" and then make the necessary changes to accommodate
uranium. He believed that uranium presented few metallurgical problems
and any changes in the gun would be minor.
With the help of Richard Tolman of the National
Defense Research Committee, Oppenheimer proceeded with an experimental
program. Their most significant impact on this program was choosing
two key persons: Edwin Rose and Charles Critchfield. Rose, an engineer
and gun designer, observed that a gun weapon could be delivered by
aircraft if much of the steel used in the normal construction of guns
was eliminated.
Since a fission gun would be fired only once, much
of the steel used to ensure safety after repeated firings was
unnecessary.
Critchfield, a mathematical physicist, brought a
wealth of ordnance experience to the Laboratory. Critchfield realized
that the Naval Gun Factory needed as much as six months to build the
full-scale guns needed by the Laboratory. He suggested that time could
be saved by testing at reduced scale using 20mm anti-aircraft guns and
3-inch naval cannon. These could be procured immediately. When the
full-scale guns arrived, only the most promising nuclear designs would
need to be tested.
Oppenheimer continued his direct supervision of the
gun program until June 1943 when Navy Capt. William Parsons became the
first Ordnance Division Leader at the Laboratory.
Work on Thin Man continued until July 1944 when
Emilo Segre''s experiments on the spontaneous fissioning of plutonium
proved that a gun could not be used to assemble this material.
Oppenheimer made the decision to abandon Thin Man and redirect much of
the Laboratory's resources to develop the implosion method.
After the reorganization, gun work focused on
uranium assembly, code named "Little Boy." Oppenheimer's earlier
decision in 1943 to concentrate on Thin Man on the belief that a
uranium gun did not present major technical problems proved prophetic.
Little Boy was developed with few major complications.
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