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Computers were people using desk calculators when Los
Alamos began. By the end of the war, Los Alamos scientists were using
the first electronic computer. John von Neumann was the primary agent
of this change, which led to the Laboratory's strong program in
computer science and technology, as well as making it possible to
calculate the behavior of nuclear explosives.
Early calculations relating to the diffusion of
neutrons in a critical assembly of uranium were made by Eldred Nelson
and Stanley Frankel, who were members of Robert Serber's group in the
Radiation Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, in
1942. When they came to Los Alamos in the spring of 1943, they ordered
the same sorts of machines that they had used in California: Marchant
and Friden desk calculators to make the calculations required in the
design of nuclear weapons.
To perform some of these repetitive calculations, a
group of scientists' wives were recruited to form a central computing
pool. These "computers" included Stanley Frankel's wife, Mary;
Josephine Elliott; Beatrice Langer; Mici Teller; Jean Bacher; and
Betty Inglis. This became group T-5 under New York University
mathematician Donald (Moll) Flanders when he arrived in the late
summer of 1943.
The mechanical calculators tended to break down
under heavy use by physicists and had to be shipped back to the
manufacturer until physicists Richard Feynman of Princeton University
and Nicholas Metropolis of the University of Chicago learned to repair
them. Although Theoretical (T) Division Leader Hans Bethe at first
objected that this was a waste of time, he relented when the number of
working calculators diminished.
Dana Mitchell, whom Laboratory Director J. Robert
Oppenheimer had recruited from Columbia University to oversee
procurement for Los Alamos, recognized that the calculators were not
adequate for the heavy computational chores and suggested the use of
IBM punched-card machines. He had seen them used successfully by
Wallace Eckert at Columbia to calculate the orbits of planets and
persuaded Frankel and Nelson to order a complement of them.
In September 1943, von Neumann made the first of
many visits to Los Alamos. A mathematician at the Institute for
Advanced Study at Princeton, he had been asked by Oppenheimer to serve
as a consultant in hydrodynamics, and during his visits he became
aware of the work on implosion being conducted by Seth Neddermeyer and
his group.
Von Neumann, who also was a consultant on explosives
for the Army, pointed out that shaped charges could be used to produce
a more uniform shock wave for this purpose. He subsequently developed
Neddermeyer's one-dimensional theory of implosion with Edward Teller,
the theoretical physicist from the Metallurgical Laboratory of the
University of Chicago. When von Neumann had difficulty with the pure
high-density incompressible phase of implosion, he suggested a test
implosion to determine physical quantities that could not be
calculated analytically. He subsequently formulated another model for
computation, and Teller set up a group in T Division devoted to the
theory of implosion.
The new IBM punched-card machines were devoted to
calculations to simulate implosion, and Metropolis and Feynman
organized a race between them and the hand-computing group. "We set up
a room with girls in it. Each one had a Marchant. But one was the
multiplier, and another was the adder, and this one cubed, and all she
did was cube this number and send it to the next one," said Feynmann.
For one day, the hand computers kept up: "The only difference was that
the IBM machines didn't get tired and could work three shifts. But the
girls got tired after a while."
Feynmann worked out a technique to run several
calculations in parallel on the punched-card machines that reduced the
time required. "The problems consisted of a bunch of cards that had to
go through a cycle. First add, then multiply, and so it went through
the cycle of machines in this room - slowly - as it went around and
around. So we figured a way to put a different colored set of cards
through a cycle too, but out of phase. We'd do two or three problems
at a time," explained Feynman. Three months were required for the
first calculation, and Feynman's technique reduced it to two or three
weeks.
The first implosion calculation showed that the
fissile material would be strongly compressed and that a high yield
would result from assembling a relatively small amount of fissile
material if a spherically symmetrical implosion was produced. Although
much work on explosives lenses, detonators and other components of the
device was required to accomplish this, the Trinity test July 16,
1945, showed that the calculation was correct. About a dozen other
calculations of implosion were done to refine it before the end of the
war.
In the meantime, von Neumann brought news of
computer developments elsewhere, such as Bell Laboratory's relay
computer and Howard Aiken's Mark I electromechanical calculator at
Harvard where Aiken was director of the Harvard Computation
Laboratory. The Mark I was even used to run an unclassified version of
one of the Los Alamos problems. Although it took several times as long
as the Los Alamos machines, it computed to far greater precision.
Von Neumann saw that problems like those encountered
at Los Alamos could be solved by electronic computers similar to the
electronic numerical integrator and calculator (ENIAC) being developed
at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1944 and 1945, he formulated
ways to translate mathematical procedures into a language of
instructions for such a machine. And he recommended to Teller, who had
conceived of a thermonuclear or "super" bomb, that one of the
computational problems associated with its design be used to test the
ENIAC, because it would be much more demanding than the ballistic
trajectories the Army had designed it to calculate. Metropolis and
Frankel traveled to the University of Pennsylvania early in 1945 to
discuss the problem with the developers of ENIAC, John Mauchly and J.
Presper Eckert.
The calculations were run in December 1945 and
January 1946. A half-million punched cards of data were transferred
from Los Alamos to Philadelphia to run it, and mathematician Stan Ulam,
who von Neumann had recruited to come to Los Alamos from Princeton,
recalled "the spirit of exploration and of belief in the possibility
of getting trustworthy answers in the future. This partly because of
the existence of computing machines that could perform much more
detailed analysis and modeling of physical problems."
In the postwar era, von Neumann continued to arrange
for access to the ENIAC for Los Alamos scientists and also built an
improved version of the electronic computer at the Institute for
Advanced Study at Princeton, where Oppenheimer became director.
Inspired by his example, Los Alamos had Metropolis build the
mathematical analyzer, numerical integrator and computer, or MANIAC,
which was completed in 1952 and was responsible for the calculations
of Mike, the first hydrogen bomb. It was followed by MANIAC II, the
IBM-built STRETCH supercomputer and a series of commercial super
computers that have made the Laboratory the world's largest scientific
computing center.
Von Neumann also helped Ulam and Metropolis develop
new means of computing on such machines, including the Monte Carlo
method, which has found widespread application. His influence on the
development of electronic computers was far-reaching, and he continued
to foster their development at Los Alamos up to the time of his death
in 1957 while serving on the Atomic Energy Commission.
The wartime work of the Laboratory created a need
for computing that stimulated von Neumann, Metropolis, Ulam and others
to reduce previously insoluble physical problems to a form in which
they could be calculated automatically. The use of these techniques
not only made possible the design of nuclear and thermonuclear
weapons, but also the solution of many other scientific problems,
ranging from aerodynamics to molecular biology. What began with a
brief visit to the Laboratory by von Neumann in September 1943, has
become a revolution in science and technology.
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