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From: glen herrmannsfeldt on 25 Feb 2010 01:45 In comp.dsp robert bristow-johnson <rbj(a)audioimagination.com> wrote: (snip) > i dunno if you guys remember this, but i remember reading that on the > evening of the Trinity test blast in New Mexico in 1945, they didn't > know for sure if the nuclear chain reaction would stop when the > uranium ran out. Enrico Fermi was taking bets about whether or not > the entire atmosphere would light up in a nuclear reaction. i s'pose > it was a little tongue-in-cheek. As far as I know, it was determined long before the test that the atmosphere wouldn't go. The bets at Trinity, as I understand, where for the yield. -- glen
From: Lou Pecora on 25 Feb 2010 09:34 In article <hm56ar$14i$2(a)naig.caltech.edu>, glen herrmannsfeldt <gah(a)ugcs.caltech.edu> wrote: > In comp.dsp robert bristow-johnson <rbj(a)audioimagination.com> wrote: > (snip) > > > i dunno if you guys remember this, but i remember reading that on the > > evening of the Trinity test blast in New Mexico in 1945, they didn't > > know for sure if the nuclear chain reaction would stop when the > > uranium ran out. Enrico Fermi was taking bets about whether or not > > the entire atmosphere would light up in a nuclear reaction. i s'pose > > it was a little tongue-in-cheek. > > As far as I know, it was determined long before the test that > the atmosphere wouldn't go. > > The bets at Trinity, as I understand, where for the yield. > > -- glen Which Fermi estimated by dropping bits of paper after the explosion to see how far they moved when the pressure wave hit. Nice. -- -- Lou Pecora
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