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Edward Teller Is Dead at 95; Fierce Architect of H-Bomb

September 10, 2003





Edward Teller, who was present at the creation of the first
nuclear weapons and who grew even more famous for defending
them, died yesterday at his home on the Stanford University
campus in Palo Alto, Calif., according to the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, which Dr. Teller once
headed. He was 95.

Physicist for Nuclear Age

By WALTER SULLIVAN

Few, if any, physicists of this
century have generated such heated debate as Edward Teller.
Much of it centered on his decade-long effort to produce
the hydrogen bomb, his ardent promotion of nuclear weapons
in general, his deep suspicion of Soviet intentions and his
opposition to curtailment of nuclear testing.

His frustrations in seeking to win support for development
of the hydrogen bomb led to his testimony that helped
deprive J. Robert Oppenheimer, who directed the development
of the first atomic bomb, of his security clearance. The
result in much of the scientific community was a backlash
against Dr. Teller that clouded the rest of his life.

Nevertheless, he continued to exert important influence on
government policy.

While many colleagues did not share Dr. Teller's political
views, to some scientists his was a voice of realism crying
out in a wilderness of liberal naveté. But Dr. Teller's
critics were as impassioned as his supporters. During the
Vietnam War, Dr. Teller was the target of unrelenting
vilification from antiwar activists. He was seen as the
model for Dr. Strangelove, the motion picture character
with an artifical arm who "loved the bomb" and spoke with a
Central European accent.

Dr. Teller's English, though fluent and eloquent, revealed
his Hungarian roots, and he had an artificial replacement
for the foot he lost in 1928 as a student when he jumped
from a moving Munich streetcar.

Edward Teller was born in Budapest on Jan. 15, 1908, the
son of Max Teller, a lawyer, and Ilona Deutsch Teller, an
accomplished pianist.

As an infant Dr. Teller, like Einstein, was slow to begin
speaking, but as he developed he displayed amazing
mathematical ability. When he told his father that he
wanted to study mathematics, his father discouraged him,
saying that he would not be able to make a living as a
mathematician. In a compromise, young Teller agreed to
study chemistry, but he later said that he "cheated" by
studying mathematics too.

When he was about 20, a new subject captured his
imagination. He began to hear of advances in atomic theory
and "a whole new world" opened up to him, he later said in
an interview.

After receiving his doctorate from the University of
Leipzig in 1930, he joined the faculty of the University of
Göttingen, where he remained until 1933. But it became
clear that, as a Jew, he would have to leave Nazi Germany.
He joined the faculty of George Washington University as a
physics professor in 1935 and became a United States
citizen six years later.

The idea for a hydrogen bomb, based on the fusion of atoms,
apparently originated with Enrico Fermi, the Italian
physicist, in 1941, a year before Dr. Fermi's team achieved
the first fission chain reaction at the University of
Chicago, opening the way for developing the atomic bomb.

The energy of the atomic bomb derives from the splitting of
very large atoms like uranium or plutonium. In contrast,
the hydrogen bomb depends on the fusion of various forms of
hydrogen atoms.

In 1941, a few weeks before the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor, while Dr. Teller had a temporary appointment at
Columbia University, Dr. Fermi suggested at lunch that an
atomic bomb explosion might create conditions sufficiently
close to those inside a star to induce the fusion of heavy
hydrogen (deuterium) nuclei, releasing an enormous burst of
energy.

At first Dr. Teller doubted that fusion could be induced in
this way. Nevertheless, when Dr. Oppenheimer called a
meeting of top physicists a year later at the University of
California in Berkeley, Dr. Teller proposed that they
consider building a hydrogen bomb.

When the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory was secretly set
up in 1943 to develop an atomic bomb, Dr. Teller, by then
at the University of Chicago, agreed to give up pure
research and join the project.

Early in 1943 Dr. Teller boarded a train for Los Alamos
with his wife, the former Augusta Maria Harkanyi, who died
in 2000, and their son, Paul, born only six weeks earlier.
His hope, to design a hydrogen bomb, or "super"' led to
early friction with Dr. Oppenheimer, the laboratory's
director, who insisted that they concentrate on the atomic
bomb, which, in any case, would be needed to ignite the
hydrogen bomb.

The situation, after the first Soviet atomic bomb was
detonated in 1949, considerably sooner than expected,
changed drastically. Teller saw in the hydrogen bomb the
one hope for survival and his warnings of a Soviet menace
began to reach receptive ears.

While many - probably most - scientists opposed the H-bomb,
Dr. Teller had the support of such distinguished figures as
Dr. Ernest O. Lawrence and Dr. Luis W. Alvarez at the
University of California, both later Nobel Prize winners.

In addition to Lewis L. Strauss, a member of the Atomic
Energy Commission who became a strong ally of Dr. Teller,
Senator Brien McMahon, chairman of the Joint Committee on
Atomic Energy, and others worked to persuade President
Truman to press forward with the hydrogen bomb. On Jan. 31,
1950, Truman announced that he had directed the Atomic
Energy Commission "to continue its work on all forms of
atomic weapons, including the so-called hydrogen or super
bomb." It was a major victory for Dr. Teller.

Teller then pressed for creation of a laboratory,
independent of Los Alamos, that would focus on the hydrogen
bomb. The proposal was rejected by Dr. Oppenheimer's
General Advisory Committee, adding to Dr. Teller's
resentment. He was able, however, to persuade his friends
in the Pentagon - ultimately in a meeting with Secretary of
Defense Robert A. Lovett - of the merits of his proposal
and the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory came into being east
of San Francisco Bay. Dr. Teller served as its director
from 1958 to 1960.

The first American fusion, or "thermonuclear," explosion
occurred at Eniwetok Island in the Pacific on Nov. 1, 1952.
The device was a cumbersome assemblage weighing 65 tons.
The Soviet Union achieved such an explosion three years
later.

The hearings on Dr. Oppenheimer were held in 1954 after J.
Edgar Hoover, the Director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, received a long letter from William Liscum
Borden, a member of Senator McMahon's staff, explaining why
he believed Dr. Oppenheimer was an agent of the Soviet
Union.

The accusation led President Eisenhower to order the Atomic
Energy Commission to review whether Dr. Oppenheimer's
security clearance should be revoked. Hearings were held by
the commission's Personnel Security Board, which asked Dr.
Teller to appear.

Asked if he considered Dr. Oppenheimer disloyal to the
United States, Dr. Teller said no. He was then asked
whether he regarded him as a security risk. He replied that
he often found Dr. Oppenheimer's actions "hard to
understand."

"I thoroughly disagreed with him in numerous issues and his
actions frankly appeared to me confused and complicated,"
Dr. Teller told the panel.

A large part of the scientific community, dismayed at the
witch-hunting of the McCarthy era, aware of long-standing
friction between Dr. Teller and Dr. Oppenheimer, and loyal
to the leader of the original atomic bomb project, turned
its back on Dr. Teller. "By old friends we were practically
ostracized," he reported later. His wife "was very badly
hurt" and became ill.

In contrast to his negative testimony in 1954 Teller in the
1980's was warm in his praise of Oppenheimer. "He knew how
to organized, cajole, humor, soothe feelings - how to deal
powerfully without seeming to do so. He was an exemplary of
dedication, a hero who never lost his humanness. Los
Alamos' amazing success grew out of the brilliance,
enthusiasm and charisma with which Oppenheimer led it."

Dr. Teller continued to be highly regarded in many quarters
and his role as scientific leader and adviser to those in
high places increased. After the first Soviet Sputnik was
launched in 1957 he was featured on the cover of Time
magazine as a symbol of American scientific vigor.

On July 23, President Bush presented Dr. Teller with the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, the country's highest
civilian award.

In addition to his son, Dr. Teller is survived by a
daughter, Wendy.

While, unlike many atomic scientists, Dr. Teller did not
argue against dropping the bomb on Japanese cities, he
repeatedly said afterward that doing so had been a mistake.
Far better, he maintained, would have been to fire a bomb
in the evening high enough above Tokyo to spare the city
but to flood it in blinding light.

"If we could have ended the war by showing the power of
science without killing a single person," he said, "all of
us would now be happier, more reasonable and much more
safe."

Walter Sullivan, a science writer and editor for The New
York Times, died in 1996.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/10/obituaries/10TELL.html?ex=1064195792&ei=1&en=a8ff4de1720c0431


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