APS News has a fascinating article A Cold-War Folly? by Nina Byers. She describes a course entitled Nuclear Power: Power plants and weapons of war that she teaches UCLA undergraduates.
A couple of things I found particularly interesting. First, the graph below showing the dramatic variation in nuclear weapon stockpiles with time. Second, the diverse views that physicists (esp. famous ones) had about the use of nuclear weapons, both against Japan, and after the war. Third, it was a good reminder that our current undergraduates were actually born after the end of the cold war!
A great strength of the US college system compared to Australia and Europe is the flexibility of the curriculum and broad general education requirements that allow and encourage such courses.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Rodney Baxter (1940-2025): Mathematical Physicist
I recently learnt that Rodney Baxter died earlier this year. He was adept at finding exact solutions to two-dimensional lattice models in st...
-
Is it something to do with breakdown of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation? In molecular spectroscopy you occasionally hear this term thro...
-
This week Nobel Prizes will be announced. I have not done predictions since 2020 . This is a fun exercise. It is also good to reflect on w...
-
Nitrogen fluoride (NF) seems like a very simple molecule and you would think it would very well understood, particularly as it is small enou...

No comments:
Post a Comment