Nuclear Energy (f457813a-4e54-4de3-8ede-6b1251b96e79)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles T. Baroch Charles J. Baroch
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
36
File Size:
1488 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1964

Abstract

Nuclear energy probably has greater potentialities for changing the world's way of life than any other recent discovery. The atomic-bomb bursts over Hiroshima and Nagasaki suddenly changed the concepts of war. Peaceful uses of nuclear energy are advancing so rapidly that no study of economic trends is complete without giving them consideration. The minerals specialist, especially, must be aware of this new force in our lives, as minerals and metals are essential in harnessing the new force, and atomic energy itself is rapidly improving its competitive position in the energy field. Future historians may chronicle December 2, 1942, as the beginning of the Atomic Age. On that day Enrico Fermi and his co-workers at the University of Chicago produced and controlled the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction. Lie many inventions, the first application of nuclear energy was as a weapon of war. However, its potential usefulness in man's work and welfare far outweighs in economic importance its destructive use in war, unless its military effect would be considered so great and all-embracing that no major power will hereafter chance a world conflict. Recognition of this potential has generated a vast international effort to exploit the atom for peaceful beneficent purposes. Like its physical manifestation, the advent of nuclear energy has unleashed chain reactions that have pervaded the political, social, and economic environments of the world. The impact of nuclear developments in one of many fields is exemplified by the uranium mining industry. Uranium was discovered in 1789 and in the next century and a half it found only an insignificant use as a ceramic coloring agent; in fact, in the latter part of that period, it was a largely unsalable by-product of the radium and vanadium industries. Up to 1940 the total quantity of uranium metal produced was not more than a few grams, of doubtful purity. Thus the production of 12,400 pounds of pure
Citation

APA: Charles T. Baroch Charles J. Baroch  (1964)  Nuclear Energy (f457813a-4e54-4de3-8ede-6b1251b96e79)

MLA: Charles T. Baroch Charles J. Baroch Nuclear Energy (f457813a-4e54-4de3-8ede-6b1251b96e79). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1964.

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