enrico fermi: his life and achievements enrico fermi: his life and achievements james odle jos...

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Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

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Page 1: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements

Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements

James Odle

Jos Holman

Page 2: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Family Facts

Enrico was born on Sept. 29,1901.

Born to Alberto and Ida de Gattis Fermi.

Has one sister, Maria, and an older brother, Guildo.

His father was an administrative employee of Italian Railroads and his mother was a school teacher.

Was very close to his brother but he died of unknown causes in 1915.

Page 3: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

EducationEducation He received traditional

education from public schools in Rome.

First learned physics from secondhand books.

Was very smart and had a good memory.

By 17 he had a knowledge of physics equal to a college graduate.

He enrolled in the Scuola Normale Superiore and earned a PhD from Pisa.

He also received education at the Max Born institute in Gottingen, Germany until 1924.

Ph.D.

Page 4: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

LifeLife

Returned to Florence in 1924 with the post of lecturer.

He met his wife, Laura Capone, there and they married on July 19, 1928.

He had two children; Nella and Giulio.

He established the first school of modern physics with his friend Rasetti in Rome.

Moved to the U.S. before WWII because his wife was a Jew.

Page 5: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Life Continued…...Life Continued…...

In the U.S. Enrico taught at Colombia and the University of Chicago.

He was a main player in the Manhattan Project and created the first sustained chain reaction.

He returned to Italy in 1949. He died in Chicago on Nov. 28, 1954

due to stomach cancer.

Page 6: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Manhattan ProjectManhattan Project

America needed a reactor to make plutonium for the atomic bomb.

Fermi built his nuclear “pile” under the stands at the University of Chicago.

It used 400 tons of purified graphite and 22,000 pseudospheres of uranium stacked in 57 layers of cadminum sheets.

At 3:25 p.m. on Dec.2, 1942 the first atomic reactor started.

It ran for 28 minutes. He witnessed the first A-Bomb

explosion from a lead-lined tank.

Page 7: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Theoretical AccomplishmentsTheoretical Accomplishments

Two of his greatest contributions are his statistical method and theory of beta decay.

Discovered the Fermi constant, G. It is equal to 1.415 x 10^49 erg cm^3.

The Fermi constant represents the available in beta decay (the spontaneous emmision of electrons by the nuclei), and the mean life of a decaying substance.

Page 8: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Experimental AccomplishmentsExperimental Accomplishments

His greatest achievement was artificial radioactivity by neutron bombardment.

He was probably the first to split an atom.

He also made many other contributions.

Page 9: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

AwardsAwards

– He won the Nobel Prize in 1938 for his work on harnessing nuclear power.

– In 1946 he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Merit for his contributions to the Manhattan Project.

– In 1954 he received an award from the Atomic Energy Commission. It was later named the Fermi Award.

Page 10: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Other Fermi StuffOther Fermi Stuff

The Fermi National Accelerator Labratory (Fermilab) is about 27 miles west of Chicago.

Fermium, the element with the atomic number of 100, was discovered in 1953 at the first H-Bomb explosion.

Other things include the Fermi level, the Fermi surface, and Fermi-Dirac statistics.

Page 11: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

Quotes and Weird StuffQuotes and Weird Stuff

“A little bomb like that and it would all disappear.” -1939

His nickname was “the Pope”. He was a strong, burly man and he prided

himself on how fast he could run. Arguing about bait for fly fishing, He said, “Oh,

I see, Emilio; it is a battle of wits.” He used worms instead of flys.

He also liked to climb mountains.

Page 12: Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements Enrico Fermi: His Life and Achievements James Odle Jos Holman

The EndThe End