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Scientists Against Time

The Role of Scientists in World War Ii

H. A. Feiveson

EPUB
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Archway Publishing img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / Sonstiges

Beschreibung

In early 1942, the fate of the Allies appeared dire.


Germany had conquered most of Western Europe, and its armies were deep into Russia. Japan had overrun Manchuria, the Philippines, and the Dutch East Indies, had conquered large swathes of China, and had destroyed much of the US battle fleet at Pearl Harbor. But the tide of World War II turned dramatically in favor of the Allies, and in this, Allied scientists played a critical role.


The chapters covered in this book include an Overview summary of the entire war, the Battle of Britain, the Battle of the Atlantic against the German U-boats, the battle for command of the air, the Allied breaking of the German Enigma cipher, D-Day and the Allied invasion of Europe, and the Manhattan Project to develop an atomic bomb.

 


Harold Feiveson is a deep student of history, a masterful story teller and one of the pioneers in the global cooperative effort to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. This book provides a new, integrated overview of the remarkable technical achievements by the U.S. and British scientists who helped turn the tide of World War II. Although the war seemed endless to the participants, the number of world-shaping developments that occurred during the six years after the world’s industrialized countries committed themselves to total war is both remarkable and terrifying. The final breakthrough, nuclear weapons, led to a post-war nuclear-arms race whose dangerous legacy of destructive potential we are still struggling with today. 

-Frank von Hippel, Professor of Public and International Affairs emeritus, Princeton University

 

An authoritative introduction to what Winston Churchill called the “wizard war.” Feiveson’s examination of the crucial role played by science and technology in World War II will appeal to both specialists and military history buffs.

-Colonel Paul L Miles, U.S. Army, (Retired), former lecturer in history, Princeton University.

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Schlagwörter

Microwave Radar, Battle of the Atlantic, World War II, Enigma, Manhattan Project, The P-51 Mustang