How Leo Szilard’s concept emerged from a rich interchange of ideas across disciplinary silos
Richard Rhodes’ magisterial The Making of the Atomic Bomb (1986) begins very memorably. As he steps off the kerb to cross the road in central London on a dreary autumn morning in 1933, Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard, a refugee from Nazi Germany, has a vision. He realises how it might be possible for radioactive decay of a nucleus to initiate a chain reaction so as to ‘liberate energy on an industrial scale, and construct atomic bombs’. In that moment, Rhodes writes, ‘time cracked open before him and he saw a way to the future, death into the world and all our woe, the shape of things to come.’