An interesting read: Edward Teller: The Real Dr. Strangelove
While traveling recently I brought just one of the pile of books I've been reading - I usually have three to five books in process at the same time, not all of which I finish completely. It's this one: Edward Teller: The Real Dr. Strangelove.
Teller's name pops up in a scientific career in areas well away from his famous weapons work, for instance the Jahn-Teller effect in symmetry breaking to remove degenerate orbitals in otherwise symmetric molecules, and the "BET" (BrunauerEmmettTeller) theory of molecular adsorption onto a surface, which deviates from the Langmuir adsorption isotherm, the latter of which assumes adsorption is a single molecule thick, whereas BET describes systems of layers of adsorbed molecules on a surface. (Application of one or the other, both still in use, is situational.)
I'm only a little way into the book, but I'm finding the reading intriguing thus far, learning about Teller's odd childhood with an overbearing mother, being the target of bullying as well as he had accidentally amputated part of one foot in a train accident. By the 1930's, I learned of later emergence, well before the Manhattan Project, into a position of respect within scientific circles, so much so that he participated in the writing the drafts, along with Eugene Wigner, of the famous Szilard/Einstein letter that led Roosevelt to initiate the Manhattan Project. Apparently he helped drive Szilard out to Einstein's summer home on Long Island to discuss the letter.
So far the book is sympathetic to the man who hated being associated with "Dr. Strangelove" who is most famous for the development - priority and "credit" such as "credit" might be - to the development of the thermonuclear fusion based nuclear weapon known as the Ulam-Teller design. I have heard that Teller discounted Ulam's contribution, but I haven't gotten that far along in the book.
Teller was a strong proponent of nuclear power - as I am - and is said to have argued, along with Alvin Weinberg and Freeman Dyson that the so called "greenhouse effect" would be a consequence of the unrestricted use of fossil fuels. Of course, Arrhenius predicted as much in the 19th century, so it cannot be said to be original with Weinberg, Dyson (who thought global heating might be a good thing) and Teller.
It's an interesting book thus far. Who knows? I might read the whole damned thing.