Second incident
A re-creation of the 1946 incident. The half-sphere is seen but core
inside is not. Note the beryllium hemisphere held up with a screwdriver.
On May 21, 1946,
[3] physicist
Louis Slotin
and seven other Los Alamos personnel were in a Los Alamos laboratory
conducting an experiment to verify the exact point at which a
subcritical mass (core) of fissile material could be made critical by
the positioning of neutron reflectors. The test was known as "tickling
the dragon's tail" for its extreme risk.
[4] It required the operator to place two half-spheres of
beryllium
(a neutron reflector) around the core to be tested and manually lower
the top reflector over the core via a thumb hole on the top. As the
reflectors were manually moved closer and farther away from each other,
scintillation counters
measured the relative activity from the core. Allowing them to close
completely could result in the instantaneous formation of a critical
mass and a lethal power excursion. Under Slotin's unapproved protocol,
the only thing preventing this was the blade of a standard flathead
screwdriver,
manipulated by the scientist's other hand. Slotin, who was given to
bravado, became the local expert, performing the test almost a dozen
separate times, often in his trademark bluejeans and cowboy boots, in
front of a roomful of observers.
Enrico Fermi reportedly told Slotin and others they would be "dead within a year" if they continued performing it.
[5]
While lowering the top reflector, Slotin's screwdriver slipped
outward a fraction of an inch, allowing the top reflector to fall into
place around the core. Instantly there was a flash of blue light and a
wave of heat across Slotin's skin; the core had become
supercritical, releasing a massive burst of
neutron radiation.
He quickly knocked the two halves apart, stopping the chain reaction
and presumably saving the lives of the other men in the laboratory,
though it is now known that the heating of the core and shells stopped
the criticality within milliseconds of its initiation. Slotin's body's
positioning over the apparatus also shielded the others from much of the
neutron radiation. He received a lethal dose of 1000 rads neutron/114
rads gamma
[6] in under a second and died nine days later from acute
radiation poisoning. The nearest person to Slotin,
Alvin C. Graves, was watching over Slotin's shoulder and was thus partially shielded by him, received a high but non-lethal
radiation dose of 166 neutron/26 gamma rads.
[6]
Graves was hospitalized for several weeks with severe radiation
poisoning, developed chronic neurological and vision problems as a
result of the exposure,
[6] and died 20 years later of a
heart attack probably caused by complications from radiation exposure.
[7]
Besides Graves, the others in the room were the following.
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