Gernot Zippe
Template:Short description Template:Infobox scientist
Gernot Zippe (November 1917 – 7 May 2008) was an Austrian mechanical engineer and a nuclear physicist of German origin who is widely credited with leading the team which developed the Zippe-type centrifuge– a centrifuge machine for the enrichment and collection of uranium-235, during his time in the former Soviet program of nuclear weapons.Template:Rp<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
BiographyEdit
Zippe was born in Warnsdorf which was then part of the Austria-Hungary in November 1917.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014">Template:Cite book</ref> The Zippe family later moved to Vienna which allowed him to attend the University of Vienna and earned his doctorate in mechanical engineering in 1939.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014"/> Zippe had earlier interests in aeronautical engineering and was a civilian flight instructor in the German Luftwaffe; while he also filled a role as a researcher on radar and propellers.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014"/>
In RussiaEdit
During the World War II, Zippe was captured by the Red Army and held in Soviet custody in Prague until 1946 when the Soviet intelligence, the NKVD, learned of his technical background and moved him to Russia to work on the isotope separation for the feasibility of the weapon-grade uranium.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Zippe who had never worked on a centrifuge before took over the project but he worked Max Steenbeck on the feasibility of the machine with the provided Russian intelligence on the works of American Jesse Beams from the Manhattan Project.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014"/> The project was carried out at the Institute A in Sukhumi and was being overseen by German physicist, Manfred von Ardenne, and directed by another German scientist Max Steenbeck, whose theoretical achievements Zippe used to successful deployment in 1950.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014"/>
In 1952, Zippe was transferred to Saint Petersburg to continue his work on the efficiency with the Russian scientists, which he stayed until 1954.Template:Rp<ref name="Harvard University Press, Bernstein, 2014"/> It was an standard practice by the captured German scientists to quarantine if they had work on the Soviet program of nuclear weapons, which Zippe did while being interned in transition camp in Kyiv.Template:Rp
In GermanyEdit
In 1956, Zippe was notified by the Soviet administration in Ukraine of his release, and he decided to settle in Germany as opposed to Austria.Template:Rp In 1957, Zippe attended the conference on centrifuge research in Amsterdam, he realized the rest of the world was far behind what his team had been able to achieve.Template:Rp During this time, Zippe was able to found an employment with AMOLF as a consultant on centrifuge technology.Template:Rp In 1965, Zippe left AMOLF to join the Duggas AG (now Trade name: Evonik Industries) as a consultant until 1969 when he decided to join the consultant staff of the Urenco Group until his retirement in 1990.Template:Rp
It was the Dutch physicist Template:Ill who filed and applied for the first patent in the European and U.S. patents authorities as a functional gas-ultracentrifuge developed at AMOLF, which he credited after Zippe: Zippe-type.<ref name="Unintended Consequences" />
In the United StatesEdit
In 1960, Zippe traveled to the United States on the sponsorship of the University of Virginia, facilitated by Jesse Beams, where he did an unclassified postdoctoral research on the centrifuge technology.Template:Rp<ref name="R.R. Bowker, 1980">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In spite of his notes confiscated by the Soviet government, Zippe was able to re-create the centrifuge machine and published a research thesis on the development and efficiency of the gas centrifuge at the University of Virginia in the United States.<ref name="slender"/>Template:Rp<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Impressed by his work, the United States government tried to recruit him for an on-going centrifuge program but he was restricted from gaining the classified information on the United States' nuclear weapons program; he refused and returned to work with German firms.<ref name="slender"/> Following his return to Germany, the United States Atomic Energy Commission awarded contract works to its private firms to start work on the gas centrifuge, and marked his technical reports as classified documents on 1 August 1960.<ref name="slender"/>
Personal interests and reputationEdit
While working as consultant in the Urenco Group in Amsterdam, he was able to improve the efficiency of the gas centrifuge. He enjoyed flying and flew planes until he was 80 years old.<ref name="slender"/> Zippe passed away in Bad Tölz, Bavaria, Germany, on 7 May 2008, aged 90.<ref name="Unintended Consequences">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
From 2006–08, Zippe was a subject of interests in European political media which noted that his invention made it cheaper to produce fuel for nuclear reactors but also to build nuclear weapons, which increased the risk of nuclear proliferation.<ref name="slender"/> When asked if he has any regrets, he responded, "With a kitchen knife you can peel a potato or kill your neighbor, it's up to governments to use the centrifuge for the benefit of mankind."<ref name="slender">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Although, the United States and the European media credited Gernot Zippe of being the innovator of the machine, the Russian sources, however, disputed the account of Soviet centrifuge development given by Gernot Zippe.<ref name="Bukharin, 2004">Oleg Bukharin, Oleg. Russia’s Gaseous Centrifuge Technology and Uranium Enrichment Complex Template:Webarchive 2004.</ref> The Russians credited Max Steenbeck, as the German scientist in charge of the German part of the Soviet centrifuge effort, Isaac Kikoin and Evgeni Kamenev with originating different valuable aspects of the design.<ref name="Bukharin, 2004"/>
The Russian accounts stated that Zippe was engaged in building prototypes for the project for two years from 1953 but, since the centrifuge project was with the "Top Secret" designation, the Russians did not challenge any of Zippe's claims at that time.<ref name="Bukharin, 2004"/>
AwardsEdit
- Wilhelm Exner Medal (1990).<ref>Editor, ÖGV. (2015). Wilhelm Exner Medal. Austrian Trade Association. ÖGV. Austria.</ref>
OtherEdit
In Hebrew, the name "Gernot Zippe" (גרנוט ציפה) is an anagram of the word "Centrifuge" (צנטריפוגה).
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- The Zippe Type – The Poor Man's Bomb, BBC Radio 4, 19 May 2004
- Tracking the technology, Nuclear Engineering International, 31 August 2004
- Slender and Elegant, It Fuels the Bomb, New York Times, March 23, 2004
- Gernot Zippe
Template:Soviet Atomic Bomb Project Template:Authority control