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  1. Szilard was the chief physicist at the Chicago Metallurgical Laboratory from February 1942 to July 1946. He worked for Arthur H. Compton, the head of the Met Lab. Szilard helped build Chicago Pile-1, the first neutronic reactor to achieve a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction.

  2. Jul 15, 2016 · Leo Szilard was a Hungarian-American physicist and inventor who developed the idea of the nuclear chain reaction in 1933. He was instrumental in the beginning of the Manhattan Project, writing the letter for Albert Einstein’s signature in 1939 encouraging the US to begin building the atomic bomb.

  3. Oct 4, 2013 · 4 October 2013. Leo Szilard was the man who first realised that nuclear power could be used to build a bomb of terrifying proportions. Lisa Jardine considers what his story has to say about the...

  4. Jan 24, 2023 · Leo Szilard: the physicist who envisaged nuclear weapons but later opposed their use 24 Jan 2023 Born 125 years ago, the Hungarian–American physicist Leo Szilard is best remembered for being the first scientist to call for atomic bombs to be developed – before later demanding they be stopped.

  5. Manhattan Project Scientists: Leo Szilard. Manhattan Project National Historical Park. Leo Szilard was chief physicist at Chicago's Met Lab. US DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY. Quick Facts. Significance: Chief Physicist at Chicago's Met Lab. Place of Birth: Budapest, Hungary. Date of Birth: February 11, 1898. Place of Death: San Diego, CA. Date of Death:

  6. www.encyclopedia.com › people › science-and-technologyLeo Szilard | Encyclopedia.com

    May 14, 2018 · Nuclear Scientist Szilard started work in nuclear physics in 1934, at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, England, and by the late 1930s, he had become part of the distinguished group of top atomic scientists. In London, Szilard started to experiment with Thomas A. Chalmers on radioactive elements.

  7. Leo Szilard was born in Budapest, Hungary, on February 11, 1898. Due to racial quotas, he had to go to the Institute of Technology in Berlin due to racial quotas, where he met several brilliant physicists such as Albert Einstein and Max Planck. Szilard earned his doctorate in physics in 1922. He and Einstein became close friends.

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