Barton Bernstein's review (PHYSICS TODAY, May 2007,
page 63) of The Martians of Science: Five Physicists Who Changed the Twentieth Century
by István Hargittai (Oxford U. Press, 2006) pointedly evaluates Michael Gorn's 1992 biography
of aeronauticist Theodore von Kármán as brief and uncritical. (And I would add, replete
with names, many of which add little benefit.) But Gorn, like others thus far, seems to have overlooked
John von Neumann's contribution to aerodynamics. Early attempts to deal numerically with aerodynamic
flows that develop shocks ground to a halt in rezoning the shock too finely for computation to proceed.
With Robert Richtmyer, von Neumann demonstrated an algorithm for introducing an "artificial
viscosity" that sets a lower bound to shock thickness without violating any physics.1
Computational physicists are indebted to these two scientists for much of present-day understanding
of such diverse problems as supersonic aerodynamics and supernova explosions.
In the last sentence
of Barton Bernstein's book review, he referred to Edward Teller as the father of the hydrogen bomb.
Teller was the speaker
at a small meeting I attended in Berkeley, California, in the mid-1970s. After his talk, I asked
a question and addressed him as the father of the H-bomb. Teller immediately interrupted, saying,
"I am not the father of the H-bomb. I have never received a Father's Day card from an H-bomb."
Bernstein replies:
It's good to learn more about the brilliant John von Neumann. He merits far more biographical work
on his science, politics, and life, including his postwar political differences with J. Robert
Oppenheimer, even though he supported Oppenheimer during the 1954 security hearing.
Edward Teller did not like
to be called the "father" of the H-bomb. But he did want to be known, apart from Stanislaw Ulam, as
the scientist who had devised the crucial breakthrough for the H-bomb.
We should ponder why Teller
so energetically refused to be called the father of the H-bomb, and so jealously and unkindly sought
to deny Ulam's contribution. In his denial, Teller could seem modest, accept the acknowledgment
of scientific "fatherhood," playfully quibble about the term, and still avoid giving Ulam credit.
My interpretation is speculative, of course, but it may make sense of an otherwise puzzling matter.
Teller's behavior on this
subject should remind us of Oppenheimer, who often claimed not to want to be known as the father of
the A-bomb. But after Hiroshima, Oppenheimer was also frequently proud of his major role in the
A-bomb's creation.
Teller and Oppenheimer,
two men who became fierce enemies, shared much in common, though their separate, virtually warring
camps of admirers seldom acknowledge that. Von Neumann, whether or not he clearly saw the similarities,
was flexible enough that he could maintain alliances with both men.