Santa Fe New Mexican

Nazis’ nuclear legacy

Researcher­s investigat­e the origins of three black cubes that might be remains of the German nuclear weapon program from WWII

- By Jesus Jiménez

U.S. labs investigat­ing whether some uranium cubes they possess are the result of Germany’s WWII program.

The failure of Nazi Germany’s nuclear program is well establishe­d in the historical record. What is less documented is how a handful of uranium cubes, possibly produced by the Nazis, ended up at laboratori­es in the United States.

Scientists at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the University of Maryland are working to determine whether three uranium cubes they have in their possession were produced by Germany’s failed nuclear program during World War II.

The answer could lead to more questions, such as whether the Nazis might have had enough uranium to create a critical reaction. And, if the Nazis had been successful in building an atomic bomb, what would that have meant for the war?

Researcher­s at the laboratory believe they may know the origins of the cubes by the end of October. For the moment, the main evidence is anecdotal, in the form of stories passed down from other scientists, according to Jon Schwantes, the project’s principal investigat­or.

The lab does not have scientific evidence or documentat­ion that would confirm that Nazi Germany produced the black cubes, which measure about 2 inches on each side. The Nazis produced 1,000 to 1,200 cubes, about half of which were confiscate­d by the Allied forces, he said.

“The whereabout­s of most all of those cubes is unknown today,” Schwantes said. “Most likely those cubes were folded into our weapons stockpile.”

“The crux of our effort is to first and foremost confirm the pedigree of these cubes,” he said. “We do believe they are from Nazi Germany’s nuclear program, but to have scientific evidence of that is really what we’re attempting to do.”

When they were first produced, the cubes were essentiall­y pure uranium metal. Over time, that elemental uranium has partly decayed into thorium and protactini­um. To determine the age of the cubes, researcher­s plan to use a process called radiochron­ometry, which can separate and quantify the cubes’ chemical makeup.

“Uranium decays at a regular rate,” Schwantes said. “So when we measure the ratio of thorium to uranium in the cube, that is essentiall­y a measure of the amount of time that has passed.”

And fixing a time when the cubes were made would help in tracing whether it could have been in the early 1940s in Germany. Such a determinat­ion would also bring more questions: Could the Nazis have built their own bomb, lengthenin­g the war or even changing the outcome?

Ultimately, German forces were defeated by the Allies in May 1945, ending the war in Europe, and in the Pacific, Japan held on until September, surrenderi­ng only after the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing tens of thousands of people.

Schwantes, said he preferred not to speculate about how history could have been different, but said it was surreal to “hold this kind of historic material in hand and think about where it’s been, and who else has held it.”

Some historians think that even with nuclear capability, the Nazis would not have been able to change how the war ended.

Kate Brown, who teaches environmen­tal and Cold War history at MIT, speculated that Nazi Germany’s production of nuclear weapons probably wouldn’t have had much of an impact on the war.

“They were in total war mode, increasing­ly so,” she said. “They could have made a dirty bomb. That’s not as difficult as making a nuclear bomb.”

A key ingredient the Germans needed to produce an atomic bomb was heavy water, which is water made of a hydrogen isotope called deuterium that has twice the mass of regular hydrogen.

In their quest to produce an atomic bomb, the Germans wanted to use a method in which uranium is submerged in heavy water, Brown said. But the Allies dealt those plans “a big blow” when they bombed a plant in Norway that was the only place the Germans could get the key ingredient, she added.

Additional­ly, to succeed in its efforts, Nazi Germany would have needed large factories to produce bombs, vast tracts of land to test them and security from the threat of aerial attacks so that enemies could not spy on them, Brown said.

Adam Seipp, a history professor at Texas A&M University, said Nazi Germany lacked the resources because it was “really bad” at industrial production. “It’s one of the reasons they lost the war so catastroph­ically,” he said.

Brown said that while a Nazi bomb would not have had much of an impact on the war, the Nazis set the stage for the Cold War simply by trying to build one. The Soviets, who were then U.S. allies in defeating Germany, were aware that the Americans took this uranium out of the country “right out from under them,” she said.

“That becomes a real engine for suspicion that sets up the Cold War, almost immediatel­y,” Brown said.

After the war, the Soviet Union and the U.S. were both interested in German scientists and their equipment, Seipp said. The U.S. even launched a covert effort, Operation Paperclip, with the objective of “moving high-value German scientists to the United States, and often, frankly, ignoring their very problemati­c wartime pasts, so that they stay out of Soviet hats.”

“That helps to kind of widen the growing gap between these former allies,” he said.

What ensued was an arms race between the U.S. and the Soviets (the U.S. showed its strength first when it bombed Japan in 1945), which was followed by a space race between the former allies.

For now, Schwantes said preliminar­y results on two cubes look promising. The science being used to date the cubes is not new, he said, adding that radiochron­ometry is the same technique scientists used to establish the age of the earth as 4.5 billion years.

 ?? EMILIO SEGRE VISUAL ARCHIVES VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? A file photo shows workers dismantlin­g the German experiment­al nuclear pile at Haigerloch, southwest of Stuttgart, in April 1945. Scientists are working to determine whether three uranium cubes at an American lab were produced by the Nazi’s failed nuclear weapons program.
EMILIO SEGRE VISUAL ARCHIVES VIA NEW YORK TIMES A file photo shows workers dismantlin­g the German experiment­al nuclear pile at Haigerloch, southwest of Stuttgart, in April 1945. Scientists are working to determine whether three uranium cubes at an American lab were produced by the Nazi’s failed nuclear weapons program.

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