Radioisotopes as political instruments, 1946–1953
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Creager, Angela N. H.Editorial
Universidad de Granada
Materia
Comisión de Energía Atómica de Estados Unidos Radioisótopos Proyecto Manhattan Energía atómica Biología Medicina David Lilienthal Lewis Strauss United States Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) Radioisotopes Manhattan Project Atomic energy Biology Medicine
Date
2009Referencia bibliográfica
Creager, Angela N. H. «Radioisotopes as political instruments, 1946–1953». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 2009, Vol. 29, p. 219-240, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/136835.
Sponsorship
.S. National Science Foundation, grant SBE 98-75012; National Endowment for Humanities through a Fellowship Award; National Institutes of Health, National Library of Medicine, grant number 5G13LM009100-2Abstract
The development of nuclear «piles», soon called reactors, in the Manhattan Project
provided a new technology for manufacturing radioactive isotopes. Radioisotopes, unstable
variants of chemical elements that give off detectable radiation upon decay, were available
in small amounts for use in research and therapy before World War II. In 1946, the U.S. government
began utilizing one of its first reactors, dubbed X-10 at Oak Ridge, as a production
facility for radioisotopes available for purchase to civilian institutions. This program of the
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission was meant to exemplify the peacetime dividends of atomic
energy. The numerous requests from scientists outside the United States, however, sparked a
political debate about whether the Commission should or even could export radioisotopes.
This controversy manifested the tension in U.S. politics between scientific internationalism as
a tool of diplomacy, associated with the aims of the Marshall Plan, and the desire to safeguard
the country’s atomic monopoly at all costs, linked to American anti-Communism. This essay
examines the various ways in which radioisotopes were used as political instruments —both
by the U.S. federal government in world affairs, and by critics of the civilian control of atomic
energy— in the early Cold War.