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Part 3  Feynman, the Bomb, and the Military



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Surely you\'re joking, Mr. Feynman (bad typesetting)

Part 3 
Feynman, the Bomb, and the Military 
Fizzled Fuses 
When the war began in Europe but had not yet been declared in the United States, there was a lot of talk about getting ready and being patriotic. 
The newspapers had big articles on businessmen volunteering to go to Plattsburg, New York, to do military training, and so on. 
I began to think I ought to make some kind of contribution, too. After I finished up at MIT, a friend of mine from the fraternity, Maurice Meyer, 
who was in the Army Signal Corps, took me to see a colonel at the Signal Corps offices in New York. 
"I'd like to aid my country sir, and since I'm technicallyminded, maybe there's a way I could help." 
"Well, you'd better just go up to Plattsburg to boot camp and go through basic training. Then we'll be able to use you," the colonel said. 
"But isn't there some way to use my talent more directly?" 
"No; this is the way the army is organized. Go through the regular way." 
I went outside and sat in the park to think about it. I thought and thought: Maybe the best way to make a contribution is to go along with their 
way. But fortunately I thought a little more, and said, "To hell with it! I'll wait awhile. Maybe something will happen where they can use me more 
effectively" 
I went to Princeton to do graduate work, and in the spring I went once again to the Bell Labs in New York to apply for a summer job. I loved to 
tour the Bell Labs. Bill Shockley the guy who invented transistors, would show me around. I remember somebody's room where they had marked a 
window: The George Washington Bridge was being built, and these guys in the lab were watching its progress. They had plotted the original curve 
when the main cable was first put up, and they could measure the small differences as the bridge was being suspended from it, as the curve turned 
into a parabola. It was just the kind of thing I would like to be able to think of doing. I admired those guys; I was always hoping I could work with 
them one day. 
Some guys from the lab took me out to this seafood restaurant for lunch, and they were all pleased that they were going to have oysters. I lived 
by the ocean and I couldn't look at this stuff; I couldn't eat fish, let alone oysters. 
I thought to myself, "I've gotta be brave. I've gotta eat an oyster." 
I took an oyster, and it was absolutely terrible. But I said to myself, "That doesn't really prove you're a man. You didn't know how terrible it was 
gonna be. It was easy enough when it was uncertain." 
The others kept talking about how good the oysters were, so I had another oyster, and that was really harder than the first one. 
This time, which must have been my fourth or fifth time touring the Bell Labs, they accepted me. I was very happy. In those days it was hard to 
find a job where you could be with other scientists. 
But then there was a big excitement at Princeton. General Trichel from the army came around and spoke to us: "We've got to have physicists! 
Physicists are very important to us in the army! We need three physicists!" 
You have to understand that, in those days, people hardly knew what a physicist was. Einstein was known as a mathematician, for instance--so it 
was rare that anybody needed physicists. I thought, "This is my opportunity to make a contribution," and I volunteered to work for the army. 
I asked the Bell Labs if they would let me work for the army that summer, and they said they had war work, too, if that was what I wanted. But I 
was caught up in a patriotic fever and lost a good opportunity. It would have been much smarter to work in the Bell Labs. But one gets a little silly 
during those times. 
I went to the Frankfort Arsenal, in Philadelphia, and worked on a dinosaur: a mechanical computer for directing artillery. When airplanes flew by 
the gunners would watch them in a telescope, and this mechanical computer, with gears and cams and so forth, would try to predict where the plane 
was going to he. It was a most beautifully designed and built machine, and one of the important ideas in it was non-circular gears--gears that weren't 
circular, but would mesh anyway. Because of the changing radii of the gears, one shaft would turn as a function of the other. However, this machine 
was at the end of the line. Very soon afterwards, electronic computers came in. 
After saying all this stuff about how physicists were so important to the army the first thing they had me doing was checking gear drawings to 
see if the numbers were right. This went on for quite a while. Then, gradually the guy in charge of the department began to see I was useful for other 
things, and as the summer went on, he would spend more time discussing things with me. 
One mechanical engineer at Frankfort was always trying to design things and could never get everything right. One time he designed a box full 
of gears, one of which was a big, eight-inch-diameter gear wheel that had six spokes. The fella says excitedly "Well, boss, how is it? How is it?" 
"Just fine!" the boss replies. "All you have to do is specify a shaft passer on each of the spokes, so the gear wheel can turn!" The guy had 
designed a shaft that went right between the spokes! 
The boss went on to tell us that there 
was
such a thing as a shaft passer (I thought he must have been joking). It was invented by the Germans 
during the war to keep the British minesweepers from catching the cables that held the German mines floating under water at a certain depth. With 
these shaft passers, the German cables could allow the British cables to pass through as if they were going through a revolving door. So it 
was
possible to put shaft passers on all the spokes, but the boss didn't mean that the machinists should go to all that trouble; the guy should instead just 
redesign it and put the shaft somewhere else. 


Every once in a while the army sent down a lieutenant to check on how things were going. Our boss told us that since we were a civilian section, 
the lieutenant was higher in rank than any of us. "Don't tell the lieutenant anything," he said. "Once he begins to think he knows what we're doing, 
he'll be giving us all kinds of orders and screwing everything up. 
By that time I was designing some things, but when the lieutenant came by I pretended I didn't know what I was doing, that I was only following 
orders.
"What are you doing here, Mr. Feynman?" 
"Well, I draw a sequence of lines at successive angles, and then I'm supposed to measure out from the center different distances according to this 
table, and lay it out. 
"Well, what is it?" 
"I think it's a cam." I had actually designed the thing, but I acted as if somebody had just told me exactly what to do. 
The lieutenant couldn't get any information from anybody and we went happily along, working on this mechanical computer, without any 
interference. 
One day the lieutenant came by and asked us a simple question: "Suppose that the observer is not at the same location as the gunner--how do you 
handle that?" 
We got a terrible shock. We had designed the whole business using polar coordinates, using angles and the radius distance. With X and Y 
coordinates, it's easy to correct for a displaced observer. It's simply a matter of addition or subtraction. But with polar coordinates, it's a terrible mess! 
So it turned out that this lieutenant whom we were trying to keep from telling us anything ended up telling us something very important that we 
had forgotten in the design of this device: the possibility that the gun and the observing station are not at the same place! It was a big mess to fix it. 
Near the end of the summer I was given my first real design job: a machine that would make a continuous curve out of a set of points--one point 
coming in every fifteen seconds--from a new invention developed in England for tracking airplanes, called "radar." It was the first time I had ever 
done any mechanical designing, so I was a little bit frightened. 
I went over to one of the other guys and said, "You're a mechanical engineer; I don't know how to do any mechanical engineering, and I just got 
this job 
"There's nothin' 
to
it," he said. "Look, I'll show you. There's two rules you need to know to design these machines. First, the friction in every 
bearing is so-and-so much, and in every gear junction, so-and-so much. From that, you can figure out how much force you need to drive the thing. 
Second, when you have a gear ratio, say 2 to 1, and you are wondering whether you should make it 10 to 5 or 24 to 12 or 48 to 24, here's how to 
decide: You look in the Boston Gear Catalogue, and select those gears that are in the middle of the list. The ones at the high end have so many teeth 
they're hard to make. If they could make gears with even finer teeth, they'd have made the list go even higher. The gears at the low end of the list 
have so few teeth they break easy. So the best design uses gears from the middle of the list." 
I had a lot of fun designing that machine. By simply selecting the gears from the middle of the list and adding up the little torques with the two 
numbers he gave me, I could be a mechanical engineer! 
The army didn't want me to go back to Princeton to work on my degree after that summer. They kept giving me this patriotic stuff, and offered a 
whole project that I could run, if I would stay. 
The problem was to design a machine like the other one--what they called a director--but this time I thought the problem was easier, because the 
gunner would be following behind in another airplane at the same altitude. The gunner would set into my machine his altitude and an estimate of his 
distance behind the other airplane. My machine would automatically tilt the gun up at the correct angle and set the fuse. 
As director of this project, I would he making trips down to Aberdeen to get the firing tables. However, they already had some preliminary data. 
I noticed that for most of the higher altitudes where these airplanes would be flying, there wasn't any data. So I called up to find out why there wasn't
any data and it turned out that the fuses they were going to use were not clock fuses, but powder-train fuses, which didn't work at those altitudes--
they fizzled out in the thin air. 
I thought I only had to correct the air resistance at different altitudes. Instead, my job was to invent a machine that would make the shell explode 
at the right moment, when the fuse won't burn! 
I decided that was too hard for me and went back to Princeton. 



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