Who Invented the Trinity Nuclear Test's Christy Gadget? Patents and Evidence from the Archives
T. A. Chadwick, M. B. Chadwick

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of the Christy Gadget used in the Trinity nuclear test, analyzing archival evidence to clarify whether Robert Christy or Rudolf Peierls initially proposed the design, ultimately attributing primary credit to Christy.
Contribution
The study presents new archival evidence from Los Alamos archives to resolve historical disputes over the invention of the Christy Gadget, confirming Christy's primary role.
Findings
Archival evidence supports Christy as the originator of the design.
Christy and Peierls share joint patent credit, but Christy led the invention.
Additional contributions from von Neumann and others are acknowledged.
Abstract
The Christy Gadget is the informal name for the plutonium device detonated in the Trinity test on July 16, 1945. In September 1944, Robert Christy, working in the theoretical implosion group, proposed a novel concept that altered the design of the nuclear core in Fat Man. While scientists originally intended to use a hollow sphere of plutonium, this design entailed substantial risk, due to the likelihood of asymmetries resulting from implosion. Christy proposed changing the design to a solid sphere of plutonium with a modulated neutron source, and the design was eventually adopted, tested at Trinity, and used in the attack on Nagasaki. While there is no question regarding the important role that Christy played in demonstrating its feasibility as a reliable design, there is a debate as to who initially proposed the idea; though most sources have attributed this invention to Christy, some…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTwentieth Century Scientific Developments · Nuclear Issues and Defense
