The Visit of Prof. Hideki Yukawa to Kochi to Attend the Unveiling Ceremony of the Yukawa Bronze Statue: Turning Point in Life
Shigeo Ohkubo

TL;DR
This paper uncovers rare photos of Prof. Yukawa's 1954 visit to Kochi, highlighting its significance as a turning point that influenced his stance against nuclear weapons and his subsequent peace activism.
Contribution
It reveals new historical photos and contextualizes Prof. Yukawa's 1954 visit as a pivotal moment in his life and nuclear disarmament advocacy.
Findings
Discovery of valuable old photos of Prof. Yukawa in Kochi
Yukawa's visit marked a personal and professional turning point
His stance influenced subsequent peace movement activities
Abstract
We have discovered unknown very valuable old photos of Prof. Hideki Yukawa at the unveiling ceremony of his bronze statue at an elementary school in Kochi in 1954. The statue was moved to a newly created garden in1982, which in the subsequent decades accelerated the forgetting of its existence. The forgetting of the statue by the local people is related by chance to a historic event in the Marshall Islands. Prof. Yukawa's visit to attend the unveiling ceremony occurred just after news that Japanese fishermen were heavily injured by atomic testing at the Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. At the news conference when he arrived at Kochi, he was unexpectedly asked about his attitude to the bomb testing by the US. He was considered to be the foremost top scientist in nuclear science in Japan at that time, having been awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1949. People in Kochi were very…
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Taxonomy
TopicsJapanese History and Culture · Twentieth Century Scientific Developments · Nuclear Issues and Defense
