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German chemist (1911–2005) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Günter Wirths (1 June 1911 – 26 January 2005)[1][2] was a German nuclear chemist in the former Soviet program of nuclear weapons and an authority on the uranium metal production, especially on the reactor-grade.
Günter Wirths | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | January 26, 2005 93) Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany | (aged
Nationality | German |
Citizenship | Germany |
Alma mater | Humboldt University of Berlin |
Known for | Soviet program of nuclear weapons |
Awards | Stalin Prize (1950) Order of the Red Flag (1950) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Nuclear chemistry |
Institutions | Auergesellschaft AG Plant No. 12 in Elektrostal Degussa AG |
Thesis | (1935) |
Until the fall of Berlin in 1945, Wirths was employed with the Auergesellschaft AG in the production of uranium for the Heereswaffenamt as part of their Uranverein club.
After taken into the Soviet custody, he became one of many German nuclear physicists who were involved in the former Soviet program of nuclear weapons in Russia and returned to Germany in 1955 where he later worked at the Degussa AG chemical company.
Günter Wirths was born in Berlin on 1 June 1911– he received doctorate in chemistry from Humboldt University of Berlin.: 155 Wirths was a colleague of Nikolaus Riehl, who was the director of the scientific headquarters of Auergesellschaft.[3] Auergesellschaft had a substantial amount of "waste" uranium from which it had extracted radium. After reading a paper in 1939 by Siegfried Flügge, on the technical use of nuclear energy from uranium,[4][5] Riehl recognized a business opportunity for the company, and, in July of that year, went to the Heereswaffenamt (HWA, Army Ordnance Office) to discuss the production of uranium. The HWA was interested and Riehl committed corporate resources to the task. The HWA eventually provided an order for the production of uranium oxide, which took place in the Auergesellschaft plant in Oranienburg, north of Berlin.
It was this that got Wirths involved with the production of uranium metal, which Auergesellschaft did for the Uranverein project of the Heereswaffenamt.[6][7][8]
Near the close of World War II, as American, British, and Russian military forces were closing in on Berlin, Riehl and some of his staff moved to a village west of Berlin, to try to ensure occupation by British or American forces. However, in mid-May 1945, with the assistance of Riehl's colleague Karl Günter Zimmer, the Russian nuclear physicists Georgy Flerov and Lev Artsimovich showed up one day in NKVD colonel's uniforms.[9][10] The use of Russian nuclear physicists in the wake of Soviet troop advances to identify and "requisition" equipment, material, intellectual property, and personnel useful to the Russian atomic bomb project is similar to the American Operation Alsos. The military head of Alsos was Lt. Col. Boris Pash, former head of security on the American atomic bomb effort, the Manhattan Project, and its chief scientist was the eminent physicist Samuel Goudsmit. In early 1945, the Soviets initiated an effort similar to Alsos (Russian Alsos). Forty out of less than 100 Russian scientists from the Soviet atomic bomb project's Laboratory 2[11] went to Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia in support of acquisitions for the project.[12]
The two colonels requested that Riehl join them in Berlin for a few days, where he also met with nuclear physicist Yulii Borisovich Khariton, also in the uniform of an NKVD colonel. This sojourn in Berlin turned into 10 years in the Soviet Union. Riehl and his staff, including their families, were flown to Moscow on 9 July 1945. Wirths either flew out with Riehl or was later sent to join Riehl in Russia as a member of his group. Eventually, Riehl's entire laboratory was dismantled and transported to the Soviet Union.[10][13][14][15]
From 1945 to 1950, Riehl was in charge of uranium production at Plant No. 12 in Ehlektrostal' (Электросталь[16]).[17] German scientists, who were mostly atomic scientists, sent by the Soviets, at the close of World War II, to work in the Riehl group at Plant No. 12 included Alexander Catsch (Katsch), H. J. Born, Ortmann, Przybilla, Herbert Schmitz, Sommerfeldt, Herbert Thieme, Tobein, Günter Wirths, and Karl Günter Zimmer.[18][19]
Three major technological upgrades were made at Plant No. 12 in the production metallic uranium, two of them involved Wirths as a principle driving force:
For their work at Plant No. 12, in contribution to the Soviet atomic bomb project, Wirths and Thieme were awarded a Stalin Prize, second class, and the Order of the Red Banner of Soviet Labor, also known and the Order of the Red Flag.[28][29][30]
In preparation for release from the Soviet Union, it was standard practice to put personnel into quarantine for a few years if they worked on projects related to the Soviet atomic bomb project, as was the case for Wirths. Additionally, in 1954, the Deutsche Demokratische Republik (DDR, German Democratic Republic) and the Soviet Union prepared a list of scientists they wished to keep in the DDR, due to their having worked on projects related to the Soviet atomic bomb project; this list was known as the "A-list". On this A-list were the names of 18 scientists. Nine, possibly 10, of the names were associated with the Riehl group which worked at Plant No. 12 in Ehlektrostal'. Born, Catsch, Riehl, Wirths, and Zimmer were on the list.[31][32][33]
When Wirths was released from Russia by the Soviet Union, he fled to Germany and took a job at Degussa as an authority in the production of reactor-grade uranium.[33][34]
Wirths was well versed in the English language as he was featured in the 1988 NOVA television program Nazis and the Russian Bomb. In the program, Manfred von Ardenne was also featured; he was a German physicist who directed Institute A, in Sinop,[35][36] a suburb of Sukhumi. In the documentary, Wirths told a story about the purity of Plant No. 12's production of uranium. Through espionage, the Soviets has procured a specimen of American uranium and compared it to that at Plant No. 12. The Soviet leaders praised the purity of Plant No. 12's uranium production.
Wirths, indicated that the Americans probably determined had optimized production output by allowing the purity to be less stringent, and said Plant No. 12 was probably "over doing it," to which one of the Soviet leaders responded, "You damned Germans!"[37]
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