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Bunsaku Arakatsu

Bunsaku Arakatsu
Bunsaku Arakatsu.png
Born 1890 (1890)
Himeji, Hyōgo, Japan
Died 1973 (1974) (aged 83)
Kobe, Hyōgo, Japan
Other names 荒勝文策, あらかつ ぶんさく
Scientific career
Institutions Taihoku Imperial University
Kyoto Imperial University
Konan University
Academic advisors Albert Einstein, Paul Scherrer

Bunsaku Arakatsu (荒勝文策, あらかつ ぶんさく, 25 March 1890 – 25 June 1973) was a Japanese physics professor, in the World War II Japanese Atomic Energy Research Program of the Imperial Japanese Navy. Arakatsu was a former student of Albert Einstein.

In 1928, Arakatsu became a professor in Taihoku Imperial University (now called National Taiwan University). In 1934 Arakatsu built a particle accelerator at Taihoku Imperial University in Taipei, Taiwan, and performed the first atomic nucleus collision experiment in Asia there, right after the experiment performed in Cavendish Laboratory of University of Cambridge. He discovered that each nuclear fission of a U-235 atom yields, on average, 2.6 neutrons.

In 1936, he became a professor in Kyoto Imperial University (now called University of Kyoto). He published his results on October 6, 1939, in the Physical Review. In the following years he led other physicists at the Kyoto Imperial University in discussions on the uses of nuclear energy and the possibility of the development of a nuclear bomb. For this purpose, he assembled a research and development team, which included physicists Sakae Shimizu and Hideki Yukawa, who later became a Nobel physics laureate. The Institute for Chemical and Physical Research and an affiliate in Hŭngnam (now in North Korea) supported these efforts. In 1942, the project started under the code name F-Go and was primarily intended to replace oil by nuclear power. Oil had become a precious commodity and petroleum had become scarcer, undermining the war effort. In this respect it differed little from a tarnished Germany's nuclear program. The more the tide turned against the Japanese, the more intense was the research to build a nuclear bomb.


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