Norris Bradbury
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Categories: 1909 births | 1997 deaths | American physicists | Manhattan Project people | Los Alamos National Laboratory | Enrico Fermi Award recipients | People from Santa Barbara, California | Physicist stubs
Norris Edwin Bradbury (May 30, 1909 - August 20, 1997), was an American physicist who was born in Santa Barbara, California. He served as director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory for 25 years (1945 - 1970), succeeding J. Robert Oppenheimer, who personally chose Bradbury for the position of director after working closely with him on the Manhattan Project. During the war he was in charge of the final assembly of "the gadget", detonated in July 1945 for the Trinity test. He oversaw the transition of the laboratory from World War II through the Cold War. The Bradbury Science Museum is named in his honor. See alsoExternal links
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||


