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Going Nuclear: Notes from the officially unofficial book tour
I work in the analytical labs at one of Europe’s oldest and largest nuclear sites: Sellafield, in northwestern England. I spend my days at the fume hood front, pipette in one hand and radiation probe in the other (and dosimeter pinned to my chest, of course). Outside the lab, I have a second job: I moonlight as a writer and public speaker. My new popular science book—Going Nuclear: How the Atom Will Save the World—came out last summer, and it feels like my life has been running at full power ever since.
J. Ernest Wilkins, Jr.
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 6 | Number 3 | September 1959 | Pages 229-232
Technical Paper | doi.org/10.13182/NSE59-A25663
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The problem of designing a reactor with minimum total mass is posed. This problem is related to that of designing a reactor with minimum critical mass. For a simple class of thermal slab reactors, the known solution of the minimum critical mass problem enables a complete solution of the minimum total mass problem.