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      • In late 1943 von Neumann began work on the Manhattan Project at the invitation of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Von Neumann was an expert in the nonlinear physics of hydrodynamics and shock waves, an expertise that he had already applied to chemical explosives in the British war effort.
      www.britannica.com/biography/John-von-Neumann/World-War-II
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  2. Aug 2, 2024 · John von Neumann - Mathematician, Scientist, WWII: In late 1943 von Neumann began work on the Manhattan Project at the invitation of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Von Neumann was an expert in the nonlinear physics of hydrodynamics and shock waves, an expertise that he had already applied to chemical explosives in the British war effort.

  3. During World War II, he approached R. H. Kent, the director of the US Army's Ballistic Research Laboratory, with a computer program for calculating a one-dimensional model of 100 molecules to simulate a shock wave.

  4. He worked on the Manhattan Project and by the latter years of World War II was a consultant to several government committees, moving between groups of scientists in government, university, and industry research laboratories.

  5. Aug 2, 2024 · Von Neumann’s gift for applied mathematics took his work in directions that influenced quantum theory, automata theory, economics, and defense planning. Von Neumann pioneered game theory and, along with Alan Turing and Claude Shannon, was one of the conceptual inventors of the stored-program digital computer. Early life and education.

  6. During and after World War II, von Neumann served as a consultant to the armed forces. His valuable contributions included a proposal of the implosion method for bringing nuclear fuel to explosion and his participation in the development of the hydrogen bomb.

  7. After World War II, von Neumann served as a commissioner on the General Advisory Committee of US Atomic Energy and was a consultant to the Air Force Special Weapons Project and the Army Ballistic Research Lab.

  8. lemelson.mit.edu › resources › john-von-neumannJohn von Neumann - Lemelson

    During World War II, von Neumann worked at Los Alamos on the development of nuclear weapons and energy. He also worked a great deal with early computers and began to see potential in new and more efficient designs for these groundbreaking machines.