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Burning the Sky: Operation Argus and the Untold Story of the Cold War Nuclear Tests in Outer Space
Contributor(s): Wolverton, Mark (Author), Lescault, John (Read by)

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ISBN: 1982618841     ISBN-13: 9781982618841
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
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Binding Type: MP3 CD - See All Available Formats & Editions
Published: December 2018
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Military - Nuclear Warfare
- History | Military - United States
- History | United States - 20th Century
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 1950's
Features: Unabridged
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Last September the United States drew a thin curtain of radiation around the earth...The feat was regarded by some of its leading participants as the greatest scientific experiment of all time. -Walter Sullivan, the New York Times, March 19, 1959

After the Soviet Union proved to the United States that it possessed an operational intercontinental ballistic missile with the launch of Sputnik in October 1957, the world watched anxiously as the two superpowers engaged in a game of nuclear one-upmanship. Amid this rising tension, Nicholas Christofilos, an eccentric Greek American physicist, brought forth an outlandish, albeit ingenious, idea to defend the United States from a Soviet attack: launching nuclear warheads to detonate in outer space, creating an artificial radiation belt that would fry incoming Soviet ICBMs. Known as Operation Argus, this plan is the most secret and riskiest scientific experiment in history, and classified details of these nuclear tests have been long obscured.

In Burning the Sky, Mark Wolverton tells the unknown and controversial story of this scheme to reveal a fascinating narrative that still has powerful resonances today. He chronicles Christofilos' unconventional idea from its inception to execution, when he persuaded the military to carry out the dangerous test-using the entire Earth's atmosphere as a laboratory. Combining his investigation of recently declassified military documents with more than a decade of experience in researching and writing about the science of the Cold War, Wolverton examines the scientific, political, and environmental implications of Argus, as well as that of the atmospheric tests that followed. He also discusses the roles played by physicist James Van Allen and President Eisenhower in the scheme, and how the whistle-blowing journalists at The New York Times blew the lid off what was supposed to be America's ultimate nuclear secret.

Burning the Sky is an engrossing book that will intrigue any lover of scientific or military history and will remind readers why Project Argus remains frighteningly relevant nearly sixty years later.


Contributor Bio(s): Lescault, John: -

Patrick Cullen (a.k.a. John Lescault), a native of Massachusetts, is a graduate of the Catholic University of America. He lives in Washington, DC, where he works in theater.

Wolverton, Mark: -

Mark Wolverton is a science writer who has written widely on the history of the Cold War for a variety of national publications, including American Heritage of Invention & Technology, Smithsonian Air & Space, and American History. He is the author of A Life in Twilight: The Final Years of J. Robert Oppenheimer and The Depths of Space: The Story of the Pioneer Planetary Probes. In 2016-2017, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


 
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