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Science Weekender Tote Bag featuring the photograph Manhattan Project, Segrès Group by Science Source

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Manhattan Project, Segrès Group Weekender Tote Bag

Science Source

by Science Source

$48.00

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Product Details

Our weekender tote bags are chic and perfect for a day out on the town, a staycation, or a weekend getaway.   The tote is crafted with soft, spun poly-poplin fabric and features double-stitched seams for added durability.   The 1" thick cotton handles are perfect for carrying the bag by hand or over your shoulder.   This is a must-have for the summer.

Design Details

Segrès Group from left to right Emilio Segrès, Owen Chamberlain, Gustave Linenberger, Ann Kahn, John Miskel, Milton Kahn, John Jungerman, Martin... more

Care Instructions

Spot clean or dry clean only.

Ships Within

2 - 3 business days

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Manhattan Project, Segrès Group Photograph by Science Source

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Weekender Tote Bag Tags

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Photograph Tags

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Artist's Description

Segrès Group from left to right Emilio Segrès, Owen Chamberlain, Gustave Linenberger, Ann Kahn, John Miskel, Milton Kahn, John Jungerman, Martin Deutsch, Unknown, Clyde Wiegand, George Farwell, Ralph Nobles, Unknown, Unknown. Emilio Gino Segrè (February 1, 1905 - April 22, 1989) was an Italian-born, naturalized American, physicist and Nobel laureate in physics, who with Owen Chamberlain, discovered antiprotons, a sub-atomic antiparticle. Working with his graduate students and two University of California chemists, Arthur Wahl and Joseph Kennedy, Segrè measured rates of spontaneous fission in natural uranium and plutonium in 1942 and 1943. The plutonium was made by the 60-inch Crocker medical cyclotron at the UC Radiation Laboratory by the bombardment of uranium-238 by deuterons, the ions of heavy-water (deuterium). To investigate the possibility of spontaneous fission in plutonium, Los Alamos Director J. Robert Oppenheimer invited Segrè and his group to move to Los Alamos to continue t...

 

$48.00