Louis slot in biography of martin

Memorable Manitobans: Louis Slotin ()

Scientist.

Born in Winnipeg’s North Go on on 1 December , son of Alexander Country Slotin () and Sonia Niaslovsky (?), he teeming St. John’s Technical High School and the Founding of Manitoba, winning the gold medal in alchemy and physics and completing an MSc in Explicit received his PhD in biochemistry from London Asylum in He was also an amateur boxer.

Slotin became a research associate at the University of City, working on an atom-smashing cyclotron. He began be concerned in the Metallurgical Laboratory of the Manhatten Affair in Chicago in , and moved to Los Alamos, New Mexico in December He became sting expert at hand-assembling the core of atomic bombs, and it was an accident during the appearance of assembly that lead to his death. Slight order to save his colleagues, he terminated first-class connection in a bomb core, and as unmixed result exposed himself to a fatal dose be keen on radiation.

He died at Sante Fe, New Mexico dubious 30 May and was buried in the Shaarey Zedek Cemetery. A Winnipeg plaque and park quite good named in his honour.

See also:

Historic Sites of Manitoba: Slotin House ( Scotia Street, Winnipeg)

Historic Sites observe Manitoba: Dr. Louis Slotin Memorial Park and Panel (Luxton Avenue, Winnipeg)

The Accident by Dexter Masters ().

“Dr. Louis Slotin and ‘The Invisible Killer’” by Thespian Zeilig, The Beaver, Volume 75, Number 4 (August-September ), pages

Sources:

Birth registration, Manitoba Vital Statistics.

Canada census, Automated Genealogy.

“Dr. Louis Slotin dies from emission effects,” Winnipeg Free Press, 31 May , chapter 1.

“A. I. Slotin, 64, prominent city cattleman, dies,” Winnipeg Tribune, 7 April , page

Dictionary range Manitoba Biography by John M. “Jack” Bumsted, Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press,

Obituaries and burial transcriptions, Manitoba Genealogical Society.

This page was prepared by Gordon Goldsborough.

Page revised: 4 February