He wanted the United States to develop an atomic bomb before the Germans did.
Einstein was a life-long pacifist.
The 700-page book "Einstein on Peace" is the most comprehensive record of everything he wrote, during his life, about Peace. It was published posthumously, by his family foundation, to counter the uninformed claims, that he gave up his pacifist convictions.
Einstein never urged FDR to start the Manhattan Project. He hadn't believed that energy would be released from the atom, during his life-time. When early experiments showed that this might actually happen, Leo Szilard asked Einstein to sign a letter to FDR, telling him about this possibility.
After World War II, Einstein continued his pacifist views, and became a crusader for nuclear arms control, and peace-making through international negotiations.
Read more: Why_didn't_Einstein_work_on_the_Manhattan_Project
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He wanted the US to develop the first atomic bomb
Albert Einstein was a major contributer along with other in an operation called the Manhattan Project
Probably the most central was Leo Szilard. He drafted a letter that was signed by Einstein warning Roosevelt of the possibility that the Germans were working on atomic weapons, which was directly responsible for the US Manhattan Project.
The Manhattan project
The Manhattan Project.
The atom bomb research and development were conducted under the Manhattan project.
The Manhattan Project
I think it started by a letter of concern from Albert Einstein to President Franklin Roosevelt.
Albert Einstein did not work on the Manhattan Project, the US efforts to develop the atomic bomb. He was denied sufficient security clearance to do so. He did however write a letter to President Roosevelt, composed by his friend Leo Szilard, who did work on the project. Einstein was a teacher.
The Manhattan Project-
Albert Einstein was a major contributer along with other in an operation called the Manhattan Project
No, Einstein had no involvement in the Manhattan Project (or any other war related work as he was a pacifist).
Albert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, Edward Teller, and J. Robert Oppenheimer
Do you have a question? Entire books have been written on each of these subjects.
There is nothing correct about the question...Einstein was entirely excluded from that project and spent the entire time at a think tank at Princeton. Thosee in charge of it were his academic and professional rivals.
The Manhattan Project IS the codename. So no, there is not.
Leo Szlard(sp?) wrote a letter to encourage FDR to have the US government start a project of atomic chain reactions. Einstein signed the letter to give more importance to it.
Albert Einstein was not directly connected with the development of the atomic bomb. He was a very famous scientist whose name would get the attention of even the highest government officials. He used that fame to ensure that a letter from Fermi about the possibility of an atomic bomb would reach President Roosevelt and would be viewed as a credible letter. This eventually resulted in the creation of the Manhattan Project to develop an atomic bomb. Aside from that initial introductory letter, Einstein had no connection with the Manhattan Project.