Physics Colloquium: Zia Mian, "Dismantling the Doomsday Machine: Science, Technology and Policy Challenges"

Dates
Wed, Feb 17, 2021 - 04:00 PM — Wed, Feb 17, 2021 - 05:00 PM
Admission Fee
Free
Event Address
On Zoom: Please contact Sriram Ganeshan for details
Phone Number
Sriram Ganeshan sganeshan@ccny.cuny.edu
Event Details

Zia Mian

Senior Research Scholar and Co-Director
Program in Science and Global Security (SGS)
Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
Princeton University

Dismantling the Nuclear Doomsday Machine:  Science, Technology and Policy Challenges
Eighty years ago physicists first worked out what it would take to build a simple nuclear weapon and the immediate effects of its use. Five years later, theory and experiment became devastating facts as the United States built, tested, and then used the first nuclear weapons to destroy cities. Today, there are nine nuclear armed states and over 13,000 nuclear weapons in the world. The nuclear-armed states are developing or modernizing their arsenals, easing constraints on when these weapons might be used, and pursue policies that risk accidental nuclear war. The hard-won international arrangements intended to halt, reverse and eventually eliminate nuclear weapons programs are unraveling. One potentially hopeful development, the 2017 United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, has elicited opposition rather than support from these states. This talk will look at what role scientists have played in the past and can play today in helping address the challenge of reducing and eliminating the threat from nuclear weapons in the United States and globally, it also will introduce the new Physicists Coalition for Nuclear Threat Reduction.

 

Bio: Zia Mian is co-director of the Program on Science and Global Security, co-chair of the International Panel on Fissile Materials, director of Princeton’s Project on Peace and Security in South Asia, co-editor of the journal Science & Global Security, and an expert on the policy and technical aspects of nuclear arms. He received the American Physical Society’s 2019 Leo Szilard Award “For promoting global peace and nuclear disarmament particularly in South Asia, through academic research, public speaking, technical and popular writing and organizing efforts to ban nuclear weapons." 

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