Mark Walker, professor of history, will be the featured expert on a PBS NOVA show on Nazi development of the atomic bomb on Tuesday, Nov. 8, at 8 p.m. The program, “Hitler's Sunken Secret,” airs locally on WMHT, Channel 17.

“The truth is that [the Nazis] could not possibly have built a weapon like the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima or Nagasaki,” Walker wrote in an essay on the Web site for the show. “This was not because the country lacked the scientists, resources, or will, but rather because its leaders did not really try.”
The Nazis were trying to win the war and devoted tremendous resources to weapons development. “So why not the atomic bomb?” Walker asks. “Nazi Germany, it turns out, made other choices and simply ran out of time.”
Walker, a specialist in the development of nuclear technology, is author of Nazi Science, editor of Science and Ideology: A Comparative History and co-editor (with Carola Sachse) of Politics and Science in Wartime.
NOVA producer-director David Sington was on campus with a crew last March to film Walker in several locations, including his office, the Nott Memorial and walking through the snow in Library Field. Sington had earlier filmed in Norway at the site of a nuclear reactor, where the Germans had begun a program to refine weapons grade uranium.
For more, visit the NOVA website at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/hydro/.