Hans Heinrich von Halban (24 January 1908 – 28 November 1964) was a French physicist of Austrian-Jewish descent.
Family
He is a descendant of Polish Jews who left Kraków for Vienna in the 1850s on his father's side. His grandfather, Heinrich Blumenstock, was a senior official in the Habsburg Empire and was ennobled by Emperor Franz Joseph I in the 1880s, taking the name of Ritter Heinrich Blumenstock von Halban. The surname Blumenstock was subsequently dropped by the family, as was the use of 'von' after the Second World War. His mother's family was from Bohemia and his great-grandfather, Moritz von Fialka, was a colonel in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866.
Although converted to Catholicism, the family were never religiously observant. Hans Halban was a convinced secularist.
In 1937, Halban was invited to join a team led by Frédéric Joliot-Curie at the Collège de France in Paris. Further members of this team also included Francis Perrin and Lew Kowarski. In 1939, the group measured the mean number of neutrons emitted during nuclear fission,[3] and established the possibility of nuclear chain reactions and nuclear energy production.[4][5] In August of the same year, the group showed that the rate of fission in uranium oxide was increased by immersion in ordinary water.[6] Their research was made possible after the French government purchased 185 kg of heavy water from Norsk Hydro and secretly flew it to France.[citation needed]
Halban's marriage to his first wife Els (née Andriesse, who later married the Czech physicist George Placzek) ended in divorce. In 1943, Halban married Aline Elisabeth Yvonne Strauss (née de Gunzbourg), who had escaped France in 1941 with her young son Michel.[8] This marriage would also end in divorce, with Aline marrying the philosopher Isaiah Berlin in 1956.[8]
Following the Liberation of Paris in August 1944, Halban visited London and Paris, where he saw Joliot-Curie for the first time since leaving France. Although he maintained that he did not divulge any nuclear secrets to Joliot-Curie, General Groves, the head of the Manhattan Project, had Halban removed from his job in Montreal, and replaced by John Cockcroft. Furthermore, Halban was not allowed to work or to leave North America for a year.
After eight years at Oxford, Halban was invited back to France in 1954 by Prime Minister Pierre Mendès-France to direct the building of a nuclear research laboratory at Saclay, outside Paris, which greatly expanded the French Commissariat à l'énergie atomique (Atomic Energy Commission). He took up the appointment in 1955 following his divorce from his wife Aline. The CEA Saclay laboratory developed the independent French nuclear bomb and oversaw the development of French civil nuclear energy.
Last years
Due to worsening health, Halban was obliged to retire in 1961. He spent the last three years of his life in Paris and Crans-sur-Sierre, Switzerland with his third wife, Micheline (née Lazard-Vernier).
He died on 28 November 1964 from complications following an unsuccessful heart operation at the American Hospital of Paris, leaving behind three children: Catherine Maud from his first marriage, and Pierre (Peter) and Philippe from his second. He is buried in Larchant, near Paris.
Posthumously discovered documents
In 1940, James Chadwick forwarded the work of Halban and Lew Kowarski from Cambridge to the Royal Society. He asked that the papers be held as they were not appropriate for publication during the war. In 2007, the Society discovered the documents during an audit of their archives.[9]