In 1932, old China first carried out a
national college entrance examination. In that year, Tsinghua University
admitted about 50 students. In this class, there was a boy brought up in Beijing
named Qian Sanqiang, , who was the second son of a famous Chinese scholar Qian
Xuantong.
Qian Sanqiang, born in Zhejiang's
Huzhou City in 1913, was a nuclear scientist and a member of Chinese Academy of
Sciences. In 1936, Qian Sanqiang graduated from the physics department of
Tsinghua University. He was one of the 10 students in his class who insisted on
the major when graduation.
In the early spring of 1937, he was
recommended to study in France supported by Sino-France Education Fund. Then he
went to Paris to work and study in the Curie Lab of Paris University and the
Atomic Nuclear Chemistry Lab of France Academy in the field of atomic nuclear
studies and obtained doctorate there. In 1946, he won a scholarship awarded by
French Academy of Sciences. In 11 years of study abroad, Qian Sanqiang was
inspired by his love for the motherland to conquer many scientific heights of
the time. Qian and his wife He Zhehui, also his collaborator, discovered that of
about 300 atomic fissions, there is one that partitions into 3 blocks. The
discovery of triopartion and quadripartion, first by He Zehui in the world, was
regarded by the Curries as the most important work of the laboratory after the
Second World War. The discovery of triopartion phenomenon in uranium has
deepened human understanding of nuclear fission.
In 1948, giving up all comfort and superior
working conditions abroad Qian returned to China with his wife and their
six-month-old daughter. He then served successively as professor with the
physics department of Tsinghua University, director-general with the atomic
energy research institute of Peking Research Institute, director-general with
the atomic energy research institute of Chinese Academy of Sciences,
director-general with the planning bureau of Chinese Academy of Sciences, deputy
minister with State Ministry of the Second Machinery, deputy director-general
with Chinese Academy of Sciences, council chairperson with China Physics
Association, honorary council chairperson with China Nuclear Association,
special consultant with Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Qian is the founder of Chinese atomic energy
development undertakings. It was under his leadership that China built its first
heavy water atomic reactor and first cyclotron in the 1950s. In the 1960s, Qian
organized a group of nuclear scientists to resolve the key technological
problems in the R&D of atom bomb and hydrogen bomb. And the achievements
ensured the successful development of China's first hydrogen bomb only two years
plus eight months after the development of China's first atom bomb.
Qian had during his lifetime made indelible
contribution to China's development of atom and hydrogen bombs and its
high-energy physics and had thus been honored as "Father of China's Atom Bomb".
Because of Qian's contribution in physics, the French President signed a paper
to award him with military honor. Seven years later, Qian died of heart disease.
In September 1999, seven years after his death, the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of China, the State Council and the military commission of the
Central Committee of the Communist Party of China decide to grant him the
special prize of 'Two Bombs and One Satellite Meritorious
Award'.