Really?
I seem to remember an article about the theoretical possibility of coherent light beams in "Scientific American", back in the 1950s..... about 10 years after the war ended.
There has been such an incredible amount of pure MANURE written regarding German developments that it ain't even funny. Friend sent me a piece, asked for a critique: bloody Nazi flying saucers armed with mixed 88mm and 128mm guns, escorted by twice as many HO-9 fighters as were ever built, zipping along the Amazon Valley, festooned with hakenkreuzes and Balkan crosses. Thing would have to be built as strong as a Tank, just to handle the recoil of the guns, which means that it would have to use an inertialess drive in order to perform the way they are said to perform.... and we don't even have the mathematical theory to permit such. Just garbage.
They did make some very real developments, though: Class XXI U-boat remained in production until the late 1950s, which is part of what enabled the Soviet Onion to have the world's largest submarine fleet.... they just kept turning the things out like popcorn while the rest of the world was at "peace".
Where they did make some really lasting contributions was in organic chemistry. My old boss told me that his outfit (Waffen-SS) got a Christmas present from Adolf in 1944. Every man got a small bar of CHOCOLATE. It was made out of coal. They were ahead in that, definitely, also in coal-gas conversion (check out a modern oil refinery for what this means today). As to their atomic program, get a book called HEISENBERG'S WAR. It analyses the situation pretty carefully. Werner Heisenberg was the ONLY really top nuclear scientist left in Germany, all the others (Jews, for the most part) having gone to England and to the USA..... and Heisenberg did not trust Adolf with The Bomb. Heisenberg lobbied extensively for nuclear power, but to construct a power reactor. It has been said that he didn't know enough to build a bomb but, when he heard what had hapened at Hiroshima, he gave the other scientists with whom he was interned a very solid lecture, only hours later, detailing what had to have been in the bomb, how it was built and so forth. The man was a bit sharper than he looked..... quite sharp enough that he wouldnt let Adolf have even a sniff of The Bomb.
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