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Encyclopedia > LLNL
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Aerial view of the lab and surrounding area.

The Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) is a United States Department of Energy national laboratory, managed by the University of California, in Livermore, California. Along with Los Alamos National Laboratory, it is one of the USA's two laboratories whose mission has included the design of nuclear weapons. The laboratory's self-described purpose currently is "to promote innovation in the design of our nation's nuclear stockpile through creative science and engineering." The laboratory's field of research has expanded to include general energy issues, as well as biomedicine and environmental science.


The site, at the location of a former World War II Naval Training Station, was originally used to house projects of the University of California Radiation Laboratory which were too large for its location on the hills of Berkeley, California. In 1949, Edward Teller suggested to Ernest Lawrence, head of the Berkeley lab, that a second weapons lab be created as "competition" with the lab which sprung up to create the first atomic bomb, Los Alamos. Teller's advocacy for the lab was also in response to his frustrations with the low-priority he felt his idea of a hydrogen bomb was getting at Los Alamos. In 1951, Teller formally appealed to the Atomic Energy Commission for the creation of the laboratory, and in September 1952 the lab was formally founded. Despite Teller's original motivation, however, the hydrogen bomb was primarily designed at Los Alamos.


32-year old Herbert York was appointed the first director of the lab. York set out to develop the Lab's program and created four main elements: Project Sherwood (the Magnetic Fusion Program), diagnostic weapon experiments (both for Los Alamos and Livermore), the design of thermonuclear weapons, and a basic physics program. The first two facilities were a building to house the latest electronic computer, a UNIVAC I, and a technology building with a large central bay for lifting heavy equipment.


Throughout the Cold War, Lawrence Livermore competed with Los Alamos to design the nation's nuclear arsenal, as well as perform other science and technology related tasks (some classified, some not). In the early 1990s their weapons work shifted into stockpile stewardship.


Computers at the lab

The first computer the laboratory possessed was a UNIVAC I, ordered in July through September 1952 and delivered in April 1953.


Over the years other computers were installed, including:

External links

  • LLNL.gov (http://www.llnl.gov) (official)
  • Laboratory History (http://www.llnl.gov/50th_anniv/history.htm) (official)
  • Large Scale Scientific Computing at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (http://www.nersc.gov/~deboni/Computer.history/GAM.Intro.html)



  Results from FactBites:
 
LLNL develops powerful new rechargable battery (720 words)
With the LLNL fuel cell, a typical cell phone battery could be projected to last more than 300 percent longer, extending standby time from four days to two weeks, and talk time from six hours to two days.
Founded in 1952, LLNL is a national security laboratory with a mission to ensure national security and apply science and technology to the important issues of our time.
LLNL is managed by the University of California for the National Nuclear Security Administration/ Department of Energy.
LLNL (15704 words)
The laboratory research conducted at LLNL includes (a) determination of the parent of origin of the extra X chromosome, and (b) determination of the level of sperm aneuploidy in the father of affected children.
Additional secondary objectives from the LLNL point of view are to develop an ongoing relationship with the NIH/National Cancer Institute with the goal of drawing on their substantial research and clinical expertise in the area of radiation therapy.
The LLNL component of the proposal will be the resequencing of DNA repair genes to identify common genetic variation in a population of individuals with melanoma.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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