United States Department of Energy National Laboratories

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The DOE is one of the biggest funders of science research in the US
The DOE is one of the biggest funders of science research in the US

The United States Department of Energy National Laboratories and Technology Centers are a system of facilities and laboratories overseen by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) for the purpose of advancing science and helping promote the economic and defensive national interests of the United States of America. Most of the DOE national laboratories are actually federally funded research and development centers administered, managed, operated and staffed by private corporations and academic universities under contract to DOE.

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[edit] History

The system of centralized national laboratories grew out of the massive scientific endeavors of World War II, in which new technologies such as radar, the computer, the proximity fuze, and the atomic bomb proved decisive for the Allied victory. Though the United States government had begun seriously investing in scientific research for national security since World War I, it was only in late 1930s and 1940s that monumental amounts of resources were committed or coordinated to wartime scientific problems, under the auspices first of the National Defense Research Committee, and later the Office of Scientific Research and Development, organized and administered by the MIT engineer Vannevar Bush.

During the second world war, centralized sites such as the Radiation Laboratory at MIT and Ernest O. Lawrence's laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley allowed for a large number of expert scientists to collaborate towards defined goals as never before, and with virtually unlimited government resources at their disposal.

In the course of the war, the Allied nuclear effort, the Manhattan Project, created several secret sites for the purpose of bomb research and material development, including a laboratory in the desert of New Mexico directed by Robert Oppenheimer (Los Alamos, and sites at Hanford, Washington and Oak Ridge, Tennessee). Hanford and Oak Ridge were administered by private companies, and Los Alamos was administered by a public university (the University of California). Additional success was had at the University of Chicago in reactor research, leading to the creation of Argonne National Laboratory outside Chicago, and at other academic institutions spread across the country.

After the war and its scientific successes, the newly created Atomic Energy Commission took over the future of the wartime laboratories, extending their lives indefinitely (they were originally thought of as temporary creations). Funding and infrastructure were secured to sponsor other "national laboratories" for both classified and basic research, especially in physics. Each national laboratory would generally be centered around one or many expensive machines (such as particle accelerators or nuclear reactors).

Most national laboratories maintained staffs of local researchers as well as allowing for visiting researchers to use their equipment, though priority to local or visiting researchers often varied from lab to lab. With their centralization of resources (both monetary and intellectual), the national labs serve as an exemplar for Big Science.

Elements of both competition and cooperation were encouraged in the laboratories. Often two laboratories with similar missions were created (such as Lawrence Livermore which was designed to compete with Los Alamos) with the hope that competition over funding would create a culture of high quality work. Laboratories which did not have overlapping missions would cooperate with each other (for example, Lawrence Livermore would cooperate with the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, which itself was often in competition with Brookhaven National Laboratory).

The national laboratory system, administered first by the Atomic Energy Commission, then the Energy Research and Development Administration, and currently the Department of Energy, is one of the largest (if not the largest) scientific research systems in the world. The DOE provides more than 40% of the total national funding for physics, chemistry, materials science, and other areas of the physical sciences. Many are locally managed by private companies, while other are managed by academic universities, and as a system they form one of the overarching and far-reaching components in what is known as the "iron triangle" of military, academia, and industry.

[edit] List of DOE National Laboratories and Technology Centers

[edit] National Laboratories

[edit] Technology Centers

* GOCO (Government-owned, Contractor-operated)
** GOGO (Government-owned, Government-operated)

[edit] List of scientific user facilities

  1. Accelerator Test Facility
  2. Advanced Light Source
  3. Advanced Photon Source
  4. Alcator C-Mod
  5. Argonne Tandem Linear Accelerator System
  6. Atmospheric Radiation Measurement
  7. B-Factory
  8. Bates Linear Accelerator Center
  9. Booster Neutrino
  10. Center for Functional Nanomaterials
  11. Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies
  12. Center for Microanalysis of Materials
  13. Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences
  14. Center for Nanoscale Materials
  15. Combustion Research Facility
  16. Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility
  17. DIII-D Tokamak Facility
  18. Electron Microscopy Center for Materials Research
  19. Energy Sciences Network
  20. Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory
  21. Final Focus Test Beam
  22. Free Air CO2 Experiment
  23. High Flux Isotope Reactor Center for Neutron Scattering
  24. Holifield Radioactive Ion Beam Facility
  25. Intense Pulsed Neutron Source
  26. James R. Macdonald Laboratory
  27. Joint Genome Institute
  28. Linac Coherent Light Source
  29. Main Injector
  30. Los Alamos Neutron Science Center
  31. Manuel Lujan Jr. Neutron Scattering Center
  32. Materials Preparation Center
  33. Molecular Foundry
  34. National Center for Electron Microscopy
  35. National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center
  36. National Spherical Torus Experiment
  37. National Synchrotron Light Source
  38. Next Linear Collider Test Accelerator
  39. Neutrinos at the Main Injector
  40. Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory
  41. Pulse Radiolysis Facility
  42. Radiochemical Engineering Development Center
  43. Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
  44. Shared Research Equipment Program
  45. Spallation Neutron Source
  46. Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory
  47. Structural Biology Center
  48. Tevatron Collider
  49. Texas A&M Cyclotron Institute
  50. Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory
  51. University of Washington Tandem Van de Graaff
  52. Yale University Tandem Van de Graaff

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Westwick, Peter J. The National Labs: Science in an American System, 1947-1974. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003.


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