- published: 15 Aug 2016
- views: 4424
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) is a federal research facility in Livermore, California, founded by the University of California in 1952. A Federally Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC), it is primarily funded by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) and managed and operated by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC (LLNS), a partnership of the University of California, Bechtel, Babcock & Wilcox, URS, and Battelle Memorial Institute in affiliation with the Texas A&M University System. The laboratory was honored in 2012 by having the synthetic chemical element livermorium named after it.
LLNL is self-described as "a premier research and development institution for science and technology applied to national security." Its principal responsibility is ensuring the safety, security and reliability of the nation’s nuclear weapons through the application of advanced science, engineering and technology. The Laboratory also applies its special expertise and multidisciplinary capabilities to preventing the proliferation and use of weapons of mass destruction, bolstering homeland security and solving other nationally important problems, including energy and environmental security, basic science and economic competitiveness.
Additive manufacturing is changing the way the world thinks about manufacturing and design. And here at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, it’s changing the way our scientists approach research and development. Today we’ll look around three of the additive manufacturing research labs on the Lawrence Livermore campus. https://manufacturing.llnl.gov https://careers.llnl.gov
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) science communicator Maren Hunsberger takes us "Inside the Lab" to learn what it’s like to be a female scientist at Lawrence Livermore, and how that’s changed over the years. Here's more about how LLNL helps promote women in STEM: https://www.llnl.gov/tags/women-stem
In the 1990s, the U.S. nuclear weapons program shifted emphasis from developing new designs to dismantling thousands of existing weapons and maintaining a much smaller enduring stockpile. The United States ceased underground nuclear testing, and the Department of Energy created the Stockpile Stewardship Program to maintain the safety, security, and reliability of the U.S. nuclear deterrent without full-scale testing. This video gives a behind the scenes look at a set of unique capabilities at Lawrence Livermore that are indispensable to the Stockpile Stewardship Program: high performance computing, the Superblock category II nuclear facility, the JASPER a two stage gas gun, the High Explosive Applications Facility (HEAF), the National Ignition Facility (NIF), and the Site 300 contained fi...
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory was featured in an entire category of clues on the TV game show "Jeopardy" on Monday, March 9. Called the "Science of Security," the category featured basic science questions that tie into Laboratory facilities and programs, among them laser science and the National Ignition Facility, high performance computing and Sequoia, astrophysics and the GeMINI planet imager, bioscience and the Microbial Detection Array and satellite technology and the Lab's work to track them for traffic control.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) will receive a first-of-a-kind brain-inspired supercomputing platform for deep learning developed by IBM Research. Based on a breakthrough neurosynaptic computer chip called IBM TrueNorth, the scalable platform will process the equivalent of 16 million neurons and 4 billion synapses and consume the energy equivalent of a hearing aid battery – a mere 2.5 watts of power. The brain-like, neural network design of the IBM Neuromorphic System is able to infer complex cognitive tasks such as pattern recognition and integrated sensory processing far more efficiently than conventional chips. Read more: https://www.llnl.gov/news/lawrence-livermore-and-ibm-collaborate-build-new-brain-inspired-supercomputer
An overview of work being done at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. For more information, visit our website: https://www.llnl.gov
Welcome to the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, the world’s largest and most energetic laser system. It draws researchers from around the globe for experiments that can’t be conducted anywhere else on Earth. Let’s take a closer look. https://lasers.llnl.gov https://careers.llnl.gov
John Emmett was working at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., and had a Ph.D. from Stanford University, was asked to join Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's new Laser Division in July 1972. He became associate director of Laser Programs at in 1975, succeeding Carl Hausmann, who became weapons program manager. Emmett led the LLNL Laser Programs until 1989, guiding and overseeing the construction of a series of successively more powerful lasers, including Nova. In a speech at the dedication of the National Ignition Facility (May 2009), Emmett credited former director Roger Batzel and former associate director Carl Haussmann for seeing the need for an integrated effort. "Before I came to Livermore, the Lab's laser program was 57 Grand Duchies of Fenwick with every progr...
A Halloween pumpkin bares the Lab logo and Livermorium atomic number at the gates of LLNL.
Work with the brightest minds in science and engineering to solve some of the most challenging problems facing the nation using world-class research capabilities and tools. Search jobs: https://careers.llnl.gov/ For more than 60 years, we have used science and technology to make the world a safer place. We lead the nation in stockpile science and deliver innovative solutions for the nation's most challenging security problems. Research Areas - High Performance Computing: Scientific computing for the nation - Engineering: Technologies at extreme scales - Physics & Life Sciences: Frontier scientific research - Global Security: Applied science & technology - Lasers: National Ignition Facility - User Facilities: Unparalleled research capabilities - Internally Funded Research: Institutional ...
Everything we can see and touch is made up of chemical elements as illustrated on the Periodic Table of Elements. The heaviest, naturally occurring element is uranium. Using high-energy particle accelerators, scientists have created even heavier elements extending the Periodic Table of Elements up to element 118. As one travels along the Periodic Table to heavier and heavier elements, the lifetimes of these elements gets shorter and shorter until they decay less than one second after they are produced. In this presentation we will discuss how scientists create new elements, and how their nuclear and chemical properties compare to their naturally-occurring counterparts. This Science on Saturday talk explores the journey from element discovery to element naming, culminating with the official...
On Oct. 23-24, LLNL joined hundreds of other research institutions, universities, high-tech industries, professional societies, museums and science centers in a two-day expo on the National Mall in Washington, DC, held as part of the first-ever USA Science and Engineering Festival. The Lab featured an energy-related theme with two major components. 1) A 3D virtual ride on a beam of light as it races through the National Ignition Facility -- the world's largest laser system -- and smashes into a BB-sized target filled with fusion fuel, all as a quest to develop fusion as a future energy source. 2) An energy-climate challenge. Visitors tried out a brand-new "sim" developed by LLNL scientists as a learning tool about energy and climate change. Players faced the challenge of meeting the w...
It was the road trip of a lifetime for students at the University of West Florida. One professor and 19 students traveled through 11 states in 27 days across the American West to develop an in-depth understanding of western Cold War, urban and cultural history. This is a look at their stop at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory along "Route 66 to the Atomic West."
This animation illustrates how the NX-01 rocket motor throat was printed, layer-by-layer, using the powder bed additive manufacturing process, a manufacturing marvel in itself. The curved throat is printed with a series of channels that travel its length. Fuel is pumped through these channels on its way to the combustion chamber, regeneratively cooling the rocket and pre-heating the fuel. Powder bed additive manufacturing is one of many additive manufacturing technologies being developed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: https://manufacturing.llnl.gov/additive-manufacturing/metal-additive-manufacturing
Tina Eliassi-Rad is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Rutgers University. Until September 2010, Tina was a Member of Technical Staff and Principal Investigator at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Tina earned her Ph.D. in Computer Sciences (with a minor in Mathematical Statistics) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2001. Broadly speaking, Tina's research interests include data mining, machine learning, and artificial intelligence. Her work has been applied to the World-Wide Web, text corpora, large-scale scientific simulation data, complex networks, and cyber situational awareness. Tina is an action editor for the Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery Journal. In 2010, she received an Outstanding Mentor Award from the US DOE Office of Science and a Directorate Gold A...
JOIN US for the EU2016 Conference: Elegant Simplicity//June 17-19//https://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/2015/12/30/eu2016-home-page/ Scientists working at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory are proposing a radical new theory about the nature of invisible, theoretical dark matter particles. The scientists have developed what they call a “stealth dark matter” model, which suggests that dark matter is composed of electrically charged particles and which are bound by a mysterious, unknown force. However, today in our discussion with physicist Eugene Bagashov, we take a step backwards to ask a more fundamental question: Why should anyone assume that dark matter actually exists? Source story on theoretical "stealth" (electrically charged) dark matter particles: http://www.gizmag.com/stealt...
LIVESTREAM: Watch the talk live on Saturday, Feb. 8, and pose questions for the presenters: https://new.livestream.com/LivermoreLab/science-on-saturday-2 ABOUT: Lawrence Livermore Scientist Frederico Fiuza and Los Gatos High School Teacher Dan Burns will discuss how researchers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory are using computer modeling to better understand nuclear fusion. They will field questions posted on this page at the end. This is the second of four "Science on Saturday" lectures and demonstrations for middle- and high-school students.
Communicating complex ideas to fifth graders doesn't always come naturally to brilliant scientists. But Livermore's "Fun with Science" presenter Nick Williams has developed a talent for it. His description of time as "Forward Movement" was voted the written entry winner of the 2013 Flame Challenge by more than 20,000 students. Watch kids debate which entry is the best (segment starts at 1:22:45) http://new.livestream.com/WorldScienceFestival/WhatIsTime See Nick's winning submission http://www.centerforcommunicatingscience.org/meet-the-finalists/ — with Alan Alda at The Flame Challenge. Set up your own Fun with Science field trip https://www.llnl.gov/education/schooltours.html#fieldtrips Learn about public tours of the Livermore Lab: https://www.llnl.gov/about/tours.html
Livermore Lab astrophysicist Bill Craig describes his team's role in developing X-ray imaging technology for the NASA Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) mission. The black-hole-hunting spacecraft bagged its first 10 supermassive black holes this week: http://buff.ly/15Tlj5L. NuSTAR opens out of this world view thanks to Lab technology: http://buff.ly/1edsP5x NuSTAR helps solve riddle of black hole spin: http://buff.ly/15TlpdR
Hey everyone! My name is Josh Hawkins and welcome to my channel! Come join me as I travel across a 1:1 scale recreation of our Milky Way Galaxy in Elite: Dangerous - Horizons. This week we take a walk down through time as we explore not just the galaxy, but a bit of the timeline of Elite: Dangerous history as well and figure out what it truly means to be an explorer! Prelude No. 18 by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://chriszabriskie.com/preludes/ Artist: http://chriszabriskie.com/ Epic Unease by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN110040...
It's been too long, too hard, too far
I know you don't know me at all
I'm screaming, I'm breathing, I'm looking up at you from the floor
I'm over, I'm under, I'm thinking that there's got to be more
And I know these days
They fade away like stealing time
Just let me be 'cause I'm alright
I'm waking up to bigger things
I'm digging, I'm clawing, I'm doing anything that I can
I'm dealing, I'm feeling that somethings got to give in the end
And I know these days
They fade away like stealing time
Don't take my place 'cause I'm alright
So kill my pain to save my pride
Just let me be 'cause I'm alright
Days, they fade away like stealing time
Don't take my place, 'cause I'm alright
So kill my pain to save my pride
Just let me be 'cause I'm alright