visibility Similar

code Related

Reconversion of 184-inch cyclotron. Photo taken 9/27/1955. 184"-1340 Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

description

Summary

Photographs Documenting Scientists, Special Events, and Nuclear Research Facilities, Instruments, and Projects at the Berkeley Lab

Nothing Found.

label_outline

Tags

reconversion cyclotron principal investigator project analog conversion nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution analog conversion project principal investigator special events us national archives industrial history
date_range

Date

27/09/1955
create

Source

The U.S. National Archives
link

Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Restricted - Possibly Specific Use Restriction: Copyright Note: The University of California, as the Department of Energy contractor managing the historical image scanning project, has asserted a continuing legal interest in the digital versions of the images included in the NARA accession, and, accordingly, has stipulated that anyone intending to use any of these digital images for commercial purposes, including textbooks, commercial materials, and periodicals, must obtain prior permission from the University of California-Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, through photo@lbl.gov.

label_outline Explore Analog Conversion Project, Analog, Principal Investigator

184-inch cyclotron, calutron conversion, steel plates in foreground. Photo taken 9/01/1945. Confidential, declassified 4/30/1959. Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

Torturing pole plates for 184-inch cyclotron magnet. Photo taken 2/12/1946. 184"-155 Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

A M35A2 2 1/2-ton cargo truck pulls a support vehicle up the starboard loading ramp of the United States Naval Ship (USNS) Gordon. USNS Gordon is the first United States Navy (USN) Large, Medium-Speed Roll-on/Roll-off Ships, or LMSR, cargo vessel. USNS Gordon is a former commercial tanker and underwent conversion to United States Navy Military Sealift Command specifications to make it ideal for the loading, transport and unloading of United States Army and United States Marine Corps combat equipment. It is more than 300 yards long and has a storage capacity of more than 300,000 square feet. The ship is named in honor of MASTER Sergeant Gary I. Gordon, US Army, who was posthumously...

AIR SAMPLER POWER PANEL ON THE ROOF OF THE ENERGY CONVERSION LABORATORY ECL

37-inch cyclotron. Stainless steel liner M3 and stainless steel gunk catcher for M3. Photo taken 5/31/1943. 37"-49. Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

184-inch cyclotron deflector. Photo taken 9/17/1947. 184"-818 Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

184-inch cyclotron, calutron conversion. Photo taken 8/24/1945. Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

An overhead view looking down from the 350 ton crane, at the traverse bulkhead arrangement of the stern section of the Military Sealift Command's new vehicle transport ship USNS GILLILAND (T-AKR 298) under conversion in drydock #11 at Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation on the James River

60-inch cyclotron rear end, August 23, 1939. Cooksey 43 [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

60-inch cyclotron probe positioning gear installed for testing, Dewar off. Photo taken 6/11/1954. 60"-568. Principal Investigator/Project: Crocker Lab/60-inch

37-inch cyclotron, portable transformer. Photo taken 4/18/1944. 37"-111. Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) Program Industry Day presentation, HUD headquarters

Topics

reconversion cyclotron principal investigator project analog conversion nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution analog conversion project principal investigator special events us national archives industrial history