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The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV. It was also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. This cyclotron was used in one of the first attempts to treat cancer. Cooksey label: Cancer Room, note proton snout. Cooksey 1-10, September 20, 1938. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV. It was also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. This cyclotron was used in one of the first attempts to treat cancer. Cooksey label: Cancer Room, Old Lab, with Paul Aebersold. Cooksey 1-7, September 20,1938. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV. It was also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. This cyclotron was used in one of the first attempts to treat cancer. Cooksey label: Cancer Room, with Paul Aebersold as patient. Cooksey 1-9, Septemver 26, 1938. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV. It was also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. This cyclotron was used in one of the first attempts to treat cancer. Shown with Paul Aebersold looking on. Cooksey label: Cancer Room, note proton snout. Cooksey 1-12, September 20, 1938. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV. It was also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. This cyclotron was used in one of the first attempts to treat cancer. Shown with Paul Aebersold (standing) and Bill Brobeck as patient.Cooksey 1-14, September 20, 1938. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV, also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. Cooksey 18-2, October 13, 1937 [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV, and used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. Cooksey 24-31, September 1, 1935. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

60-inch cyclotron with Milton White and his reflection. August 23, 1939. Cooksey 44. Cooksey note: Looking from above at the "east" side, one sees, below the union of the two dee support tanks, the high speed (approximately 5000 L/sec) oil diffusion pump developed in this laboratory. Professor Milton G. White is by the magnet. Some of the equipment with which Alvarez and Cornog discovered helium three is behind White. Paint cans full of water are piled in front of the control room to reduce the radiation at that point. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

Krause, Donald Cooksey, Livingood, and Lehmann with the 27-inch cyclotron tank #2 in operation from 1932 to 1936, accelerated deuterons at 4.8 MeV for the investigation of deuteron-nucleus interactions. Cooksey 24-32, September 1, 1935. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

The 37-inch cyclotron accelerated deuterons to 8 MeV and alpha particles to 16 MeV. It was also used to create radio isotopes and the first artificial element, technetium. This cyclotron was used in one of the first attempts to treat cancer. Cooksey label: Cancer Room Construction, Old Lab. Cooksey 1-4, September 20, 1938. [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

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Summary

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

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cyclotron deuterons mev particles radio isotopes radio isotopes element technetium attempts first attempts cancer cooksey label cooksey label room construction cancer room construction old lab old lab photographer donald nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution ultra high resolution donald cooksey special events us national archives
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Date

20/09/1938
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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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 Technetium, Isotopes, Deuterons

184-inch cyclotron block design study. Photo taken 8/05/1949. 184"-1062 Principal Investigator/Project: Analog Conversion Project

US Air Force (USAF) SENIOR AIRMAN (SRA) Charles Gillaspie, 55th Maintenance Squadron (MXS), Munitions Flight, punches out a military specifications label for live ammunition during a pallet build up in preparation for the 2004 Offutt Air Force Base (AFB) Operational Readiness Exercise (ORE). Over the next two weeks, the 55th Wing is conducting an ORE in preparation for an upcoming Air Combat Command (ACC) inspection in March

15-inch bubble chamber event. Photograph taken May 1, 1958. Bubble Chamber-472

INSTRUMENTED MULTI ELEMENT COMBUSTOR, NASA Technology Images

Hyperfragment giving three particles. Photograph taken August 1, 1957. Bubble Chamber-304

A CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter from HMH-463 Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, that was disassembled so it could be transported to Anderson Air Force Base, Guam, waits to be put back together during Exercise KOA THUNDER 2001 at Anderson Air Force Base. Marines from Aviation Support Element, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, 1ST Marine Air Wing, Okinawa, Japan, and 3rd Marines 7th Battalion, 29 Palms, California, participated in KOA THUNDER on the island of Guam from July 9 to July 14. The purpose of the exercise was to demonstrate the Marine Corps' ability to deploy in the South Pacific from places other than Okinawa, Japan

COMPRESSOR LOAD VALVE FIXED ELEMENT WEAR SURFACE

KRON TV's first rehearsal for February 26 "Science in Action" show with Earl Herald, Al Ghiorso, and Director Vern Louden. Photo taken March,1962. Morgue 1962-80 (P-6) [Photographer: Donald Cooksey]

INSTRUMENTED MULTI ELEMENT COMBUSTOR, NASA Technology Images

184-inch cyclotron. Transmission live calculator. Photo taken 6/30/1953. 184"-1132

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

S131E010329 - STS-131 - STORMM Reflector Relocation

Topics

cyclotron deuterons mev particles radio isotopes radio isotopes element technetium attempts first attempts cancer cooksey label cooksey label room construction cancer room construction old lab old lab photographer donald nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution ultra high resolution donald cooksey special events us national archives