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Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is a federally funded research and development center in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1943, the laboratory is now sponsored by the United States Department of Energy and administered by UT–Battelle, LLC .
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, a U.S. Department of Energy multipurpose national laboratory and the site of several active and historical nuclear energy projects X-10 Graphite Reactor , on the Oak Ridge National Laboratory campus, built during World War II and the first reactor designed and built for continuous operation
The Y-12 National Security Complex is a United States Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration facility located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, near the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. It was built as part of the Manhattan Project for the purpose of enriching uranium for the first atomic bombs. [ 1 ]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory is dwarfed by weapons labs, though the city of Oak Ridge still works on the U.S. nuclear arsenal. No, Oak Ridge is not 'the lab.' Here are 5 misconceptions about the ...
The Low Intensity Test Reactor, located at the central campus of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is the latest in a string of 1940s-era buildings to come down at three sites in Oak Ridge built for ...
The reactor vessel of the Oak Ridge Research Reactor is loaded into a protective shipping container for transportation and disposal offsite. Workers removed 127,000 gallons of water and sediment ...
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 mountains of New Mexico directed by Robert Oppenheimer , and sites at Hanford, Washington and Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Hanford and Oak Ridge were ...
The X-10 Graphite Reactor is a decommissioned nuclear reactor at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.Formerly known as the Clinton Pile and X-10 Pile, it was the world's second artificial nuclear reactor (after Enrico Fermi's Chicago Pile-1) and the first intended for continuous operation.