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The Office of Nuclear Energy (NE) is an agency of the United States Department of Energy which promotes nuclear power as a resource capable of meeting the energy, environmental, and national security needs of the United States by resolving technical and regulatory barriers through research, development, and demonstration.
The United States Department of Energy (DOE) is an executive department of the U.S. federal government that oversees U.S. national energy policy and energy production, the research and development of nuclear power, the military's nuclear weapons program, nuclear reactor production for the United States Navy, energy-related research, and energy conservation.
Assistant Secretary of Energy (Nuclear Energy) Rita Baranwal [8] July 11, 2019 (Confirmed June 20, 2019, 86–5) [9] Assistant Secretary of Energy (International Affairs) Theodore J. Garrish [10] April 12, 2018 (Confirmed April 9, 2018, voice vote) Assistant Secretary of Energy (Congressional and Intergovernmental Affairs) Melissa F. Burnison [11]
English: New DOE orginization chart as of Oct. 2014. Date: 6 October 2014: Source: ... Author: US Department of Energy: Licensing. Public domain Public domain false ...
The Department of Energy executes the research to support its missions through 17 national laboratories. The chart shows the nature of the research done at each laboratory. Each multipurpose science laboratory possesses a number of core capabilities and facilities that enable a wide range of multidisciplinary research.
English: Organizational chart of the U.S. Department of Energy as of July 2015. Русский: ... Department of Energy of the U.S. - 2015: Width: 1300: Height: 1000
The Under Secretary for Science and Innovation, [1] formerly the Under Secretary for Science and Energy, is a high-ranking position within the United States Department of Energy. The position was created by the Energy Policy Act of 2005, and the first Under Secretary for Science, Raymond L. Orbach, was sworn in on June 1, 2006. [2]
The Chart of the Nuclides, containing information such as masses, relative abundances, half-lives, neutron cross sections, and decay properties for more than 3,100 nuclides and 580 isomers was developed at KAPL. This chart is a necessity for students and professionals in nuclear physics, chemistry, engineering, and medicine around the world ...