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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – The prototype lander for NASA’s Regolith and Environment Science and Oxygen and Lunar Volatile Extraction, or RESOLVE, project is assembled and ready for testing in a facility behind the Operations and Checkout Building at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. RESOLVE consists of a rover and drill provided by the Canadian Space Agency to support a NASA payload that is designed to prospect for water, ice and other lunar resources. RESOLVE also will demonstrate how future explorers can take advantage of resources at potential landing sites by manufacturing oxygen from soil. NASA will be conducting field tests in July outside of Hilo, Hawaii, with equipment and concept vehicles that demonstrate how explorers might prospect for resources and make their own oxygen for survival while on other planetary bodies. For more information, visit http://www.nasa.gov/exploration/analogs/index.html. Photo credit: NASA/Ben Smegelsky KSC-2012-3266

STS074-331-016 - STS-074 - Interior views of Mir space station

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Area B, Building No. 19, Five-Foot Wind Tunnel, Dayton, Montgomery County, OH

PLT Polansky looks through hatch at U.S. Laboratory / Destiny module

The Ares I-X Pathfinder 1 (PF1) Segment move from Building 50 to Building 333

Falcon Heavy Demo Mission - Payload

JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE (JWST) HELIUM SHROUD AT GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER

STRAIN GAUGED AREA OF LOW SPEED SHAFT FOR MOD-0A WINDMILL

Navy Ship AO-109 Waccamaw - Public domain photogrpaph

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10-foot velocity spectrometer, Mark V. Photograph taken February 5, 1964. Bevatron-3478 – Photographer: George Kagawa

description

Summary

Digital Preservation File Name and Format: 434-LB-6-XBD201306-03041.TIF

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

Nothing Found.

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velocity spectrometer mark mark v bevatron photographer kagawa 1964 nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution digital preservation file name velocity spectrometer george kagawa special events atomic energy us national archives
date_range

Date

1964
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Source

The U.S. National Archives
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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 Mark V, Spectrometer, Velocity

A flight deck crewman wears an ND Mark V nuclear, biological and chemical mask during a general quarters drill aboard the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER (CVN 69)

Bevatron MG 2 X 2 motor secondary modified Kramer control system. Photograph taken January 17, 1966. Bevatron-4005 – Photographer: George Kagawa/Doug McWilliams

Glass electrode for spectrometers. Photograph taken November 20, 1962. Bubble Chamber-1211 - Photographer: George Kagawa

Interior of generator room. Photograph taken November 24, 1959. Bevatron-1931

Control room after modification. Photograph taken July 11, 1956. Bevatron-1107

STS082-336-027 - STS-082 - DTO 684, Radiation Measurement in Shuttle Crew Compartment

Trilling-Goldhaber experiment equipment. Gerson Goldhaber on left. Photograph taken February 6, 1964. Bevatron-3484 – Photographer: George Kagawa

Anti-neutron, negative proton experiment. Photograph taken August 8, 1956. Bevatron-1134

The Mark V experimental fast patrol boat (XFPB) for SEAL special operations is lowered into the water by crane

Moveable targets (gap mounted traveling flip targets) can be positioned and even removed from Bevatron tank by remote control. Mechanical engineer Ken Stone, who designed the mechanism, checks installation. Targets can be raised into position in less than – Photographer: George Kagawa

University of California Radiation Laboratory, Bevatron, 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, Alameda County, CA

A wooden walkway in the middle of a park. Railway railroad train.

Topics

velocity spectrometer mark mark v bevatron photographer kagawa 1964 nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution digital preservation file name velocity spectrometer george kagawa special events atomic energy us national archives