visibility Similar

code Related

Corona test setup on Bevatron cable and supports. Photograph taken June 29, 1950. Bevatron-271

description

Summary

Digital Preservation File Name and Format: 434-LB-6-XBD201212-01853.TIF

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

Nothing Found.

label_outline

Tags

corona test setup corona test setup bevatron cable bevatron cable nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution digital preservation file name special events atomic energy us national archives
date_range

Date

1950
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 Corona, Setup, Bevatron

NAVY VANE HOLE PLUGGING TEST SETUP

205 megacycle cavity resonator. Photograph taken November 7, 1945. LINAC-22

8-inch quadrapole focusing magnet. Photograph taken August 6, 1956. Bevatron-1149

Hydrogen circulatory system for Van de Graaff arc source. Photograph taken February 28, 1946. LINAC-64

Leg slab. Photograph taken October 24, 1958. Bevatron-1651

200814-N-NH257-1043 ARABIAN SEA (August 14, 2020) Aviation

A member of a US Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal unit attaches a cable to a device that will be used to detonate several mortar rounds during an ordnace disposal exercise

200816-N-NH257-2026 ARABIAN SEA (August 16, 2020) Aviation

Installing new flywheel at the Bevatron. Photograph taken October 12, 1961. Bevatron-2385

Linear accelerator transfer line resistor setting control. Photograph taken April 24, 1947. LINAC-423

US Air Force (USAF) AIRMAN First Class (A1C) Leroy Clemens (left), Firefighter, 31st Civil Engineering Squadron (CES), assists members of the Missions Systems Flight, 31st Communications Squadron (CS), uses water pressure to help clear out 85 feet of tunnel that had collapsed and needed cable run through it

VANDENBERG ABF, Calif. - The Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL rocket that will lift NASA's IRIS solar observatory into orbit is moved from a hangar onto a transporter at Vandenberg Air Force Base. IRIS, short for Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, is being prepared for launch from Vandenberg June 26. IRIS will open a new window of discovery by tracing the flow of energy and plasma through the chromospheres and transition region into the sun’s corona using spectrometry and imaging. IRIS fills a crucial gap in our ability to advance studies of the sun-to-Earth connection by tracing the flow of energy and plasma through the foundation of the corona and the region around the sun known as the heliosphere. Photo credit: VAFB/Randy Beaudoin KSC-2013-2726

Topics

corona test setup corona test setup bevatron cable bevatron cable nuclear research nuclear research facilities berkeley laboratory berkeley lab high resolution digital preservation file name special events atomic energy us national archives