Tuesday, December
28, 2004
New
Technique for Tracking Gene Regulators
Finding out where gene-regulator proteins bind
to DNA and identifying the genes they regulate
just got a step easier thanks to a new technique
developed by scientists at the U.S. Department
of Energys Brookhaven National Laboratory.
The technique could greatly speed the process
of unraveling the role these proteins play in
turning on and off the genes that establish
the very identity of cells be they brain
cells, liver, or blood as well as what
might go awry in certain conditions like cancer.
Tuesday, December
21, 2004
United
States and Spain Sign Agreement to Prevent Trafficking
of Nuclear Material
The United States and Spain signed an agreement
to begin a joint effort in the war on terrorism
by installing special equipment at one of Spains
busiest seaports to detect and stop hidden shipments
of nuclear and other radioactive materials.
Monday, December
20, 2004
Department
of Energy Launches New Web Site With Government-Wide
Energy Saving Tips
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has launched
a new web site with detailed information and
tips on how to save money by developing smart
energy habits. The site, www.EnergySavingTips.gov,
serves as a consumer-friendly portal to detailed
energy saving information from various federal
agencies.
Wednesday,
December 15, 2004
Department
of Energy Issues Final Request for Proposals
for E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Contractor
The Department of Energy (DOE) released a final
Request for Proposals (RFP) for the competitive
selection of a management and operating (M&O)
contractor for Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
(LBNL), a major DOE Office of Science research
facility located in Berkeley, California.
Tuesday, December
14, 2004
PNNL's
Body Scanner Garners Federal Commercialization
Award
A technology developed by researchers at the
Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory has been recognized for its successful
transfer to the commercial market. The Federal
Laboratory Consortium announced PNNL has won
a 2005 Excellence in Technology Transfer Award
for the lab's holographic body scanner, an imaging
technology that is being applied in two widely
divergent industries - apparel and security.
The
Secret Life of Acid Dust
Dry dust reacts with air pollutants to form
dewy particles whose sunlight-reflecting and
cloud-altering properties are unaccounted for
in atmospheric models.
Monday, December
13, 2004
December
13 Issue of DOE Pulse. Pulse is a Newsletter
About Accomplishments at the Department of Energy's
National Laboratories. Here is Some of What
You'll Find in This Issue:
* Jefferson Lab: Puzzling neutron structure
* Brookhaven: Blocking infection
* Idaho: Capturing corrosion's path
* Argonne: Marketing nanomaterials
U.S.
Department of Energy Authorizes the Exercise
of UT-Battelle Operating Contract Option for
Oak Ridge National Laboratory for Five Years
U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced
the decision to authorize the exercise of a
competitive contract option to extend the University
of Tennessee-Battelle LLC management and operating
contract of the Department of Energys
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) for an
additional five years.
Friday, December
10, 2004
Statement
of Energy Secretary Abraham on the Nomination
of Sam Bodman
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham has released
a statement regarding the nomination of Sam
Bodman as the 11th Secretary of Energy.
Glass
Gives Up Secrets Under Pressure
Glass is a mysterious material, but when researchers
apply pressure, it reveals secrets. Using a
variety of techniques, researchers at Argonne
National Laboratory saw for the first time ever,
the atomic structure of a dense, purely octahedral
glass that has eluded scientists for decades.
They also witnessed a continuous structural
change in the glass, disproving the theory that
tetrahedral glasses go through a distinct transition
between low- and high-density phases.
New
Method for Studying Protein Structure Could
Advance Drug Development
Structural changes in proteins can now be seen
in increased detail, using a new application
of an existing technique. The application, developed
at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National
Laboratory, could help produce lead drugs for
disease therapy.
Wednesday,
December 8, 2004
New
Oil and Gas Projects to Enhance Energy Security,
Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
the selection of 35 new cost-shared projects
that promise to strengthen our nations
energy security and reduce greenhouse emissions.
In announcing the awards, Secretary Abraham
lauded the wide-ranging projects as an
investment in our future that will benefit the
Nation for years to come. The total award
value of the new projects is more than $39 million.
Monday, December
6, 2004
NIU
launches Institute for Neutron Therapy at Fermilab
Northern Illinois University announced plans
to revive a unique and proven cancer treatment
that blends advanced medical science with accelerator
physics developed at Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory, a Department of Energy laboratory
in Batavia, Ill.
Energy
Department Extends Acceptance Policy for Spent
Nuclear Fuel from Foreign Research Reactors
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that he has extended a policy that to date has
enabled the United States to recover nearly
500 kilograms of uranium-235 enough to
build about 20 crude nuclear weapons
in U.S.-origin high-enriched uranium (HEU) used
to fuel foreign research reactors. The Department
of Energys (DOE) decision to extend the
period for spent fuel acceptance will provide
additional time for research reactors to convert
from HEU to low-enriched uranium (LEU) fuel.
Secretary
Abraham Congratulates International Partnership
for the Hydrogen Economy on its One-Year Anniversary
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham congratulated
the International Partnership for the Hydrogen
Economy (IPHE) on its successful first year.
Led by the United States, fifteen nations and
the European Commission signed the Terms of
Reference establishing the IPHE on November
20, 2003.
Tuesday, November
30, 2004
DOE
Researchers Demonstrate Feasibility of Efficient
Hydrogen Production from Nuclear Energy
In a major step toward achieving President George
W. Bushs goal of ensuring Americas
energy security through innovative technologies,
researchers at the U.S. Department of Energys
Idaho National Engineering and Environmental
Laboratory (INEEL) and Ceramatec, Inc. of Salt
Lake City, Utah have demonstrated the feasibility
of using nuclear energy to efficiently produce
hydrogen from water.
Friday, November
26, 2004
Research
Opportunities Expand at Nation's Premier X-ray
Facility
The Advanced Photon Source (APS), located at
Argonne National Laboratory and the premier
hard X-ray research facility in the nation,
each year hosts thousands of experimenters who
carry out research that impacts nearly every
aspect of our lives. Now, the outlook for this
essential U.S. Department of Energy(DOE)-funded
program is even brighter as changes in the way
scientists access the APS are significantly
increasing opportunities for experimentation.
Wednesday,
November 24, 2004
Isotron
Licenses ORNL Cancer Treatment Technology
Patients with cancers previously next to untreatable
may have new hope because of a license agreement
between Isotron of Norcross, Ga., and UT-Battelle,
which manages Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Monday, November
22, 2004
Argonne
Realigns Top Management
Argonne National Laboratory has modified its
organization to address changing national research
priorities as well as to address the upcoming
transition of Argonne's Idaho component
Argonne-West to the newly formed Idaho
National Laboratory.
Friday, November
19, 2004
Pier
Oddone of Berkeley Lab Named Fermilab Director
Officials of Universities Research Association,
the consortium of universities that operates
the Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory, today (November 19) announced the
appointment Piermaria Oddone as Fermilab's fifth
director. Acting on the recommendation of its
Board of Overseers and with the approval of
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, URA's Board
of Trustees appointed Oddone to succeed Fermilab's
current director, Michael Witherell, on July
1, 2005. Witherell announced in October 2003
that he would serve as Fermilab director through
June 2005.
Monday, November
15, 2004
Abraham
Thanks President Bush for the Privilege To Serve
the Nation
In a letter to President George W. Bush dated
November 14, 2004 resigning his position pending
the confirmation of a new Energy Secretary,
Spencer Abraham touted DOEs significant
success toward reducing Americas dependence
on foreign sources of energy, improving the
environment and further securing the homeland
through efforts to reduce nuclear proliferation.
New
Results From Anti-Neutrino Studies at KamLAND
First they were seen to go away, now, for the
first time, theyve been seen coming back.
An international team of researchers at KamLAND,
an underground neutrino detector in central
Japan, has shown that not only do anti-neutrinos
emanating from nearby nuclear reactors disappear,
they also reappear. This is further
evidence that the three known types or flavors
of neutrinos electron, muon and tau
all have mass and can oscillate or change from
one type to another.
Thursday, November
11, 2004
Sandwich
Clusters May Improve Magnetic Memory Storage
A new type of molecular magnet known as a sandwich
cluster is being studied under a joint
research collaboration between the U.S. Department
of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory, the
University of Chicago and Keio University in
Japan.
Tuesday, November
9, 2004
DOE
Awards Battelle Energy Alliance Contract to
Establish World-Class Nuclear Energy and Technology
Lab in Idaho
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that the U.S. Department of Energy has selected
the Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC (BEA) to establish
the Idaho National Laboratory (INL) as the Nations
premier laboratory for nuclear energy research,
development, demonstration and education within
a decade.
Monday, November
8, 2004
Brookhaven
Lab and BioSurface Engineering Technologies,
Inc. Develop a Synthetic Peptide That Enhances
the Effect of a Bone Growth Factor, BMP-2
Researchers from the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) and BioSurface
Engineering Technologies, Inc. (BioSET) have
developed a synthetic peptide that enhances
the effects of a tissue growth factor known
as bone morphogenetic protein 2, or BMP-2. BMPs
are a family of proteins in the human body responsible
for the proliferation, repair, and differentiation
of cells in many tissues, including bone.
Thursday,
November 4, 2004
Secretary
Abraham Announces Record Breaking Supercomputer
Performance
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that a supercomputer developed for the nations
Stockpile Stewardship Program has attained a
record breaking performance of 70.72 teraFLOP/s
(trillion floating point opera.
Monday, November
1, 2004
Climate
Uncertainty with CO2 Rise Due to Uncertainty
About Aerosols
Climate scientists agree that atmospheric carbon
dioxide (CO2) has increased about 35 percent
over the industrial period and that it will
continue to rise so that CO2 will reach double
its pre-industrial value well before the end
of this century.
Monday, October
25, 2004
Eight
Energy Dept. Lab Directors Receive Energy Secretary's
Gold Award
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham today presented
the Secretarys Gold Award to eight current
and former directors of Department of Energy
national laboratories. The award is the Energy
Departments highest honorary award and
includes a plaque with citation, a medallion
and a rosette.
Former
BNL Director John Marburger Among the Recipients
Fermilab
Director Witherell One of Eight Directors to
Receive Energy Secretary's Gold Award
Friday, October
22, 2004
New
Method Studies Living Bacteria Cells
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory have found a new
way to study individual living bacteria cells
and analyze their chemistry.
Tuesday, October
19, 2004
Scientists
See an Effect of Superconductor
Research
Recent research by a scientist at the U.S. Department
of Energys Brookhaven National Laboratory
and his collaborators may lead to new advances
in electronic circuitry and new clues to the
causes of high-temperature superconductivity.
The researchers found evidence to support the
existence of the theoretical Giant Proximity
Effect, a physical phenomenon in which
a thick layer of a conventional metal conducts
like a superconductor that is, with no
resistance when it is placed in contact
with a superconducting material.
Monday, October
18, 2004
October
18 Issue of DOE Pulse. Pulse is a Newsletter
About Accomplishments at the Department of Energy's
National Laboratories. Here is Some of What
You'll Find in This Issue:
* Brookhaven: A mechanism for HIV dementia
* Argonne: Medical implant, detection research
* Jefferson Lab: New views on nuclei
* Ames: Bioanalysis boon
Feature: Fermilab's quantum chromodynamics contributions
A
Nanowire with a Surprise
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory and their collaborators
have discovered that a short, organic chain
molecule with dimensions on the order of a nanometer
(a billionth of a meter) conducts electrons
in a surprising way: It regulates the electrons
speed erratically, without a predictable dependence
on the length of the wire. This information
may help scientists learn how to use nanowires
to create components for a new class of tiny
electronic circuits.
Friday, October
15, 2004
Department
of Energy Issues Draft Request for Proposals
for E. O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Contractor
The Department of Energy (DOE) is seeking comments
on a draft Request for Proposals (RFP) for the
competitive selection of a management and operating
(M&O) contractor for Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory (LBNL), a major DOE Office of Science
research facility located in Berkeley, California.
2nd
Annual Energy Dept. "What's Next"
Expo to be Held in Albuquerque
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham and U.S.
Rep. Heather Wilson announced today that the
Department of Energys 2nd annual Whats
Next Expo will be held in Albuquerque
in the fall of 2005.
Transportation
Research Takes Multi-pronged Approach to Clean
Fuels, Engines
Cleaner, more efficient engines are at the top
of the nation's transportation technology goals.
To improve the nation's economy, environment
and energy security, researchers in Argonne's
Energy Systems Division (ES) work with engines
ranging in size from small auto engines to 10-foot-tall
single-cylinder diesel locomotive engines.
Thursday,
October 14, 2004
Energy
Secretary Abraham Hosts "What's Next Expo"
Featuring Exhibits of "Future Science for
Future Scientists" to Interest Chicago-Area
Students in Math and Science Careers
As part of a science education initiative he
launched earlier this year to inspire young
people to pursue careers in mathematics and
the sciences, Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham
hosted more than 500 Chicago-area seventh- and
eighth-graders and their teachers at the inaugural
Department of Energy Whats Next
Expo at the Navy Pier in downtown Chicago.
DOE
Labs, Universities and Second Sight Partner
to Speed Development of "Artificial Retina"
In an effort to speed the design and development
of an artificial retina that could potentially
help millions of people blinded by retinal diseases,
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that five Department of Energy (DOE) national
laboratories, a private company and three universities
have signed agreements to form a research partnership.
Argonne
Plays Important Role in Development of Artificial
Retina
A collaborative research and development agreement
signed between the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE) and Second Sight LLC will help bring hope
to hundreds of thousands of Americans who are
losing their sight to degenerative retinal diseases.
Tuesday, October
12, 2004
DOE-Funded
Research Projects Win 36 R&D 100 Awards
for 2004
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that researchers at Department of Energy (DOE)
national laboratories and companies with research
funded by DOE have won 36 of the 100 awards
given this year by R&D Magazine for the
most outstanding technology developments with
commercial potential.
Friday, October
8, 2004
Paul
Sworn in as NNSA Principal Deputy Administrator
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham administered
the oath of office to Jerry Paul this week to
be the principal deputy administrator of the
National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).
Thursday,
October 7, 2004
DOE/EPA
Announce Fuel Economy Leaders for Model Year
2005
DOE and EPA provide several online sources for
more fuel economy information. The joint DOE
and EPA Web site, http://www.fueleconomy.gov,
offers detailed information on vehicle fuel
economy, including a complete version of the
Fuel Economy Guide.
Book
Review: The Fermi Agez
Fermi age, Fermi constant, Fermi-Dirac gas,
Fermi energy, Fermi hole, fermion, Fermi selection
rules, Fermi statistics, fermium
No
serious student can enter physics without finding
the name Fermi everywhere. These are the
words of James W. Cronin editor of Fermi
Remembered, a collection of essays recently
published by the University of Chicago Press.
Wednesday,
October 6, 2004
$12.5
Million in Subcontracts Awarded for Fusion Experiment
at Princeton
The U.S. Department of Energy's (USDOE) Princeton
Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) has awarded
two subcontracts for the fabrication of major
components for the National Compact Stellarator
Experiment (NCSX), now under construction at
the Laboratory. NCSX will explore the physics
of an innovative concept for fusion energy production
and will advance the understanding of the related
basic science. PPPL is building the new experiment
in partnership with the USDOE's Oak Ridge National
Laboratory in Tennessee.
Tuesday, October
5, 2004
More
than 500 Chicago Students to Attend "What's
Next" Expo Sponsored by Energy Department
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham will join
more than 500 Chicago area seventh- and eighth-grade
students and their teachers at the first ever
Whats Next Expo on October
14, 2004, at Chicagos Navy Pier.
DOE-Supported
Physicists are Co-Winners of 2004 Nobel Prize
in Physics
Dr. Raymond L. Orbach, Director of DOEs
Office of Science said, The award of this
year's Nobel Prize to Gross, Wilczek and Politzer
for their fundamental, groundbreaking theoretical
investigation of the forces between quarks brings
to mind the original discovery of quarks themselves
at several DOE national laboratories. The Office
of Science is proud of its long association
with research into the fundamental constituents
of matter and of the scientists whose work it
has supported.
Monday,
October 4, 2004
Jack
Craig Named Director Of Energy Department's
Environmental Management Consolidated
The Department of Energy (DOE) announced the
appointment of Jack Craig as director of the
Department of Energys (DOE) Consolidated
Business Center (CBC) in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Friday, October
1, 2004
Nanomaterials
Break out of Laboratory into Marketplace
Miniature medical machines that can bring sight
to the blind and computers that work at the
speed of light are no longer the stuff of futuristic
novels. Argonne National Laboratory researchers
are creating nanomaterials and nanotechnology
to make these and other innovations possible,
and collaborating with industry to bring new
technologies to the marketplace.
Friday, September
24, 2004
Quantum
Universe Web Site Launched
New site describes revolution in 21st-century
particle physics http://interactions.org/quantumuniverse/
U.S.
Department of Energy Awards SEC Closure Alliance,
LLC $235 Million Small Business Contract To
Complete Closure of Fast Flux Test Facility
The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded SEC
Closure Alliance, LLC of Hanford, Wash., a $235
million small business contract to complete
the deactivation and closure of the Fast Flux
Test Facility (FFTF) nuclear reactor at its
Hanford, Wash. site by 2011. The FFTF is a 400-megawatt
liquid-sodium cooled nuclear test reactor in
Hanfords 400 Area, about 13 miles north
of Richland, Wash.
Spun
From Bone - PNNL-USC Team Discovers how Protein
in Teeth Controls Bone-like Crystals to Form
Steely Enamel
Bone and enamel start with the same calcium-phosphate
crystal building material but end up quite different
in structure and physical properties.
Thursday,
September 23, 2004
Department
of Energy Announces Negotiations for Loan of
Oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
The Department of Energy announced that it intends
to enter into negotiations to make available
a limited quantity of crude oil from the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve (SPR), to help relieve physical
shortages of crude oil supplies in the Gulf
of Mexico following recent hurricanes.
Wednesday,
September 22, 2004
New
Insights into Hydrated Electrons Will Aid Biologists,
Chemists
Sometimes, it pays to think small. By observing
how a single electron behaves amid a cluster
of water molecules, a team of scientists has
gained a better understanding of a fundamental
process that drives a myriad of biological and
chemical phenomena, such as the formation of
reactive molecules in the body that can cause
disease.
Tuesday, September
21, 2004
Sequencing
of Poplar Genome Giant Step for Research Community
Sequencing the Populus genome represents a huge
international success, and scientists at Oak
Ridge National Laboratory expect it to sprout
big gains in research involving alternative
energy production and environmental restoration.
Monday, September
20, 2004
HIV
Dementia Mechanism Discovered
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory have discovered
a key mechanism in the brains of people with
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) dementia.
The study is the first to document decreases
in the neurotransmitter dopamine in those with
the condition, and may lead to new, more effective
therapies. HIV dementia is a type of cognitive
decline that is more common in the later stages
of HIV infection.
'Smart'
Drilling Prototype Yields More Oil, Gas; Reaches
Milestone
A Department of Energy (DOE) sponsored technology
that allows natural gas and oil explorers to
drill safer, more productive wells by using
a high-speed, down-hole communications system
has achieved a major milestone with the successful
testing of a prototype in a full-scale commercial
well for the first time, putting the technology,
called Intellipipe, on the fast track
to commercialization.
University
of Chicago: "Nuclear Power Competitive
With Coal & Natural Gas"
While experts have debated the costs associated
with developing advanced nuclear power generation,
the first exhaustive study examining the economic
competitiveness of nuclear power has been completed
by the University of Chicago and it shows that
the future cost associated with nuclear power
production is comparable with gas and coal-based
energy generation.
Friday, September
17, 2004
Accelerator
Systems Division Keeps Nation's Brightest X-rays
Beaming
Argonne is home to the Advanced Photon Source,
this hemisphere's most brilliant source of X-rays
for scientific research. The Accelerator Systems
Division maintains the equipment to provide
optimal X-ray quality with few interruptions
to scientists. Researchers come from a variety
of disciplines and from industry, academia and
national and international laboratories.
ORNL
Microscope Pushes Back Barrier of 'How Small'
Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers, using
a state- of-the-art microscope and new computerized
imaging technology, have pushed back the barrier
of how small we can see--to a record, atom-scale
0.6 angstrom. ORNL, a Department of Energy national
laboratory, also held the previous record, at
0.7 angstrom.
Thursday,
September 16, 2004
Successful
CO2 Sequestration and Enhanced Oil Recovery
Project Heads Into Phase II
In a multinational project that includes the
U.S. Department of Energy, more than 110 billion
cubic feet of 95 percent pure CO2 have been
injected into the Weyburn Oilfield in Saskatchewan,
Canada, near the North Dakota border. The effort,
known as the Weyburn Project, is expected to
store about 22 million tons of CO2 and produce
130 million barrels of oil over 20 years. Most
of the injected CO2 comes from the Dakota Gasification
Companys synfuels plant in Beulah, N.D.,
via a 320-kilometer pipeline.
Neutron
Physics Instrument may Unlock Mysteries of Universe
Fundamental questions that particle physicists
have pondered for decades might be answered
when a $9.2 million neutron physics beam line
is built at the Department of Energy's Spallation
Neutron Source on Chestnut Ridge.
Tuesday, September
14, 2004
Peering
Inside the Body, With a New Spin-literally
This story is unabashedly all spin. What's the
angle? Why, magic. Its subjecta mouse
in a form-fitted Plexiglas tubeperforms
the honors, spinning like an old phonograph
record, at a leisurely one to three revolutions
a second. The mouse chamber is tilted just so
inside a magnetic field being pelted with radio
waves. The tiny rodent-adventurer and her cohorts
are put under and are no worse for the wear.
Fermilab
Offers Tours of Antimatter Production Site,
October 3 and 24
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory are offering
special "Antimatter Tours" on October
3 and October 24, at 1 p.m. The two-hour program
includes a 30-minute presentation by a Fermilab
scientist, followed by a tour through a section
of the accelerator tunnel that is used to produce
antiprotons.
Friday, September
10, 2004
PNNL
Lands $10.3 Million NIH Biodefense Contract
to Unlock Proteomes of Salmonella and Pox
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has received
a $10.3 million biodefense contract from the
National Institute of Allergies and Infectious
Agents (NIAID) to identify the proteins that
regulate the bacteria that cause salmonella
poisoning and typhoid fever, and the monkey
pox virus.
Thursday,
September 9, 2004
Energy
Department Early Career Scientists and Engineers
Honored
At a White House ceremony, seven researchers
funded by the Department of Energy (DOE) and
its National Nuclear Security Administration
were honored for their work ranging from nanoscale
materials to the geology of Nevada.
Wednesday,
September 8, 2004
DOE
AND OPIC Form Partnership to Promote Environmentally
Sound Economic Development in Emerging Markets
U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham and Overseas
Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) President
and CEO Dr. Peter S. Watson signed an agreement
acknowledging their partnership in the effort
to promote investment in cleaner, more efficient
energy technologies in emerging markets throughout
the world.
Monday, September
6, 2004
Historic
Research Division Continues to Push Nuclear
Frontiers
The building housing Argonne's Chemical Engineering
Division (CMT) was named a Nuclear Historic
Landmark this summer by the American Nuclear
Society. The award recognizes the division's
significant contributions to the development,
implementation and peaceful use of nuclear technology.
Friday, September
3, 2004
$18
Million Bioinformatics Center to Become Weapon
Against Deadly Diseases
A computer database designed to help biomedical
scientists identify and exploit the weak spots
in scores of deadly microorganisms will be established
with an $18 million contract from the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
(NIAID).
Thursday,
September 2, 2004
PNNL
Scientist Selected for National Academy Symposium
Yong Wang, a senior scientist at the Department
of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory,
has been invited to participate in the National
Academy of Engineering's 10th annual Frontiers
of Engineering symposium, September 9-11, in
Irvine, Calif.
Wednesday,
September 1, 2004
A
Guiding Light on the Nanoscale
Another important step towards realizing the
promise of lightning fast photonic technology
has been taken by scientists with the U.S. Department
of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
(Berkeley Lab) and the University of California
at Berkeley. Researchers have demonstrated that
semiconductor nanoribbons, single crystals measuring
tens of hundreds of microns in length, but only
a few hundred or less nanometers in width and
thickness (about one ten-millionth of an inch),
can serve as "waveguides" for channeling
and directing the movement of light through
circuitry.
Monday, August
30, 2004
AMES
Laboratory Wins Regional Technology Transfer
Awards
The U. S. Department of Energys Ames Laboratory
will be presented two technology-transfer awards
at the Federal Laboratory Consortium Mid-Continent
and Far-West Regional Meeting, Sept. 7-10, in
South Padre, Texas. The FLC awards recognize
Ames Lab for superb efforts in linking its mission
and expertise with potential users of government-developed
technologies and services.
Monday, August
23, 2004
Energy
Technology Researchers Solve Energy and Medical
Problems
Argonne's Energy
Technology Division (ET) provides innovative
materials and engineering solutions to national
energy challenges that range from energy production
and conservation to transportation. Researchers
also find creative ways to re-use and extend
the value of their discoveries.
Sunday, August
22, 2004
Taking
Charge of Molecular Wires
Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory and the University
of Florida have uncovered information that may
help molecular wires replace silicon
in micro-electronic circuits and/or components
in solar energy storage systems. The scientists
were studying how electric charge is distributed
in polymer molecule chains that are several
nanometers, or billionths of a meter, in length.
Why
Damaged DNA Gets a Case of the Bends
Our knees may become stiff when injured, but
banged up DNA becomes flexible, suggests the
most detailed computer model of damaged DNA
to date. Further, this flexibility explains
how the body's enzymes recognize and fix damaged
DNA, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's
Maciej Haranczyk reported at the American Chemical
Society national meeting.
Thursday,
August 19, 2004
PNNL
Researchers Join 2004 Class of HPS Fellows
Don Bihl and Bruce Napier, researchers at the
Department of Energys Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory, recently were named fellows
of the Health Physics Society. The honorees
were recognized in July at the HPS annual meeting
in Washington, D.C., for their outstanding contributions
to health physics.
Wednesday,
August 18, 2004
Oil
Well Pump Tests May Dramatically Reduce Operating
Costs, Increase Domestic Oil Recovery
A new hydraulic pump currently undergoing near-flawless
field tests at the Department of Energys
Rocky Mountain Oilfield Testing Center (RMOTC)
could reduce the operating cost of high-volume
offshore oil wells by 40 percent, adding to
Americas oil reserves and energy security
by prolonging the life of mature oil fields.
Argonne
Researcher Wins Award from Hispanic Engineering
Society
A researcher at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory has won the Outstanding
Technical Achievement Award from an Hispanic
engineering organization, the third Argonne
researcher and the second in a row
to do so.
A
Better Catalyst for Ammonia Production
Research by scientists at the U.S. Department
of Energys Brookhaven National Laboratory
may help lead to a more efficient catalyst for
ammonia production, one of the countrys
largest industries.
Fermilab
Scientists Present New Physics Results at ICHEP
Beijing
Scientists from the Department of Energy's Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory are presenting
new results from experiments performed at the
world's highest-energy particle accelerator
during the 32nd International Conference on
High Energy Physics in Beijing, China, August
16-22. The physicists from Fermilab and from
universities and laboratories around the world
traveled to Beijing to present new results from
the DZero and CDF experiments.
The
First Engineering of Cell Surfaces in Living
Animals
Four years ago Carolyn Bertozzi, a member of
the Materials Sciences Division at the Department
of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
and a professor of chemistry at the University
of California at Berkeley, introduced a new
way of engineering the surfaces of cells, by
arming cell-surface sugars to take part in a
modified chemical reaction known as the Staudinger
ligation.
Tuesday, August
17, 2004
Secretary
Recognizes 2004 Project Management Awardees
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham recently
recognized the winners of the Secretary of Energys
Fourth Annual Project Management Awards at a
ceremony at the Department of Energy. The awards
acknowledge outstanding performance based on
successful completion or near completion of
a project and overall management of the project
or program.
Monday, August
16, 2004
New
Projects Selected to Ensure Energy Security
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
the selection of nine projects totaling $10
million to develop the Nations oil and
gas resources and protect the environment. The
new projects, part of the Department of Energys
Natural Gas and Oil Environmental Program, will
address issues to further boost President Bushs
emphasis on energy security.
ORNL
to host Small Business Day Aug. 30
Small businesses interested in working with
four Department of Energy national laboratories
managed or co-managed by the Battelle Memorial
Institute of Columbus, Ohio, may participate
in a two-day conference Aug. 30-31 at DOE's
Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Friday, August
13, 2004
U.S./Canada
Report Details Actions Taken to Reduce Blackout
Risk
The American and Canadian co-leads of the Power
System Outage Task Force, David Meyer and Dr.
Nawal Kamel, have released a joint report called
The
August 14th Blackout One Year Later: Actions
Taken to Reduce Blackout Risk. The report
details key accomplishments over the last year
and identifies major challenges still ahead.
Thursday,
August 12, 2004
Energy
Department Announces 2004 University Coal Research
Recipients
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that 22 universities in 18 states will receive
$3.4 million in fossil energy research grants
through a Department of Energy (DOE) program
that brings science, university students, and
their professors together to advance the study
of new clean and efficient coal-use technologies
and concepts. Southern Illinois University will
receive $49,997 for a clean coal project.
Wednesday,
August 11, 2004
Jefferson
Lab Detector Technology Aids Development of
Cystic Fibrosis Therapy
To study the structure of the nucleus of the
atom, DOEs Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator
Facility develops and employs a wide range of
cutting-edge detector technologies. Now, Jefferson
Lab scientists have used their expertise to
build a small animal medical imager thats
helping researchers develop a new gene therapy
technique for cystic fibrosis.
Near-zero-energy
Buildings Blessing to Owners, Environment
An electricity meter that sometimes runs backwards
is just one of the cool aspects of Department
of Energy near-zero-energy homes.
Tuesday, August
10, 2004
DOE
Completes First Global Threat Reduction Initiative
Shipment Returning Nuclear Fuel to the United
States
In another step in the Bush administration's
efforts under the Department of Energy's (DOE)
new Global Threat Reduction Initiative (GTRI),
a shipment of spent nuclear fuel from three
research reactors in Germany was completed on
August 5.
PNNL
Testing Reliability of Radiation Detectors
A marathon of testing is under way at the Department
of Energys Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory to ensure that personal radiation
detection equipment purchased with Department
of Homeland Security funds meets new standards
for identifying potential threats.
Monday, August
9, 2004
Energy
Department to Award Illinois $280,000 for Two
Energy Savings Projects
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that the Department of Energy (DOE) will provide
$280,000 to the state of Illinois for two energy
efficiency and renewable energy projects. Funding
is being provided through DOEs State Energy
Program Special Projects competitive grants.
Energy
Department to Award $16.3 Million for 162 Energy
Savings Projects
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that the Department of Energy (DOE) will provide
$16,337,695 for 162 energy efficiency and renewable
energy projects in 43 states and the District
of Columbia. Funding is being provided through
DOEs State Energy Program Special Projects
competitive grants.
Powerful
Results: Abraham Releases Report on Energy Department's
Successful Efforts to Implement the President's
Management Agenda
At the direction of Secretary of Energy Spencer
Abraham, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
released a report detailing the results of its
department-wide effort to implement management
reforms called for under President Bushs
Management Agenda (PMA). In July 2004, the Department
of Energy was ranked first among all cabinet
agencies in its efforts to implement the PMA.
Department
of Energy Projects Win R&D Magazine Technology
Awards
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that researchers at the Department of Energys
(DOE) National Energy Technology Laboratory
(NETL) and companies conducting DOE-funded research
have won four awards given this year by R&D
Magazine for the most outstanding technology
developments with the greatest commercial potential.
Automated
Science Speeds Solution of Human Genome Data
Scientists in Argonne 's Biosciences
Division are automating and accelerating
the complex processes that coax a protein to
reveal its structure so they can learn the role
Nature assigned it.
The
Telomere Crisis: A Crucial Stage in Breast Cancer
Telomere crisis is an important early event
in the development of breast cancer, and its
occurrence can be identified with precision,
according to recent findings by a team of scientists
at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory and the University of California
at San Francisco. Their report is now available
through advance online publication of Nature
Genetics.
Friday, August
6, 2004
Energy
Secretary Abraham Announces Plan to Help Compensate
Sick Nuclear Workers in Iowa
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham has
announced a major breakthrough that should allow
expedited payment of workers compensation
claims for the former employees of the Iowa
Army Ammunition plant.
Thursday, August
5, 2004
Research
Reveals Functions of Anti-Cancer Molecule
A research team including Huilin Li, now a scientist
at the U.S. Department of Energys Brookhaven
National Laboratory, has discovered the mechanism
of epothilone A (EpoA), a next-generation cancer
treatment. Now in Phase III clinical trials,
EpoA may avoid many of the problems associated
with paclitaxel (Taxol), the widely used chemotherapeutic
agent, which acts in a similar way. Understanding
these mechanisms may help drug designers create
even more effective drugs.
Tuesday, August
3, 2004
How
They Spent Their Summer Vacation: QuarkNet Students
Experience Real Work of Fermilab Scientists
Inaugurating a new phase of the QuarkNet education
program, four local high school students spent
eight weeks soldering electronic equipment,
writing code for computer programs, analyzing
data from particle physics experiments, standing
shifts in a particle detector control room,
attending lectures and collaboration meetings,
and experiencing the real-life environment and
challenges of scientists at the U.S. Department
of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
Monday, August
2, 2004
U.S.
Energy Secretary Reappoints Connelly to Top
Federal Advisory Board
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham has reappointed
Massachusetts Department of Telecommunications
and Energy Commissioner James Connelly to serve
on the Department of Energys Electricity
Advisory Board.
New
Light on How Metals Change Shape at the Nanoscale
A nanocrystalline metal is one whose average
grain size is measured in billionths of a meter,
much smaller than in most ordinary metals. As
the grain size of a metal shrinks, it can become
many times stronger, but it also usually loses
ductility. To take advantage of increasing strength
with decreasing grain size, researchers must
first understand a fundamental problem: by what
processes do nanosized crystals of metal stretch,
bend, or otherwise deform under strain?
Physicists
Discover Dramatic Difference in Behavior of
Matter Versus Antimatter
Physicists conducting the BaBar experiment at
the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC),
a Department of Energy laboratory operated by
Stanford University, announced exciting new
results demonstrating a dramatic difference
in the behavior of matter and antimatter. They
submitted their results to the journal Physical
Review Letters for online publication.
Friday, July
30, 2004
Energy
Department Issues Three Advance Notices of Proposed
Rulemaking for Appliance Energy Efficiency Standards
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham has announced
the upcoming publication of Advance Notices
of Proposed Rulemaking regarding energy efficiency
standards for three products: distribution transformers,
commercial air conditioners and heat pumps,
and residential furnaces and boilers. Each of
these products will be the subject of an upcoming
public meeting at which the Department of Energy
(DOE) will summarize its analysis and seek public
comment.
Thursday,
July 29, 2004
Energy
Department Awards Illinois $13.85 Million to
Weatherize Homes of Low-Income Families
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham has announced
the award of $13.85 million to the State of
Illinois to improve the energy efficiency of
the homes of low-income families. This amount
is part of a July 1 award of $94.8 million to
20 states.
Wednesday,
July 26, 2004
President's
Clean Coal Initiative Attracts "Second
Wave" of Technologies to Address Environmental,
Energy Priorities
The Department of Energy (DOE) announced it
has received proposals for projects in a new
generation of clean coal projects, valued at
nearly $6 billion, in the latest phase of the
Presidents Clean Coal Power Initiative
(CCPI).
Friday, July
23, 2004
Energy
Secretary Abraham Directs Complex-Wide Stand-Down
of Classified Operations Using Controlled Removable
Electronic Media
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham today ordered
that all Department of Energy (DOE) operations
using such controlled removable electronic media
(CREM) as classified hard drives or computer
discs conduct an immediate stand-down to improve
procedures for protecting such media.
Wednesday,
July 21, 2004
Energy
Department Announces Resignation of James Glotfelty,
Director of Office of Electric Transmission
and Distribution
The Department of Energy announced the resignation
of James Glotfelty, Director of the Office of
Electric Transmission and Distribution (OETD)
effective August 2, 2004. The offices
current deputy director, William Parks, will
be the acting director of the office.
Monday, July
19, 2004
PNNL
Wins Three R&D 100 Awards, Shares a Fourth
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has been
honored with three R&D 100 Awards for 2004,
while four additional PNNL researchers share
an R&D 100 Award with Battelle for their
work on a Battelle-funded project.
Fuel
Cells to Advance Zero-Emissions Energy
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
a new phase of fuel-cell research designed to
hasten the wider availability of zero-emissions
energy. Eleven new projects with total value
of nearly $4.2 million, including private-sector
cost-sharing of more than 20 percent, focus
on solving the remaining issues in developing
solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) systems for commercial
use.
Implementing
Agreement Signed With Romania Under the Newly
Created Global Threat Reduction Initiative
In the most recent step in the Administrations
efforts to secure nuclear materials at potentially
vulnerable sites in the world, the United States
and Romania signed an implementing agreement
to accelerate the groundwork for future work
on nuclear nonproliferation activities.
Friday, July
16, 2004
'Flying'
Nanotubes are Strong and Hard
Diamonds are the hardest known substance. Carbon
nanotubes are the strongest. Scientists at the
U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National
Laboratory tried to combine the best of both
worlds by creating a composite nanostructure.
They wanted to grow tiny carbon tubes with tiny
diamonds.
Wednesday,
July 14, 2004
Argonne
Scientists Determine Structure of Staph, Anthrax
Enzyme
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory and the University
of Chicago have determined the crystal structure
of sortase B, an enzyme found in the bacteria
that cause staph and anthrax. While an antibiotic
is probably five to seven years away, the structure
could provide the first clue in developing a
treatment for the infections.
ORNL
Nanoprobe Creates World of New Possibilities
A technology with proven environmental, forensics
and medical applications has received a shot
in the arm because of an invention by researchers
at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National
Laboratory.
Tuesday, July
13, 2004
U.S.
ITER Project Office will be Located at Princeton
Plasma Physics Laboratory
The U.S. Department of Energy announced today
that the U.S. project office for ITER, a major
international fusion experiment, will be located
at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL).
PPPL is located on Princeton Universitys
James Forrestal Campus in Plainsboro, NJ, and
is charged with developing the scientific understanding
and key innovations that will lead to an attractive
fusion energy source.
Friday, July
9, 2004
Argonne
Wins Four R&D 100 Awards for Innovative
Technologies
Four technologies developed or co-developed
at Argonne have been recognized with R&D
100 Awards, which highlight some of the best
products and technologies newly available for
commercial use from around the world. This is
the 41st year the technology awards have been
given by R&D
magazine to recognize the "100 most
technologically significant new products"
from the entries the magazine receive.
Thursday, July
8, 2004
Energy
Department Science Education Initiative Launched
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and
its national laboratories are launching an initiative
to promote science literacy and help develop
the next generation of scientists and engineers.
Ames
Laboratory Welcomes DOE Science Education Initiative
Argonne
National Laboratory Energy Secretary Abraham
announces new science education initiative
Brookhaven
National Laboratory - Energy Department Science
Education Initiative Launched
Fermilab
Supports Energy Department Science Education
Initiative
Jefferson
Lab Offers Many Programs that Support and Complement
the New DOE Education Initiative and STARS
Berkeley
Lab Welcomes DOEs Science Education Initiative
Oak
Ridge National Laboratory Joins Science Education
Effort
Science
and Engineering Education at Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory
Princeton
Plasma Physics Laboratory - Energy Department
Launches Science Education Initiative
Energy
Secretary Abraham introduced a major education
initiative at SLAC with his announcement of
the STARS! program
Wednesday,
July 7, 2004
Energy
Department Brings Over $1 Billion in New Sub-Contracting
Opportunities to Small Businesses
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) opened its
Fifth Annual National Small Business Conference
at the Philadelphia Marriott-Downtown. The purpose
of the conference is to reach out to small businesses
-- including Small Disadvantaged, Women-owned,
8(A), HUBZone and Service-Disabled Veteran-owned
businesses -- to assist them in contracting
with DOE.
Tuning
the Nanoworld
Scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
have found new ways of combining quantum dots
and segmented nanorods into multiply branching
forms and have applied new ways to calculate
the electronic properties of these nanostructures,
whose dimensions are measured in billionths
of a meter.
Tuesday, July
6, 2004
Study
Finds Plant Enzyme Function Changes with Location
in Cell
Scientists have long thought that individual
enzymes have specific, single jobs dependent
on their molecular shape. According to this
premise, enzymes could only evolve to perform
new functions by accumulating several shape-changing
mutations, which can take thousands of generations.
Now, scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory have discovered
another factor that can change several plant
enzymes functions instantaneously: their
location within the cell. Depending on where
these enzymes end up, they produce slightly
different products.
U.S.
Removes Iraqi Nuclear and Radiological Materials
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced that
the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Department
of Defense (DOD) have completed a joint operation
to secure and remove from Iraq radiological
and nuclear materials that could potentially
be used in a radiological dispersal device or
diverted to support a nuclear weapons program.
Berkeley
Lab Wins "R&D 100" Awards for
Unique Electrochromic Windows and Synthetic
Nanomotor
A unique new type of energy-saving electrochromic
window and the smallest synthetic motor ever
reported, both of which were developed by scientists
at the U.S. Department of Energys Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab),
have been recognized with 2004 R&D 100 Awards.
Given by R&D Magazine, the awards have been
called the Oscars of technology.
The addition of these two winners brings the
total of R&D 100 Awards won by Berkeley
Lab researchers to 34.
Thursday,
July 1, 2004
Fermilab
Inaugurates StarLight Connection
Officials at the Department of Energy's Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory today (Thursday)
announced a potential five-hundredfold increase
in the laboratory's computer network connections
to U.S. and international science communities.
A new high-performance optical fiber link will
connect Fermilab with one of the most advanced
optical networking facilities in the world--the
Science Technology And Research Light-Illuminated
Gigabit High-Performance Transit facility on
the Chicago campus of Northwestern University.
Wednesday,
June 30, 2004
Yucca
Mountain Documents Made Available for Licensing
Proceeding
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has certified
to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) the
public availability through the Internet of
approximately 1.2 million documents totaling
some 5.6 million pages regarding Yucca Mountain.
The documents are available on the Departments
website, and will be included in the NRC's Licensing
Support Network (LSN).
Department
of Energy Announces New Solicitation to Provide
Nuclear Energy Research Initiative Grants
The Department of Energy (DOE) announced the
issuance of solicitation DE-PS07-04ID14551 to
conduct advanced nuclear energy research at
the Nations universities. The solicitation
was issued June 1, 2004. Applications are due
by July 16, 2004.
Monday, June
28, 2004
June
28
Issue of DOE Pulse. Pulse is a newsletter about
accomplishments at the Department of Energy's
national laboratories. Here is some of what
you'll find in this issue:
* Jefferson Lab: Origins of matter explored
* Brookhaven: Calcium-doped superconductors
* Ames: Carbon-doped superconductors
* Argonne: Materials 'can't be too thin'
DOE
Scientists Sample the Skies
This summer, scientists from the U.S. Department
of Energys (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory
(ANL), Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL),
and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL)
will take to the skies above Western Pennsylvania
for one month to sample the air for aerosol
pollutants and evaluate their effects on Earths
climate. The research is part of the International
Consortium for Atmospheric Research on Transport
and Transformation (ICARTT) experiment, an effort
by many separate institutions and government
agencies to conduct a joint regional air quality
and climate study of unprecedented scope.
Friday, June
25, 2004
DOE
Statement on Passage of Energy & Water Development
Appropriations Bill (HR 4614)
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham released
a statement following the passage of the Fiscal
Year 2005 Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Bill by the House of Representatives.
Ames
Lab Physicists "Perturb" Superconductor
to New Heights
At the U. S. Department of Energys Ames
Laboratory, a basic research effort to enhance
the properties of magnesium diboride, MgB2,
superconductors by doping them with carbon atoms
has doubled the magnetic field the material
can withstand. The work may one day ease the
expense associated with current superconducting
materials that generate the intense magnetic
fields required for such applications as magnetic
resonance imaging for medical diagnostics, high-field
magnets for research, and superconducting magnets
for particle accelerators.
Thursday,
June 24, 2004
More
Electricity, Lower Emissions from Lignite Plants
Are Goals of New Clean Coal Power Initiative
Project
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
the testing of the Lignite Fuel Enhancement
System, a new process that could dramatically
reduce air emissions from certain coal-based
power plants while boosting overall generating
capacity.
Wednesday,
June 23, 2004
Department
of Energy Empowers Employee Diversity
The Department of Energys (DOE) Office
of Economic Impact and Diversity held its Second
Quarter Special Emphasis Program, focusing on
forums that educate and inform DOE employees
about diverse groups within the United States.
Tuesday, June
22, 2004
Energy
Secretary Abraham Calls for Study of U.S. Refining
Capacity
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham called on
the National Petroleum Council (NPC) to conduct
a study of refining capacity in the United States.
PNNL,
SGI to Team on Storage Technology Development
for Data-intensive Computing
The Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest
National Laboratory (PNNL) has announced a research
alliance aimed at enabling a new generation
of fast and efficient storage technology for
data-intensive computing. Part of a long-term
collaboration between PNNL and Silicon Graphics,
the alliance includes options for more than
2.5 petabytes of storage over the next two years.
Monday, June
21, 2004
PNNL
Supercomputer Holds Onto Top-10 Spot in New
Rankings
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's supercomputer
has been ranked in the top 10 on the top 500
list of the world's fastest computers for a
third consecutive time since the computer went
online last year. The computer at the Department
of Energy lab dropped four slots to No. 9 from
a peak of No. 5 in last fall's rankings.
Thursday,
June 17, 2004
Nobel
Laureate Steven Chu Named Director of Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory
The University of California Board of Regents
named Steven Chu, professor in the physics and
applied physics departments at Stanford University
and a co-winner of the Nobel Prize in physics,
as director of the UC-managed Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory.
Ability
to 'See' Through Rock Helps Find Oil Reserves
Successful tests with a new technology funded
by the Department of Energy (DOE) have allowed
geologists to see through thousands
of feet of rock to find and tap pockets of oil.
Known as cross-well electromagnetic imaging,
the technology penetrates the rocks between
oil wells with very long and slow electromagnetic
waves.
Surprise:
Fermilab's SELEX Experiment Finds Puzzling New
Particle
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory will announce
on Friday, June 18 the observation of an unexpected
new member of a family of subatomic particles
called "heavy-light" mesons. The new
meson, a combination of a strange quark and
a charm antiquark, is the heaviest ever observed
in this family, and it behaves in surprising
ways -- it apparently breaks the rules on decaying
into other particles.
Wednesday,
June 16, 2004
DOE
Seeks 'Small-Footprint' Oil and Gas Technologies
The Department of Energy (DOE) has announced
a major new research and development initiative
to develop microhole technologies
-- those that use portable drilling rigs with
a smaller footprint and lower environmental
impact.
Energy
Secretary Spencer Abraham Announces Resignation
of Jessie Roberson, Assistant Secretary for
Environmental Management
It is with grateful praise and in recognition
of her outstanding talents that I regretfully
announce that Jessie Roberson has decided to
leave her position as Assistant Secretary of
Environmental Management at the Department of
Energy effective July 15, Secretary Abraham
said.
Friday, June
11, 2004
Argonne
Launches New Utility Advisory Board
Laboratory Director Hermann Grunder announced
the formation of an Argonne National Laboratory/University
of Chicago Utility Advisory Board. The new board,
comprised of senior executives from eight nuclear
generating companies will provide advice to
the laboratory on the direction and focus of
the laboratory's priorities in three key areas
related to nuclear energy.
Thursday,
June 10, 2004
DOE's
Carbon Sequestration Program Adds Partners
The Department of Energy (DOE) today announced
that seven new states and 13 organizations have
joined the Carbon Sequestration Regional Partnership
Program, the centerpiece of national efforts
to validate and deploy carbon sequestration
technologies.
Energy
Secretary Abraham Notes Improvements in Gasoline
and Crude Oil Stock Levels
The latest International Energy Agency (IEA)
data released indicates that oil stock levels
are increasing.
Wednesday,
June 9, 2004
Department
of Energy to Conduct Separate Competitions for
Los Alamos National Laboratory and Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory
The Department of Energy announced that it will
conduct separate competitions for the management
of Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratories, both now managed by the University
of California. The department also announced
that it will extend the current contract for
the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory beyond
its current September 30, 2005, expiration date
in order to separate the two competitions.
Monday, June
7, 2004
Secretary
of Energy Spencer Abraham Tours Hydrogen Storage
and Dispensing Equipment at Air Products, Inc.
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham visited
Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. to highlight
the companys role in President Bushs
Hydrogen Fuel Initiative.
Wednesday,
June 2, 2004
Fluid
Stripes May Be Essential for High-Temperature
Superconductivity
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory, in collaboration
with researchers at the Rutherford Appleton
Laboratory in the United Kingdom and Tohoku
University in Japan, have discovered evidence
supporting a possible mechanism for high-temperature
superconductivity that had previously appeared
incompatible with certain experimental observations.
The finding, which hinges paradoxically on what
the scientists observed in a particular material
that loses its superconductivity for a special
composition of atoms, is bound to be controversial
in this dynamic field. It is described in the
June 3, 2004 issue of Nature.
Tuesday, May
25, 2004
Ground
Broken for Nanotechnology Center at Sandia and
Los Alamos Labs
The new Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies
(CINT) at the Department of Energys Los
Alamos (LANL) and Sandia National Laboratories
(SNL) moved closer to reality with two groundbreaking
ceremonies this week. The $76 million center
is one of five new Nanoscale Science Research
Centers to be built by the Department of Energys
Office of Science to provide researchers with
world-class facilities for the interdisciplinary
study of matter at the atomic scale.
US
Department of Energy Provides Nuclear Security
Assistance for 2004 Athens Olympics
Tuesday in Greece, Secretary of Energy Spencer
Abraham officially transferred hand-held radiological
detection equipment to Greek officials to support
increased security for the upcoming Olympic
Games. The event, held at the Ministry of Development
in Athens, highlighted international cooperation
to enhance nuclear security measures for the
Olympics.
Friday, May
21, 2004
Argonne,
Notre Dame Sign Agreement for Institute for
Theoretical Sciences
The new institute will attract visiting international
scholars, junior researchers and graduate students
in several areas of basic and applied theoretical
sciences. The institute will provide them
with the opportunity to pursue research in the
international, intellectually stimulating environment
of the University
of Notre Dame and Argonne National Laboratory,
said Boldizsar Janko, director of the new institute
and professor of physics at Notre Dame.
Energy
Department and Alliance to Save Energy Team
to Help Consumers Save Energy and Money
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the
Alliance to Save Energy (Alliance) announced
a year-long Powerful $avings public education
and awareness campaign designed to provide consumers
with the information and tools necessary to
make smart energy choices a part of their daily
lives.
ORNL-State
Partnership Lauded at Dedication of Computational
Facility
Touting potential economic benefits to Tennessee,
the state's head of economic development helped
dedicate a new $10 million facility Friday to
house the Joint Institute for Computational
Sciences at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Wednesday,
May 19, 2004
Six
DOE National Labs Recognized for Excellence
in Technology Transfer
Researchers at six Department of Energy national
laboratories have been honored for their outstanding
work in the process of transferring federally
developed technology to the marketplace.
Tuesday, May
18, 2004
DOE
Surpasses Congressional Target of Recovering
Radioactive Sources
The Department of Energy (DOE) has surpassed
a congressional target of recovering and securing
5,000 radioactive sources domestically within
an 18-month time period, said Secretary of Energy
Spencer Abraham. These radioactive materials
could be used in a radiological dispersal device,
also known as a dirty bomb. The
Departments National Nuclear Security
Administration passed the congressional target
this month by recovering and securing 5,529
high-risk sources during the specified time-period.
Monday, May
17, 2004
Argonne,
U.S. Air Force Sign Agreement for Technical
Fellowship Program
Officials from the U.S.
Air Force and the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory signed an agreement
that will open educational opportunities to
Air Force officers and civilian employees in
technical fields.
Friday, May
14, 2004
Argonne
to Play Major Role in New Computer Facility
The U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National
Laboratory will play a major role in the development
of a new national computational science facility
aimed at deploying a supercomputer capable of
sustained performance of 100 trillion floating-point
operations per second (teraflops) by 2007.
Thursday,
May 13, 2004
Fermilab's
Main Injector Wetland Mitigation Project Wins
2003 Conservation and Native Landscaping Award
On Tuesday, May 11, 2004, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency and Chicago Wilderness presented
the Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory with a 2003 Conservation and Native
Landscaping Award at a ceremony in Chicago's
Jackson Park. Bharat Mathur, Acting Regional
Administrator for U.S. EPA Region 5, and Elizabeth
McCance, Director of Conservation Programs for
Chicago Wilderness, cited Fermilab's achievement
in using native plants in the Main Injector
Wetland Mitigation Project.
Wednesday,
May 12, 2004
DOE
Leadership-Class Computing Capability for Science
will be Developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced that
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will grant
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Oak
Ridge, Tenn., and its development partners,
Cray Inc., IBM Corp. and Silicon Graphics Inc.,
$25 million in funding to begin to build a 50
teraflop (50 trillion calculations per second)
science research supercomputer. The department
selected ORNL from four proposals received from
its non-weapon national labs.
Tuesday,
May 11, 2004
First
Fermilab LHC Magnet Leaves Illinois, Bound for
Geneva
Officials of the U.S. Department of Energy's
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, near
Chicago, and of the European Organization for
Nuclear Research, CERN, in Geneva, announced
today (Tuesday) the shipment of an advanced
superconducting magnet from Fermilab to CERN.
The first of a series of such magnets designed
and built at Fermilab, the magnet is destined
to play a key role in the operation of the Large
Hadron Collider, a new particle accelerator
now under construction at CERN, due to begin
operating in 2007.
Department
of Energy and General Motors Announce CHALLENGE
X Competition
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and General
Motors (GM) announced the participants of an
exciting new competition to challenge engineering
students across North America to explore advanced
technologies that will reduce the environmental
impact of vehicles while maintaining utility
and performance.
Monday, May
10, 2004
Botulinum
Toxin Structure Offers Clues for Vaccines/Treatments
By deciphering the near atomic-level structure
of the catalytic domain of botulinum toxin type
E one of seven neurotoxins that cause
botulism, a disease that paralyzes victims by
blocking nerve cells ability to communicate
scientists at the U.S. Department of
Energys Brookhaven National Laboratory
are one step closer to a potential vaccine or
treatment. Structures of the toxin and a related
non-toxic version that differs by just one amino
acid appear in the June 1, 2004 issue of the
journal Biochemistry, available online May 8,
2004.
Friday, May
7, 2004
Argonne
Fast-Reactor Pioneer Receives International
Prize
Retired Argonne National Laboratory engineer
Leonard J. Koch will be awarded the Global
Energy International Prize by Russian President
Vladimir Putin in Russia this June. Koch, a
leading world expert on fast reactor technology
will be recognized for his role in development
of Argonne 's Experimental Breeder Reactors
I and II.
Tuesday, May
4, 2004
Energy
Department Early Career Scientists and Engineers
Honored
At a White House ceremony today, seven researchers
funded by the Department of Energy (DOE) and
its National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA) were honored for their work ranging from
understanding stellar explosions to the mechanics
of biological tissues.
Monday, May
3, 2004
First
Data From Deep Underground Experiment Narrow
Search for Dark Matter
With the first data from their underground observatory
in Northern Minnesota, scientists of the Cryogenic
Dark Matter Search have peered with greater
sensitivity than ever before into the suspected
realm of the WIMPS. The sighting of Weakly Interacting
Massive Particles could solve the double mystery
of dark matter on the cosmic scale and of supersymmetry
on the subatomic scale.
New
Brookhaven Laser Facility Captures Molecules
in Action
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory have released
results from the first experiment at Brookhavens
Deep Ultraviolet Free Electron Laser (DUV-FEL),
a facility that produces powerful ultraviolet
laser light for research applications.
May
3 Issue of DOE Pulse. Pulse is a newsletter
about accomplishments at the Department of Energy's
national laboratories. Here is some of what
you'll find in this issue:
* Argonne: No more guessing on interfacial
structure
* Brookhaven: "Beefed up" baceteria
boost phytoremediation
* Jefferson Lab: Laser-zapping for cleaner clothes
* ORNL: Rites of spring have carbon impact
* Pacific Northwest: Methuselah enzymes
High
Schools win the Hydrogen Fuel Cell Model Car
Challenge
It wasnt The Kentucky Derby, but six teams
took their place in the winners circle
at todays second annual Hydrogen Fuel
Cell Model Car Challenge, part of the Department
of Energys National Science Bowl®.
Thursday,
April 29, 2004
Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory to co-lead Center
for Chemical Hydrogen Storage
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, along
with Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico,
will lead a new national Center for Chemical
Hydrogen Storage. It is one of three Department
of Energy "Centers of Excellence"
aimed at enabling use of hydrogen-powered vehicles.
Tuesday, April
27, 2004
Secretary
of Energy Abraham Announces NREL, Los Alamos
and Sandia Hydrogen Storage "Centers of
Excellence"
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
that the Department of Energy (DOE) has selected
over $150 million in hydrogen storage research
projects to support President Bushs Hydrogen
Fuel Initiative.
PNNL
on Fast Track for Hydrogen Fuel Reformer
Researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory are developing
a system to rapidly produce hydrogen from gasoline
in your car. "This brings fuel cell-powered
cars one step closer to the mass market,"
said Larry Pederson, project leader at PNNL.
Researchers will present their developments
at the American Institute for Chemical Engineers
spring meeting in New Orleans, on April 27th,
2004.
Monday, April
26, 2004
Students
Put Model Cars to the Test
Teams of young engineers will put their skills
to the test in the 14 th annual model car competition,
Saturday May 8, sponsored by Argonne National
Laboratory, the U.S. Department of Energy, CNH
and the Society
of Automotive Engineers.
Fermilab
Welcomes Buffalo Fans
The Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory invites buffalo fans to visit its
herd of about 50 buffalo, including 16 young
animals born since April 12. At the current
level of security ("yellow alert"),
visitors may come to Fermilab's Pine Street
entrance and receive a Buffalo Viewing Pass.
The pass allows unescorted visitors to drive
to the buffalo pasture to view the herd. Driving
is restricted to selected roads leading to and
from the buffalo pasture. Bicyclists currently
are allowed access to the site without the need
for a pass.
Monday, April
19, 2004
Energy
Department Approves "Mission Need"
for Upgrading Key Jefferson Lab Facility
Deputy Secretary of Energy Kyle McSlarrow traveled
to the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator
Facility (Jefferson Lab) today to announce that
the Department of Energy has established a mission
need for upgrading the labs Continuous
Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF).
Exposure
to Food Increases Brain Metabolism
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory have produced
new evidence that brain circuits involved in
drug addiction are also activated by the desire
for food. The mere display of food smelling
and tasting favorite foods without actually
eating them causes increases in metabolism
throughout the brain. Increases of metabolism
in the right orbitofrontal cortex, a brain region
that controls drive and pleasure, also correlate
strongly with self-reports of desire for food
and hunger.
Friday, April
16, 2004
First
3-D Look at Diesel Particles Gives Clues to
Cleaner Engines
In the first use ever of a new three-dimensional
technique to study diesel engine emissions,
researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Argonne National Laboratory developed information
that could lead to improved exhaust-cleaning
devices, ways for industry to meet environmental
regulations, and new insights on the impact
to public health from diesel engine emissions.
Thursday,
April 15, 2004
Energy
Secretary Looks Forward to Brazil Meetings Aimed
at Expanding Energy Cooperation
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham will
travel to Brazil this week for a series of meetings
with government officials to further cooperative
energy efforts between the two countries. His
visit is a direct result of the June 2003 meeting
of President George Bush and President Luiz
Inacio Lula Da Silva when the two leaders agreed
to launch a broad, bilateral energy partnership
focusing on hydrogen energy, energy sector investment,
carbon sequestration, electricity modernization,
and offshore drilling project safety.
Wednesday,
April 14, 2004
Department
Refocuses Threat Reduction Efforts to Return
Nuclear Research Reactor Fuel
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced the
latest effort by the Department of Energy to
address the worldwide threat posed by nuclear
and radiological materials. The Secretary has
directed the Departments National Nuclear
Security Administration (NNSA) to consolidate
the U.S. Foreign Research Reactor Spent Nuclear
Fuel (FRR SNF) Acceptance Program within its
nonproliferation mission. This decision is intended
to accelerate and strengthen the Departments
efforts to return weapons-usable nuclear materials
of U.S.-origin back to the United States.
Wednesday,
April 7, 2004
Brookhaven
Lab Helps Develop Technology to Turn Dredged
Material into Cement
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory have helped develop
a new technology that converts material dredged
from the bottoms of harbors and waterways into
a substance that can be made into construction-grade
cement.
Monday, April
5, 2004
DOE
Office of Science Reorganization Announced
The Director of the Department of Energys
Office of Science (SC), Dr. Raymond L. Orbach,
has announced the official launch of a new complex-wide
organizational structure. The new structure
eliminates a layer of management, redefines
roles and responsibilities for headquarters
and field managers and clarifies lines of authority
and accountability. The reorganization will
take the Office of Science into the 21st
century as an efficient, high-performing organization
that continues to produce great science and
real benefits for the American people,
Orbach said.
Secretary
Abraham Statement on White House Appointment
of David Garman to Serve As Acting Under Secretary
U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham issued
a statement, upon the announcement by the White
House of their appointment of David Garman,
currently DOEs Assistant Secretary of
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, to serve
as the acting Under Secretary of Energy.
Thursday,
April 1, 2004
Energy
Department Awards $128.2 Million to 30 States
and the Navajo Nation to Weatherize Homes of
Low-Income Families
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham announced
today the award of $128.2 million to 30 states
and the Navajo Nation to improve the energy
efficiency of the homes of low-income families.
Monday, March
29, 2004
Energy
Department Announces New Industry Partnerships
to Expand Nation's Wind Energy Potential
U.S. Deputy Secretary of Energy Kyle McSlarrow
announced that the Department of Energy will
open negotiations for 21 public-private partnerships
to greatly expand potential U.S. wind development
through advances in cost effective low wind
speed technology. The value of the cost-shared
projects is expected to total $60 million over
the next four years. The announcement came at
the wind industrys Global WINDPOWER 2004
Conference in Chicago.
Friday, March
26, 2004
Protein
Folding on a Chip
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory are proposing
to use a supercomputer originally developed
to simulate elementary particles in high-energy
physics to help determine the structures and
functions of proteins, including, for example,
the 30,000 or so proteins encoded by the human
genome. Structural information will help scientists
better understand proteins role in disease
and health, and may lead to new diagnostic and
therapeutic agents.
Studying
3-D Materials in One Dimension
Research by Young-June Kim, a physicist at the
U.S. Department of Energys Brookhaven
National Laboratory, may help determine how
a class of materials already used in electronic
circuits could be used in optical, or light-based,
circuits, which could replace standard electrical
circuits in telecommunications, computer networking,
and other areas of technology.
Tuesday, March
23, 2004
Physicists
See Golden Needle in a Micro-Cosmic Haystack
An international team of physicists examining
an extremely rare form of subatomic particle decay
a veritable golden needle in a micro-cosmic
haystack of 7.8 trillion candidates has
discovered evidence for the highly sought process,
which could be an indication of new forces beyond
those incorporated in the Standard Model of particle
physics.
Wednesday,
March 17, 2004
Electricity
Controls Nanocrystal Shape
Wires, tubes and brushes make it possible to
build and maintain the machines and devices
we use on a daily basis. Now, with help from
a surprising source, these same building blocks
can easily be created on a scale 10,000 times
smaller than the period at the end of this sentence.
Wednesday,
March 10, 2004
Energy
Department Releases Long-Term Hydrogen Research
Plan
The Department of Energy (DOE) released its
Hydrogen Posture Plan, a document
which outlines the activities, milestones and
deliverables that DOE plans to pursue to support
Americas shift to a hydrogen-based transportation
energy system. This plan identifies milestones
for technology development over the next decade,
leading up to a commercialization decision by
industry in 2015.
Tuesday, March
9, 2004
Secretary
Abraham Announces Energy Hog Campaign; Launches
with Ad Council and Home Depot to Audience of
School Children
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham launched
a national public service advertising campaign
designed to make children and their parents
aware of energy efficient behavior through a
new spokes-villain, the Energy Hog, an energy
waster.
Friday, March
5, 2004
Department
of Energy Recognized for Exemplary Performance
on the Implementation of the President's Management
Agenda
The Department of Energy (DOE) was recognized
at the 2004 Government Performance Summit for
its accomplishments in making significant management
improvements over the past three years. The
"Excellence in Management" award for
exemplary performance on the implementation
of the Presidents Management Agenda was
presented to Deputy Secretary of Energy Kyle
McSlarrow, who delivered the keynote address
on the second day of the summit.
Conference
Encourages Young Women to Explore Scientific,
Technical Careers
The U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National
Laboratory will host the 17th annual Science
Careers in Search of Women conference, Friday,
March 12.
Tuesday, March
2, 2004
ENERGY
STAR® Honors Efficiency Leaders
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) honored
winners of the 2004 ENERGY STAR Partner of the
Year awards. The awards highlight the efforts
of leading manufacturers, retailers, utility
companies, and a variety of state and regional
programs that promote energy efficiency and
awareness of the ENERGY STAR label.
Monday, March
1, 2004
DOE
Announces Deputy General Counsel for Environment
and Nuclear Programs Appointment
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced
that Gary Lavine will join the Department on
March 8 as Deputy General Counsel for Environment
and Nuclear Programs serving under General Counsel
Lee Otis.
New
Technique Dates Saharan Groundwater as Million
Years Old
The Sahara Desert was once a lush, green landscape
dotted with lakes and ponds. Evidence of this
past verdancy lies hidden beneath the sands
of Egypt and Libya, in the form of a huge aquifer
of fresh groundwater. An international team
of geologists and physicists has found that
this groundwater has been flowing slowly northward
(at about the rate grass grows) for the past
million years. Their findings are published
in the March issue of Geophysical
Research Letters.
Thursday,
February 26, 2004
Fermilab
Hosts Virtual Ask-a-Scientist on March 31, 2004
Are you curious about extra dimensions? Do you
have questions about dark energy? Have you ever
wondered about black holes? On March 31, 2004,
the Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory will host the next Virtual Ask-a-Scientist
from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Central Time. Physicists
Adam Yurkewicz and Jean-Roch Vlimant both of
Fermilab's DZero experiment will respond to
questions live online.
Wednesday,
February 25, 2004
Secretary
of Energy Announces Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Congressional and Intergovernmental
Affairs
Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham announced
that Jill Sigal has been appointed Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Energy for Congressional
and Intergovernmental Affairs.
Monday, February
23, 2004
DOE
Suspends Rulemaking on Proposed Safety Rules
In a letter to the Defense Nuclear Facilities
Safety Board (DNFSB), U.S. Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham announced that he is suspending
rulemaking on proposed changes to the departments
worker safety rules and requirements. The Department
of Energy will also publish a notice of this
action in the Federal Register.
Friday, February
20, 2004
Argonne
Licenses Anti-Jet-Lag-Diet Software to Online
Company
The Anti-Jet-Lag Diet, developed by the U.S.
Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory,
is now officially online. Argonne-developed
software that computes individualized diet plans
to help travelers avoid jet lag has been licensed
exclusively to AntiJetLagDiet.com
LLC.
Wednesday,
Feburary 18, 2004
Department
of Energy, EPA Sign Agreement to Expand Research
and Computing Collaboration
Increased collaboration on research and computing
resources, including the linking of two national
supercomputers, will take place under a Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU) signed today by the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of
Energy (DOE). This agreement builds on prior
research and computing collaboration between
EPA and DOE.
Tuesday, February
17, 2004
Argonne
Wins Federal Lab Consortium Research Award
The U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National
Laboratory has won the Federal
Laboratory Consortium Award for Excellence
in Technology Transfer for an improved industrial
process used in producing cotton.
Friday, February
13, 2004
Morgan
Park Academy Wins 9th Annual Rube Goldberg Machine
Contest
Morgan Park Academy, Chicago, today won Argonne
National Laboratory's ninth annual Rube
Goldberg Machine Contest held at Chicago
Children's Museum on Navy Pier.
Thursday,
February 12, 2004
U.S.
Department of Energy's Office of Science Unveils
20-Year Vision for the Future of Basic Research
The U.S. Department of Energys Office
of Science unveiled its Strategic Plan, which
charts a course for science over the next two
decades that promises dramatic increases in
knowledge and scientific achievements. The DOEs
Office of Science is the nations largest
supporter of the physical sciences and a major
contributor to other vital areas of basic research
that underpin national security and economic
prosperity.
Monday, February
2, 2004
Secretary
Abraham Unveils DOE '05 Budget
Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham released
the Department of Energys (DOE) $24.3
billion budget request for fiscal year 2005,
a part of President Bushs overall budget
request to Congress.
Fermilab
Education and Computing Experts Help Bring The
Grid to Classrooms
The Grid, a global network of computational
power with a potential some have likened to
that of the Internet, is coming to the classroom.
At the Needs Assessment & Developers Workshop
for Grid Techniques in Introductory Physics
Classroom Projects, held at Florida International
University on January 28 and 29, educators,
researchers, and scientists met to discuss how
students of introductory physics might tap into
real physics data sets around the world and
collaborate on its analysis over the Internet.
Friday, January
30, 2004
Department
of Energy Announces Extension and Competition
Decisions for Laboratory Contracts
The U.S. Department of Energy announced extensions
and competitions for the management and operating
contracts for several of the Departments
science and national defense laboratories.
Thursday,
January 29, 2004
Department
of Energy Ranked First Among Cabinet Agencies
On The President's Management Agenda
The Department of Energy was ranked first among
cabinet-level agencies in the most recent scorecard
to assess implementation of the Presidents
Management Agenda (PMA).
Tuesday, January
27, 2004
DOE
Announces Decision to Compete M&O Contracts
for Los Alamos, Ames, Lawrence Berkeley, Argonne,
and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories
Pursuant to Section 301(a) of the recently
adopted Energy and Water Development Appropriations
Act of 2004 (PL 108-137), the U.S. Department
of Energy announced today and notified U.S.
Senate and House Appropriation Committees that
it will compete management and operating contracts
for the following national laboratories: Ames
National Laboratory; Iowa (expiration: December,
2004); Argonne National Laboratory; Illinois
(expiration: September, 2004); Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory; California (expiration:
January, 2004); Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory; California (expiration: September,
2005); Los Alamos National Lab; New Mexico (expiration:
September, 2005) (In April 2003, the Secretary
of Energy announced previously his intention
to compete this contract.)
Fermilab
Hosts Virtual Ask-a-Scientist on January 29,
2004
The Department of Energy's Fermi National Accelerator
Laboratory will host the next Virtual Ask-a-Scientist
on January 29, 2004 from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Central Time. Physicists Brendan Casey of Fermilab's
DZero experiment and Ken Bloom of Fermilab's
CDF experiment will respond to questions live
online.
Tuesday, January
20, 2004
RHIC
Results Make Headlines at Quark Matter 2004
Physicists from the four experimental collaborations
collecting data at the Relativistic
Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) presented their
latest results and analyses at the Quark
Matter 2004 meeting held in Oakland, California,
January 11 17.
Friday, January
16, 2004
Student
Voting Machines to Cast Ballots in 20 Steps
As if elections weren't already complicated
enough, students from Chicago area high schools
participating in Argonne National Laboratory's
ninth annual Rube
Goldberg Machine Contest will soon try to
make them more so, but it's all in the name
of engineering, fun and learning.
Thursday,
January 15, 2004
DOE
Financial Services Operations to be Consolidated
and Streamlined
$31 Million in Savings to Taxpayers
Deputy Secretary of Energy Kyle McSlarrow announced
a major restructuring of DOEs financial
services operations that is expected to result
in savings of $31 million over a 5-year period.
This restructuring is the result of a financial
services competitive sourcing study conducted
by the Department as part of the Presidents
Management Agenda.
Scientists
at Brookhaven Contribute to the Development
of a Better Electron Accelerator
Scientists working at the U.S. Department of
Energys Brookhaven National Laboratory
have developed a compact linear accelerator
that uses laser light to accelerate electrons
with better efficiency and energy characteristics
than ever before. The experimental device, called
Staged
Electron Laser Acceleration (STELLA), is
a step forward in accelerator development, and
may help electron accelerators become practical
tools for applications in industry and medicine,
such as radiation therapy for cancer patients.
Wednesday,
January 14, 2004
AMES
Lab Physicists Find Unusual Growth Mode at Low
Temperature
Control is the name of the game,
said Ames Laboratory physicist Michael C. Tringides.
He was talking about the importance of growing
atomic structures and ultrathin metal films
in uniform sizes and with highly ordered geometries
for technological applications that include
switches, lasing materials and semiconductors
that allow computer chips to run faster.
Monday, January
12, 2004
January
12 Issue of DOE Pulse Features Chicago Operations
Office Labs:
* Brookhaven: Pure hydrogen for fuel cells
* Jefferson Lab: Nucleons two-by-two
* Ames: Self-organized metal islands
* Argonne: Manipulating light at the nanoscale
Thursday,
January 8, 2004
New
g-2 Measurement Deviates Further From Standard
Model
The latest result from an international collaboration
of scientists investigating how the spin of
a muon is affected as this type of subatomic
particle moves through a magnetic field deviates
further than previous measurements from theoretical
predictions. The result strengthens the challenge
this experiment, known as muon g-2, first posed
to the so-called Standard
Model of particle physics in February
2001 (based on data collected in 1999),
and then backed with a more precise result in
July
2002 (based on data collected in 2000).
Wednesday,
January 7, 2004
Brookhaven
Scientist Develops a Safer Way to Make One Class
of Superconductors
A scientist at the U.S. Department of Energys
Brookhaven National Laboratory has developed
a safer, easier, and more environmentally friendly
way to create a certain experimental type of
superconductor, a material that conducts electricity
with zero resistance. This new synthesis process
facilitates the study of superconductors, which
are already used in medical imaging machines
and are expected to improve the efficiency of
computer chips, electrical transmission lines,
and many other real-world devices.
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