Table of Contents
Nuclear Energy: Fission vs. Fusion : What are the differences in these energy processes?
- Booklet
- 04.12.4
- Uranium: The Facts
- Printed on the cover: URANIUM: The Facts
Contents:
Uranium: An Energy Answer
From Earth to Home
The Safety Issues: Radiation
The Safety Issues: Radon
The Safety Issues: Water
The Safety Issues: Worker Safety
The Safety Issues: Tailin... View Full Record
- Print, Photographic
- 19.36.8
- Vertical Section Through Damaged EBR-I Core
- Diagram of an EBR (Experimental Breeder Reactor) core from the EBR-I.... View Full Record
- Booklet
- 98.1.107
- Introduction To Laser Fusion
- Printed on the cover: Introduction to Laser fusion, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory of the University of California, Los Alamos, New Mexico.
This booklet describes the use of laser initiated fusion. Laser initiated fusion is the design and construc... View Full Record
- Book
- 13.25.7
- Stakeholders and Radiological Protection: Lessons Learned from Chernobyl 20 Years After
- Twenty years after the major accident at Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, the radioactive contamination continues to have an important impact on lives in the vicinity, and to a lesser extent in areas such as Western Europe and beyond. The purpose of th... View Full Record
- Folder, File
- 02.25.39
- Monitored Retrievable Storage Facility
- Monitored Retrievable Storage Facility, U.S. Department of Energy Office Of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management.
Fact sheets on nuclear fuel and storage.
Fact sheet topics:
Storage of spent nuclear fuel
Transportation of used fuel;
Nucl... View Full Record
- Print, Photographic
- 04.15.4
- Operation Crossroads
- Naval Officers and news correspondents observing nuclear test from the bridge of the destroyer USS Laffey (DD-724).
[Written on the back of the photo:] Back row - Lt. T. Wyman Riley, Fred Opper, Elton Fay, Frank Allen, Ralph Peterson, Don Bell... View Full Record
- Book
- 13.41.145
- Radioactive Deposits in New Mexico, A Contribution to the Geology of Uranium
- The Abstract reads:
Forty-five areas of radioactivity in New Mexico had been investigated by goverment geologists or reported in the geologic literature before 1952. Twenty-one areas contained visible uranium minerals and one contained thorium mine... View Full Record