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         Nuclear Chemistry:     more books (100)
  1. Chemistry of Plutonium (Nuclear science and technology series) by Jesse M. Cleveland, 1979-12
  2. The heart of the matter: A nuclear chemistry module (IAC, interdisciplinary approaches to chemistry) by Vic Viola, 1978
  3. Nuclear quadrupole resonance in chemistry by Granit Konstantinovich Semin, 1975
  4. Handbook of Nuclear Chemistry. Volume 1: Basics of Nuclear Science by Attila Vertes, Sandor Nagy, et all 2003-11-01
  5. Nuclear chemistry (Foundations of modern chemistry series) by Bernard G Harvey, 1965
  6. INTRODUCTION TO NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY by D.J. Carswell, 1967
  7. Nondestructive Activation Analysis: With Nuclear Reactors and Radioactive Neutron Sources (Studies in analytical chemistry)
  8. Visualized chemistry: Including nuclear fission and atomic energy by William Lemkin, 1956
  9. Analytical Chemistry of Nuclear Materials by Unnamed Unnamed, 1966
  10. Carbon-13 Nuclear Magnetic Spectroscopy (Organic chemistry: a series of monographs) by J.B. Stothers, 1973-01
  11. Basic Concepts of Nuclear Chemistry by Ralph T. Overman, 1967
  12. Nuclear Analytical Techniques in Medicine (Techniques and instrumentation in analytical chemistry)
  13. Atomic and nuclear chemistry (Commonwealth and international library. Intermediate chemistry division) by Thomas Arthur Hardy Peacocke, 1967
  14. Natural and Synthetic Nanotechnological Materials: Quantum Chemistry and Nuclear Resonance Spectroscopy Data by Elmira I. Yuryeva, Rafael N. Pletnev, et all 2008-05

61. Institute Of Nuclear Chemistry
Institute of nuclear chemistry. Director Dr. Giancarlo Angelini. Researchersn. 12. Research Assistants n. 11. The scientific activities
http://www.mlib.cnr.it/istituti/icn/
Institute of Nuclear Chemistry
Director: Dr. Giancarlo Angelini
Researchers: n. 12
Research Assistants: n. 11
The scientific activities, carried out by of the Institute of Nuclear Chemistry, are related to the use of radiochemical techniques applied to synthetic and organic physical-chemistry problems. In particular, they can be summarized as follows: A) Gas and condensed phase reactivity studies of positive and negative ions formed by radiolytic, nuclear decay and mass spectrometric methods. Classical and no-classic ions can be generated by these methods and their reactivities toward neutral molecules can be evaluated. Particular attentions are devoted to the comprehension of the intramolecular isomerization processes which can take place in the primary ions or in the secondary intermediates. B) Reactivity studies in condensed phase using excited radicalic and ionic species formed by radiolysis, photolysis and nuclear decay methods. Using inclusion compounds (host-guest structure), some valid models are defined to study the reactivity in the solid state and its intrinsic energy transfers. Besides, another interesting field concerns the study of the radiation effects toward the formation and reactivity processes of polycyclic aromatic compounds. With the same technology can be evaluated the isomerization of some terpenic compounds and the dissociation processes of several preservative products used in pharmaceutical field.

62. Lawrence And His Laboratory: Chapter 7: The End Of The Beginning
A machine that has proven even more productive for nuclear chemistry, the 88inchsector-focused cyclotron, was authorized in 1958 and completed in 1961.
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Research-Review/Magazine/1981/81fchp7.html
CHAPTER 7 The End of the Beginning I n the spring of 1958 Lawrence suffered a serious recurrence of his chronic colitis. Although already failing, he accepted against advice and as his duty President Eisenhower's request that he serve as a technical expert in talks with the Soviet Union toward a ban on testing nuclear weapons. Briefings in Washington and the journey to Geneva proved too much. He was rushed back to a hospital at Stanford, where he died on August 27. His passing ended an era in the Laboratory's history. His confidence and extravagance, enthusiasm and ingenuity, energy and entrepreneurship, could not be duplicated. Nor perhaps would his way have fit the future as well as it had the past. Events in the 1960s would call into question the values he held dear science, technology, industry, growth, and patriotism; and changes in national priorities would shift the center of gravity of the Laboratory's work. The Time Projection Chamber (TPC), shown with inventor David Nygren (left), was designed by LBL physicists for use at PEP, the positron- electron colliding beam ring at Stanford. As Lawrence's successor the University chose Nobel laureate Edwin McMillan , a leader in high-energy physics and accelerator design and associate director for the Physics Division. McMillan served until 1973, when the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory had become a collection of interdisciplinary groups working in fields as diverse as metallurgy, catalysis and surface science, electron microscopy, theoretical chemistry, photoelectron spectroscopy, earth sciences, hydrology, physical chemistry, cellular biology, oncology, and laser chemistry and biology. His successors

63. Nuclear Chemistry.

http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/genchem/20/

64. Learnchem.net: Nuclear Chemistry Tutorial
nuclear chemistry By Hao Zhang Charges of Elemental Components. Ofthe three elemental components, a proton has a positive charge
http://www.learnchem.net/tutorials/nuc.shtml
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Online Quizzes Index Chemistry Olympiad Test Questions Submit Quizzes Request Quizzes Reference Tools Constants Formulas Glossary Periodic Table ... Thermodynamic Data Nuclear Chemistry By Hao Zhang Charges of Elemental Components Of the three elemental components, a proton has a positive charge, a neutron has a neutral charge, and the electron has a negative charge. Atomic Definitions The atomic number (designated by the symbol Z ) represents the number of protons in the nucleus. In an element, which never has a charge, the number of protons equals the number of electrons. The mass number A ) is the sum of neutrons and protons in the nucleus. Therefore, A Z equals the number of neutrons in a nucleus. Typical Nuclide(where X equals any element): Two Types of Atomic Stability Kinetic stability - the likelihood of a nucleus to change into a more stable state. Thermodynamic stability - A comparison of the potential energy of the nucleus to the sum of the potential energy of its protons and neutrons.

65. Nuclear Chemistry @ Oregon State University
The long term goals of his nuclear chemistry research group are (a)searching for new phenomena at the limits of nuclear stability.
http://www.chem.orst.edu/gradad/nuclear.htm
Nuclear Chemistry at Oregon State University Professor Walter Loveland is primarily interested in the study of nucleus-nucleus collisions at low, intermediate, and high energies. The long term goals of his nuclear chemistry research group are: (a) searching for new phenomena at the limits of nuclear stability. (b)studying the dynamics and thermodynamics of colliding nuclei. (c)application of nuclear techniques to the study of environmental and/or biomedical problems. In studying the interactions of very energetic heavy colliding nuclei, he is probing conditions which have prevailed only in the very early moments of the universe A typical experiment involves irradiating a metal foil with a heavy ion beam from a particle accelerator and detecting the reaction products recoiling from the target at various angles with large detector arrays. The multiparameter data are recorded on magnetic tape for immediate, on-line analysis and later off-line analysis. Experiments generally involve international collaborations and take place at accelerator complexes in Europe and the U.S. Measurements are made at the accelerator with computer-aided data analysis taking place at OSU. Recent accomplishments of the Loveland group involve the study of fusion reactions with radioactive beams and the generation of several new nuclei by fission and fragmentation of heavy nuclei; and participation in the first synthesis of elements 116 and 118.

66. Radiochemistry And Radioanalytical Chemistry Conference
The papers for the Proceedings of the MARC IV conference have been sent to the Journalof Radioanalytical and nuclear chemistry and will appear later this year
http://www.wsu.edu:8000/~rfilby/marc4.html

67. NAP2001: Our Three Jubilare
He obtained a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Mainz University, Germany,in 1972 and the Venia Legendi in nuclear chemistry in 1979. At
http://nap2001.gsi.de/jubilare.asp
May 3-4, 2001 GSI-Darmstadt (nap2001.gsi.de)
Home
Our Jubilare Participants Symposium ...
pages
Our three "Jubilare"

Printer-friendly version
(without graphics - opens in new window).] As described in the Announcement, NAP2001 is being organized in honor of three of the world's well-renowned astroscientists, who all celebrate "round" birthdays during 2001: Karl-Ludwig Kratz ( Mainz ), Claus Rolfs ( Bochum ) and Friedrich-Karl Thielemann ( Basel However, especially newcomers to the field of astrophysics may not be so familiar with the backgrounds of our three "Jubilare". For you, we have put together the following brief introductions: Karl-Ludwig Kratz Kratz started his scientific activities in Nuclear Chemistry and Nuclear Structure Physics. Later, he concentrated on nuclear structure data for Nuclear Astrophysics and initated his own research program in Nuclear Astrophysics, with the main focus on the r-process. He also leads a very active group engaged in Environmental Physics, mainly using neutron activation. He was awarded the American Chemical Society Award in Nuclear Chemistry in 1999. In his scarce leisure time he enjoys skiing. Claus Rolfs His scientfic interests lie in the fields of Nuclear Astrophysics and of Materials Science where he has published numerous articles. His textbook on Nuclear Astrophysics, "Cauldrons in the Cosmos", as well as television appearances have helped to make Physics more popular. International awards of his career include the Roentgen Prize of Giessen University and the Humboldt Award of the Belgian-German Scientific Society. Last but not least, Claus Rolfs is an enthusiastic musician.

68. Stars Discovery Sheet
A. Basic nuclear chemistry What is the difference between chemical reactions andnuclear reactions (in which one are new elements produced and in which one
http://can-do.com/uci/ssi2000/ds-stars.html
Discovery Sheet 1: The Chemistry of Stars
(Student worksheet for " Cosmic Chemistry " Web Quest")
Created by:
Michael Antrim
Irvine Unified School District Directions: Use the Internet web sites below along with any text resources that you have to answer the questions. Some of the questions require only that you locate specific information, other questions (a bit more challenging) involve more critical thinking, requiring you to make inferences and draw conclusions about the information you find.
Web Resources: Use these links as your primary resources for finding the answers to the questions below.
Discovery questions: Answer the following using the web resources above.

69. BNL Press Release
named Richard L. Hahn, a senior scientist at the US Department of Energy's BrookhavenNational Laboratory, the winner of the 2000 ACS nuclear chemistry Award.
http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/pubaf/pr/2000/bnlpr032800.html

March 28, 2000
Brookhaven Lab Scientist Wins American Chemical Society Award
UPTON, NY - The American Chemical Society (ACS) has named Richard L. Hahn, a senior scientist at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, the winner of the 2000 ACS Nuclear Chemistry Award. He will receive a citation certificate and a $3,000 award during a March 28 ceremony at the ACS meeting being held this week in San Francisco. The Nuclear Chemistry Award was established in 1955 and is given annually by the ACS to recognize outstanding scientific achievement in the field.
Hahn's citation is for "His leadership role in experiments for the detection and measurement of solar neutrinos, for wide-ranging investigations of chemical and nuclear properties of the heaviest elements, and for numerous nuclear reaction and spectroscopy studies." Hahn is the fifth Brookhaven scientist to win the award. Prior to Hahn, the most recent Brookhaven awardee was Raymond Davis, in 1979, for his work with solar neutrinos. "I am very pleased that the members of the ACS award selection committee, my peers in the nuclear chemistry community, thought my research accomplishments were worthy of this honor, especially my studies at Brookhaven during the past 13 years," said Hahn. "Basic research in solar neutrinos is on the cutting edge of science, bringing together people from a variety of fields, physicists and chemists, experimenters and theorists, to determine if our present theories have to be recast to explain all the observed properties of neutrinos."

70. ACS - Division Of Analytical Chemistry - Details Of The Division's National Meet
Analytical Chemistry in Nuclear Technology (nuclear chemistry Technology); EnvironmentalManagement Science Program (EMSP) Symposium (Environmental Chemistry);
http://www.acs-analytical.duq.edu/dac_meeting_programs.html
Details of the Division's 2003 National Meeting Programs and Plans
The New York meeting plans are given below. The ACS Spring National Meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana, March 23–27, 2003 Program Chair for this meeting: J. David Pinkston pinkston.jd@pg.com The program for this meeting is complete. The symposia organized and sponsored by the Division appear first and below them are the symposia co-sponsored The Symposia sponsored by the Division:
  • Encouraging Disadvantaged Students into Careers in the Chemical Sciences Award Symposium in Honor of Isiah M. Warner
  • Chromatography Award Symposium in Honor of William S. Hancock
  • Joint Symposium in Honor of Richard D. Smith (ACS Award in Analytical Chemistry) and of Jesse L. Beauchamp (Field and Franklin Award)
  • Analytical Chemistry Workforce of the 21st Century
  • Capitalizing on Data Diversity: Interfacing Advances in Informatics and Measurements
  • From Sensors to Functional Instruments
  • Function-Based Approaches to Sensors for Homeland Defense
  • Instrument Miniaturization for Homeland Defense: Progress and Challenges
  • That'll Never Work - Analytical Chemists Doing the Perceived Impossible
  • Microelectrochemical Systems and Arrays
  • Present and Future Technologies in Chemical Instrumentation
  • Process Analytical Chemistry
  • Fundamentals of Electrospray Ionization
  • Size-Exclusion Chromatography with Multiple Detection Techniques
  • Macromolecules to Bioparticles: Analyses with Field-Flow Fractionation
  • General Papers (Poster Session only)
Symposia cosponsored by the Division (with the primary sponsoring division in parentheses):

71. UICC International Directory Of Cancer - Institute Of Nuclear Chemistry And Tech
Cancer. UICC International Directory of Cancer Institutes and OrganisationsInstitute of nuclear chemistry and Technology. Poland
http://www.uicc.org/publ/directory/plincte.html
International Union Against Cancer
Union Internationale Contre le Cancer UICC International Directory of
Cancer Institutes and Organisations
Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology Poland Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology
Dorodna 16
03-195 Warsaw
Poland
Tel. :
Fax :
Central URL:
http://www.ichti.kom.pl
Officers Position Title Name Degrees E-mail Director Dr. Walis, Lech PhD Major Departments (Sections/Divisions) Heads Name Head Title Head Name Degrees E-mail Dept. Radiobiolology/Health Protection Prof. Szumiel, Irena PhD irenas@orange.ichti.waw.pl Personnel: scientific - 8; Experimental cancer research: Cell and chromosome responses and ionizing radiation and drugs in vitro. Studies of intrinsic factors that determine radiosensitivity and the effects of modifying agents. Molecular biology of DNA damage and DNA damage repair. Chromosomal instability. Cell sygnalling pathways. Aspoplosis. Adaptive response. Professional education and training: Postgraduate: Radiobiology. Add/Modify your organisation's entry Software developed by UICC GLOBALink for the UICC Committee on International Collaborative Activities (CICA) With a grant from the Norwegian Cancer Society

72. Demetrios G.Sarantites
Professor. (nuclear chemistry and Radiochemistry) Ph.D., Inorganic andnuclear chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1963.
http://wunmr.wustl.edu/~dgs/chem/
Professor
(Nuclear Chemistry and Radiochemistry)
Send mail to: dgs@wuchem.wustl.edu
Department of Chemistry,
Washington University,
St. Louis, MO, 63130.
Office: Radiochemistry 158
Phone: 314-935-6504, FAX: 314-935-6184
Background
B.S. and MS. Degrees in Chemical Engineering, Technical University of Athens, Greece, 1956. Assistant Professor, Chemistry and Physics, Royal Naval Academy, Piraeus, Greece, 1956-59. Ph.D., Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1963. Visiting professor at: The Institute for Atomic Physics (currently, the M. Siegbann Institute) Stockholm, Sweden, 1974-75; Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, 1981; Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, 1989. Fellow of the American Physical Society, (2001); The 2003 "Glenn T. Seaborg award for Nuclear Chemistry", a national American Chemical Society award.
Current Research in more detail
Nuclear structure at high spins; Superdeformed nuclei; Nuclear shapes via g -ray and light charged-particle spectrometry; High-spin phenomena in nuclei; Structure of very neutron deficient nuclei; High spin investigations of transuranium nuclei.
Design and construction of the Washington University " Microball " - a 4 p multi-detector array operated in conjunction with Gammasphere.

73. Faculty Listing
Demetrios G. Sarantites Professor nuclear chemistry Dr. Sarantites has an emailaddress on the departmental mail server 'wuchem.wustl.edu' under the account
http://wunmr.wustl.edu/faculty.html

74. KLUWER Academic Publishers | Nuclear/Radiation Chemistry
Journal of Radioanalytical and nuclear chemistry An International Journal Dealingwith All Aspects and Applications of nuclear chemistry Tibor Braun, E
http://www.wkap.nl/home/topics/F/7/4/
Title Authors Affiliation ISBN ISSN advanced search search tips Home Browse by Subject ... Applied Chemistry Nuclear/Radiation Chemistry
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Publication Date

Actinides and the Environment

P.A. Sterne, Antonios Gonis, A.A. Borovoi
February 1998, ISBN 0-7923-4968-7, Hardbound
Price: 249.50 EUR / 315.00 USD / 190.25 GBP
Add to cart

Assessing the Risks of Nuclear and Chemical Contamination in the former Soviet Union

Elizabeth J. Kirk February 1996, ISBN 0-7923-3951-7, Hardbound Price: 105.50 EUR / 133.00 USD / 80.50 GBP Add to cart Chemical Separation Technologies and Related Methods of Nuclear Waste Management Applications, Problems, and Research Needs Gregory R. Choppin, Mikhail Kh. Khankhasayev February 1999, ISBN 0-7923-5638-1, Hardbound Price: 143.50 EUR / 181.50 USD / 98.75 GBP Add to cart Chemical Separation Technologies and Related Methods of Nuclear Waste Management Applications, Problems, and Research Needs Gregory R. Choppin, Mikhail Kh. Khankhasayev February 1999, ISBN 0-7923-5639-X, Paperback Price: 68.00 EUR / 86.00 USD / 47.00 GBP Add to cart Defence Nuclear Waste Disposal in Russia: International Perspective Michael J. Stenhouse, Vladimir I. Kirko

75. Chemistry Division
Isotope and nuclear chemistry, CINC. Team pages. Atom Trapping Page.Isotope Production Facility. Bioassay page. Group Leader Glenn
http://pearl1.lanl.gov/external/INC/inc.htm
Isotope and Nuclear Chemistry, C-INC
Team pages Atom Trapping Page Isotope Production Facility Bioassay page Group Leader
Glenn Bentley
gbentley@lanl.gov

C-INC carries out fundamental and applied research in nuclear and radiochemistry. This involves work with all types of radioactive materials. Group expertise includes isotope applications, isotope production, radiochemical separations, nuclear chemistry, nuclear physics, radionuclide detection, and isotope signature identification.
PuB is synthesized to study its potential application to alternative actinide storage forms. C-ADI C-AAC C-PCS C-ACS ... C-FM Operated by the University of California for the US Department of Energy
chemistry@lanl.gov

76. CMU - Chemistry - Brief Faculty Profiles
Morton Kaplan Professor Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology1960 nuclear chemistry, nuclear physics, and chemical physics.
http://www.chem.cmu.edu/faculty/fac-profiles.html
Brief Faculty Profiles About the Department
Brief Faculty Profiles

Groups Listed by Research Area

Research Area Descriptions

Facilities

Selected Publications
...
Home
Catalina Achim
Assistant Professor
Ph.D. Carnegie Mellon 1998
Synthesis and structural and spectroscopic characterization of coordination compounds. Intra- and inter-molecular electron-transfer properties of mixed-valence complexes. Magnetochemistry of clusters. Bioinorganic chemistry.
ca2j@andrew.cmu.edu
http://www.chem.cmu.edu/groups/achim/ Bruce Armitage Associate Professor Ph.D. University of Arizona 1993 Bioorganic and supramolecular chemistry. Design and synthesis of functional DNA/RNA analogs, nucleic acid chemistry, photochemistry in supramolecular assemblies of molecules, development of probes for RNA structure and function, sensors for hybridization of nucleic acid probes. army@andrew.cmu.edu http://www.chem.cmu.edu/groups/army/ Guy C. Berry University Professor Ph.D. University of Michigan 1960 Physical chemistry and polymer science. Physical chemistry of macromolecules: photon correlation and integrated intensity light scattering. Solution properties of flexible and rodlike polymers. Rheology of polymers. Properties of liquid crystalline polymers. gcberry@andrew.cmu.edu

77. CMU - Chemistry - Research Area Descriptions
nuclear chemistry nuclear chemistry research in the department is primarilyin the area of nuclear reactions induced by heavyion beams.
http://www.chem.cmu.edu/faculty/fac-research-desc.html
Research Area Descriptions About the Department
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Polymer Science

The Department of Chemistry continues a 50-year tradition of research at the forefront of polymer science. Under the direction of Guy Berry Krzysztof Matyjaszewski Richard McCullough Gary Patterson and Lynn Walker , current research focuses on broadening the versatility of controlled polymerizations and conducting polymers, both with profound technological implications. For example, Matyjaszewski group interacts with over 10 international chemical companies through the Controlled Polymerization Consortium and Center for Macromolecular Engineering to prepare new advanced materials by radical polymerization. The use of light scattering methods and other means to characterize molecular structure and the dynamics of macromolecules supports sophisticated studies of structure-property relationships. Tomasz Kowalewski recently has joined us with expertise in atomic force microscopy that further enhances our strengths in polymer physical chemistry. A collaboration among Guy Berry, Gary Patterson and

78. Battelle - PNNL Technical Networks Analytical And Physical Chemistry
For more information, contact Dave Koppenaal, John Wacker, or James Campbell.nuclear chemistry, Radiation Detection, and Instrumentation.
http://www.battelle.org/technicalnetworks/pnnl/chemistry.stm
Search Technical Networks
Analytical and physical chemistry
Biosciences and biotechnology Computational science and engineering Computer science and information technology ... Statistics Page Directory Representative capabilities of the Analytical and Physical Chemistry network include the following: Atmospheric and Aerosol Chemistry. Physical chemistry and spectroscopy techniques are used to study the structures and dynamics of molecules important in contaminant chemistry, photochemistry, and atmospheric processes. There are facilities for studying atmospheric chemistry and spectroscopy, and for developing sensitive analytical techniques for pollutant monitoring remote interrogation of effluent sources and characterization of atmospheric particulates. Both low-temperature (20K) and room-temperature scanning tunneling microscopes are available for atomic-resolution imaging of molecules on surfaces to clarify aerosol structure and heterogeneous chemistry. For more information, contact Len Barrie Steve Colson , or J.P. Cowin

79. Curvit
8/19914/1992. Research Assistant at the Institute of nuclear chemistry of theUniversity of Marburg. 3/-7/1991. Military service in Greece. 9/1990-3/1991.
http://www.uni-leipzig.de/~philos/psarros/curvit.html

80. Nuclear Chemistry
nuclear chemistry. The division of chemistry dealing with changes in or transformationsof the atomic nucleus. Useful nuclear chemistry Websites.
http://www.chemistry.co.nz/nuclear_chemistry.htm

Previous Level
Inorganic Chemistry Organic Chemistry Analytical Chemistry ... Stoichiometry [ Nuclear Chemistry ] Alchemy Biochemistry
Nuclear Chemistry
The division of chemistry dealing with changes in or transformations of the atomic nucleus. It includes spontaneous and induced radioactivity, the fission or splitting of nuclei, and their fusion, or union; also the properties and behaviour of the reaction products and their separation and analysis. The reactions involving nuclei are usually accompanied by large energy changes, far greater than those of chemical reactions; that are carried out in nuclear reactors for electric power production and manufacture of radioactive isotopes for medical use, also (in research work) in cyclotrons.
Useful Nuclear Chemistry Websites
A Little Nut: The Discovery of the Atomic Nucleus
UMR American Nuclear Society

Elements 116 and 118 Discovered at Berkeley Lab

Light Water Nuclear Reactors
...
Energy, Science, and Technology Current Awareness Publications
which provides electronic access to current energy-related, subject-specific collections of bibliographic citations with abstracts and full-text reports, when available, compiled from a variety of available resources.
An Alternative to Giant Cyclotrons

Accelerator: Circular Cyclotrons and Synchrotrons

The Development of the Cyclotron at LBNL

UIC - Radiation and Life
...
The Difficult Years: Fission Research, 1939 - 1945

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