AOB4Bo KR NUCLEAR TESTING AND FALLOUT PROGRAMS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LAWRENCE RADIATION LABORATORY The Lawrence Radiation Laboratory-- Berkeley & Livermore. During World War II the Radiation Laboratory, founded by Ernest O. Lawrence at the University of California in Berkeley, was mobilized to study the possibility of using uranium for military purposes. The Laboratory adapted the 184-inch cyclotron as a mass spectrometer (renamed the Calutron) to test the feasibility of separating fissionable natural uranium, U-235, from the more plentiful uranium isotope, U-238. Using University and Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) funds, Lawrence first converted the 37-inch cyclotron to a test model mass spectometer for enriching uranium 235. In 1942, the Laboratory supplied the design and magnets for several Calutron-type separators at various laboratories and advised on the construction of an electromagnetic facility at Oak Ridge. Even earlier, beginning in 1939 and 1940, Laboratory studies of fission products revealed a new element, heavier than uranium, named pluto- nium, tion. which suggested the possibility of an atomic chain reac- The Laboratory sent the weapons-grade U-235 produced from beta calutrons to Chicago and on to the Los Alamos laboratory. The University of California provided the administration of the Los Alamos laboratory as well as staff from the Radiation Laboratory who assisted in the design and execution of the Trinity test. Wartime mobilization also stimulated the study of physiological effects of fission in the Laboratory’s Biology and Medi- cine and Donner Laboratory as researchers studied the biological effects of fission products for the OSRD. After the war, program in 1947. the AEC took charge of the nuclear energy The Radiation Laboratory’s defense work centered on the separation of fissionable elements. The Laboratory conti- nued to conduct multidisciplinary scientific research, including AEC support of nuclear chemistry in identifying transuranic elements. The Donner Laboratory continued its prewar work in nuclear medicine and radiology. Between 1946 and 1949, the military pro- grams of the Laboratory were focused primarily in the Crocker Laboratory, under the direction of Joseph Hamilton. In 1946, Laboratory radiobiologists participated in the Bikini tests and advised the Navy on decontamination of ships exposed to nuclear explosions. The Crocker Laboratory studied the biological effects of radioactive aerosols and fission products. After the Soviet detonation of a nuclear bomb in 1949, the Laboratory-- led by Edward Teller and Ernest O. Lawrence -campaigned for a second national nuclear weapons laboratory at

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