installed a fast-acting valve to withstand high pressure, and shock at the Mercury site. Device Engineering- temperatures, Livermore Device Engineering provided mechanical enginering support both A and B Physics Divisions for developing nuclear devices. to Several of the experimental assemblies were designed and detonated at Site 300 to obtain hydodynamic data and to study the device performance. Device Engineering also adapted various special materials, including high explosives, fissionable and fusionable nuclear materials, and unique metals and plastic-metal compounds and their properties, to meet specific device designs. Ultimately, these design assemblies were detonated at the Atomic Energy Commission’s proving grounds. Device Engineering participated extensively in several fullscale nuclear tests operations, including Plumbbob and Hardtack II at the NTS, Hardtack I at the PPG, specialized Plowshare research, Operation 58A at Nevada involving nuclear safety experiments, and the 1962 Danny Boy shot, a low-yield cratering experiment conducted by the Department of Defense at NTS. Engineering also introduced two new methods of device placement--balloon and underground-~ in the Plumbbob series. In support built mechanical, of Plowshare, electrical, study shock waves and effects sion Device Engineering designed and and chemical explosive systems to in various rock media. The divi- measured ground shock pressure and shock wave velocity for several nuclear events at NTS. Weapons Engineering- Livermore The function of Weapons Engineering was to link the devices designed by A and B Physics Divisions to the final weapons and tailor weapons to the requirements of particular aircraft, mis- Siles, and warhead design~ The design, development, and perfor- mance of nuclear weapons rested with the AEC weapons laboratories-~- Los Alamos and UCRL-Livermore, and supporting Sandia operations in Albuquerque and Livermore. When the Department of Defense, with the concurrence of the AEC, assigned responsibli- ties for warheads to the Livermore Laboratory, Weapons Engineering Division organized a project engineering team. LRL A and B Physics Divisions and Sandia Corporation Livermore Laboratory established working groups to coordinated the efforts of the two laboratories. At Site 300, Device and Weapons programs conducted highexplosive experiments and tests. Diagnostic information obtained from the explosions included pin technique (using electrical pins and special oscilloscopes), smear cameras), and fast photographs (using framing and linear accelerator methods.

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