Filter Issues
Publication Date
- (-) 2017 (3)
- (-) 2015 (2)
- (-) 2008 (3)
- (-) 2006 (3)
- (-) 1997 (2)
- (-) 1987 (4)
- (-) 1984 (4)
- (-) 1973 (3)
- (-) 1969 (2)
- (-) 1968 (4)
- 2024 (1)
- 2023 (2)
- 2022 (3)
- 2021 (2)
- 2020 (3)
- 2019 (3)
- 2018 (3)
- 2016 (3)
- 2014 (2)
- 2013 (2)
- 2012 (3)
- 2011 (3)
- 2010 (3)
- 2009 (3)
- 2007 (3)
- 2005 (3)
- 2004 (3)
- 2003 (3)
- 2002 (3)
- 2001 (2)
- 2000 (3)
- 1999 (3)
- 1998 (1)
- 1996 (2)
- 1995 (3)
- 1994 (2)
- 1993 (3)
- 1992 (3)
- 1991 (3)
- 1990 (4)
- 1989 (3)
- 1988 (4)
- 1986 (4)
- 1985 (4)
- 1983 (4)
- 1982 (4)
- 1981 (4)
- 1980 (4)
- 1979 (4)
- 1978 (4)
- 1977 (4)
- 1976 (4)
- 1975 (4)
- 1974 (3)
- 1972 (3)
- 1971 (3)
- 1970 (3)
- 1967 (1)
Vol. 17, No. 1, ( 1984)
- How Does ORNL Affect the Environment? ORNL's day-to-day operations for the most part have a beneficial effect on the human environment, although the impacts of its primary product—new scientific and technological information—are speculative. Slightly adverse impacts arise from releases of toxic materials from research activities; however, none of these releases is a threat to human health.
- Building a Better Ion Trap: Atomic Physicists Study Recoil Ions. A new technique developed at ORNL under the leadership of two university professors traps ions of very low energies. This "recoil ion storage" technique permits studies of the transfer of electrons from atoms during collisions with multicharged, low-energy ions and opens the way to future precision spectroscopy experiments on ions.
- The Mathematics of Artificial Intelligence. Mathematicians at ORNL are applying the principles of artificial intelligence to energy-related problems. Their goals include designing an economical, energy-efficient solar house and programming a robot to avoid obstacles so that it can operate in a hazardous environment, such as a nuclear reprocessing plant.
- Predicting Metal-Ion Toxicity: A Collaboration of ORNL Physicists and Biologists. ORNL physicists and biologists are collaborating in a search for fundamental explanations of the toxic effects of metal ions in biological systems. Their goal is to predict the degree of toxicity of metal ions and other chemical pollutants
- Sol-Gel and Gel-Sphere Technology: Powders for Power. Sol-gel technology, developed over a 25-year period at ORNL, has been used to make spherical, beadlike particles for nuclear reactor fuels. Today industry is showing interest in the technology for making ceramics of uniform composition for electronic and other nonnuclear applications. A researcher involved in the development of the prizewinning technology tells its history.
- Editorial. Herman Postma speaks out on ORNL and the environment.
- Take a Number
- Awards and Appointments
- Books. William S. Lyon reviews The Information Society as Post Industrial Society by Yoneji Masuda
- Four-Year Index
Vol. 6, No. 3, ( 1973)
- The Interesting Fuel for the HTGR
- Physical Research. A three-tiered strategy in support of energy R&D
- The History and Promise of ESCA at ORNL
- The Reactor as a Source of Industrial Energy
- Take a Number
- Lab Anecdote. Nothing could be simpler, or, the case of the left-handed GIs
Vol. 6, No. 2, ( 1973)
- Can the Mandrake Predict the Crops? A New Use for Phenology
- The Resident Polyglot. Odd Problems Met in the Course of Operating an Office of Language Services
- Clinton Laboratories—the War Years. Heavy Recall 30 Years Later
- Problem Solving. The Evolution of Analytical Chemistry
- AMW Comments
- Take a Number
- Books. The Collected Works of Leo Szilard: Scientific Papers
Vol. 6, No. 1, ( 1973)
- State of the Laboratory—1972
- Where Do they Go ... Our Poisons?
- Russian Diary:Impressions from a Brief Visit
- Take a Number
- Books. Only One Earth, by Barbara Ward and Rene Dubos
- Lab Anecdote: Hafnium-Free Zirconium for Nuclear Reactors
Vol. 3, No. 2, ( 1969)
- The Chemistry of Man
- The Consulting Statistician: Who Needs Him?
- 25 Years of Creative Support. The history of the growth of Plant and Equipment into ORNL's largest division
- Benefits vs. Risks in Nuclear Power. A logical, facts-and-figures comment on the current anti-atom literature
- The INOR-8 STORY
- AMW Comments
- Books. Black Rain, by Masuji Ibuse; The Game of Science, by Garvin McCain and Erwin M. Segal
Vol. 3, No. 1, ( 1969)
- Targets Made to Order
- The Glass Window in 4500
- Transporting Radioactive Material
- The Tennesseans of Mol. A personal account by one of Eurochemic's U.S. resident advisors
- Books. The Biological Time Bomb, by Gordon Rattray Taylor
- AMW Comments
Vol. 2, No. 2, ( 1968)
- MSRE into MSBR? The Hopes for ORNL's Molten Salt Reactor Program
- Thermonuclear's Stepchild. The Medical Instrumentation Group—and How It Grew
- Macromolecular Separations. A Case History of Productive Collaboration
- Earthquakes and Nuclear Power
Vol. 2, No. 1, ( 1968)
- Toward Fusion: The Target Plasma Program
- Critical Chemical Problems in the Development of Nuclear Reactors
- Science for Nonscientists. the So-Called "Humanities Conferences" at Oak Ridge Associated Universities
- ORNL's Sister Laboratory in Thailand
Vol. 1, No. 2, ( 1968)
- The Oak Ridge Life Sciences Program as a Challenge to the Pollution Problem
- Julius Robert Oppenheimer (1904-1967). A Fellow Physicist's Tribute to a Pioneer of the Nuclear Age
- Social Problems and National Socio-Technical Institutions
- Project Aquarium