Choosing
a Lab
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Choosing a LabBelow are brief descriptions of each of the DOE laboratories. To visit a laboratory homepage, click on the laboratory's name below. In addition to reading information on each laboratory that interests you, you are encouraged to take a look at some of the student abstracts from the years 2000 through 2006 and descriptions of research performed by various labs listed below. Each lab is funded from the Office of Science for a different number of CCI students. The number of CCI students for the past summer is listed for most labs. The Community College Institute internships are available at the following DOE laboratories: Argonne National LaboratoryANL placed 5 CCI students in summer 2007.
Argonne National Laboratory performs research that falls into
four broad categories:
Click here to read about research projects open to students at ANL. Argonne National Laboratory is surrounded by forest preserve and located about 25 miles southwest of Chicago's Loop. Brookhaven National LaboratoryBNL placed 11 CCI students in summer 2007. The home of five Nobel Prize-winning discoveries, Brookhaven is a major multidisciplinary laboratory that carries out basic and applied world-class research in physical, biomedical and environmental sciences, as well as energy technologies. Brookhaven sponsors programs for students and faculty in physics, biology, chemistry, medical science, environmental science, and many other areas. Educational placements range from working with physicists to probe the nature of matter at Brookhaven's newest accelerator, the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, to investigating the structure of proteins with biologists at the National Synchrotron Light Source. Brookhaven National Laboratory is located on Long Island, NY. Lawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryLBNL placed 14 CCI students in summer 2007. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's research and development includes new energy technologies and environmental solutions with a focus on energy efficiency, electric reliability, carbon management and global climate change, and fusion. Frontier research experiences exist in nanoscience, genomics and cancer research, advanced computing, and observing matter and energy at the most fundamental level in the universe. Ernest Orlando Lawrence founded Berkeley Lab, in 1931. Lawrence invented the cyclotron, which led to a Golden Age of particle physics, the foundation of modern nuclear science, and revolutionary discoveries about the nature of the universe. Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source is its premier national user facility located centrally on the lab site overlooking the San Francisco Bay. Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryLawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) is a premier research and development institution for science and technology applied to national security. We are responsible for ensuring that the nation's nuclear weapons remain safe, secure, and reliable. LLNL also applies its expertise to prevent the spread and use of weapons of mass destruction and strengthen homeland security. Our
national security mission requires special multidisciplinary capabilities
that are also used to pursue programs in advanced defense technologies,
energy, environment, biosciences, and basic science to meet important
national needs. These activities enhance the competencies needed for our
defining national security mission. The
Laboratory serves as a resource to the U.S. government and is a partner with industry and
academia. Safe, secure, and efficient operations and scientific and
technical excellence in our programs are necessary to sustain public trust
in the Laboratory. LLNL is
located Livermore is located in the Tri-Valley
region East of San Francisco on Interstate 580 providing easy access to
both the Central Valley and San Francisco Bay metropolitan area.
It is served by public bus transportation, and links to the Bay Area Rapid
Transit (BART) system to help visitor move about the community.
Major airports are located in San Jose, SULI
and CCI applicants will be considered for the HCDAssist program which is
sponsored by the LLNL Hazards Control Department. Assist strives to
educate students about the ever-expanding field of applied safety in a
scientific research and development environment. Project
opportunities combine hands-on experience with technical development in
such areas as: Click here to learn more about the educational programs at LLNL. Oak Ridge National LaboratoryORNL placed 7 CCI students in summer 2007. The largest of DOE's national laboratories, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) pioneers the development of new energy sources, technologies, and materials and the advancement of knowledge in the biological, chemical, computational, engineering, environmental, physical, and social sciences. Research opportunities for undergraduate students include projects in:
Click here to find out more about research at ORNL. ORNL is located in East Tennessee about 7 miles from the center of Oak Ridge (population 27,000) and about 25 miles from Knoxville (metro area population of 650,000). The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is nearby along with various state parks and Tennessee Valley Authority lakes affording numerous recreational opportunities. Click here to find out more about DOE's programs for students at ORNL. Pacific Northwest National LaboratoryPNNL placed 16 CCI students in summer 2007. PNNL is a world leader in environmental science research. The Laboratory has built an international reputation in environmental sciences through fundamental studies in chemistry, biology, computer sciences, and a wide range of other fields. This expertise has been developed through an emphasis on understanding complex systems, from molecular to global scales. Research opportunities at the Laboratory for students include appointments in atmospheric science and global change, computational sciences, experimental chemistry, marine sciences, molecular biology, environmental studies, remediation, environmental microbiology, wildlife and fisheries biology, materials research, process science and engineering, economics and political science. Located at the confluence of the Columbia, Snake and Yakima rivers in southeastern Washington, the communities of Richland, Kennewick and Pasco (populations ~110,000) offer a multitude of recreational, cultural and historical activities for you to enjoy. Our semiarid environment has over 300 days of sunshine a year and provides many opportunities to play in the great outdoors. Hiking, biking, fishing, golfing, and boating are all popular activities around the Tri-Cities area. Riverfront parks offer miles of jogging, biking, and roller blading trails. A two-hour drive to the Cascade Mountains to the west or the Blue Mountains to the east provides snow skiing in the winter and spring and hiking and camping during the summer. To learn more about activities in and around the Tri-Cities, click here. |