Episodes
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR--24-29457
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Episodes manquant?
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This episode topic is deterrence. We'll explore the meaning of deterrence and how the national labs help keep our country safe. We'll also bring you some audio from a deterrence conference that our team attended. To hear more about deterrence and the role Los Alamos plays, check out our latest National Security Science magazine at lanl.gov/magazine. This issue includes feature stories on what deterrence is and how it’s used, weapons effects, and some perspectives from people involved in the air- and sea-based deterrents.
Labcast: Los Alamos National Laboratory is exceeding expectations in radiological and hazardous waste disposal.
Highlights from the Hill: Los Alamos National Laboratory is helping bring indigenous college students into the field of physics. -
The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR: 23-34155
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
National Security Research Center “Edith Warner” article:
https://discover.lanl.gov/publications/the-vault/the-vault-2022/edith-warner/
For more Los Alamos stories, visit discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-23-34109
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-23-32384
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-23-31276
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-23-23050
Previous title: Nevada series episode 3: Subcritical testing at the Nevada National Security Site
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-23-23250
Previous title: Nevada series episode 2: The testing moratorium and the pivot to stockpile stewardship
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-23-20707
Previous title: Nevada series episode 1: Historical nuclear testing
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
Links to National Security Science articles, "Do look up" and "Looking toward an uncertain future."
https://discover.lanl.gov/publications/national-security-science/2022-summer/do-look-up
https://discover.lanl.gov/publications/national-security-science/2022-summer/looking-toward-an-uncertain-future
LA-UR-22-28631
Previous title: “Don’t Look up” movie and Los Alamos’ involvement with planetary defense science
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
LA-UR-22-28585
Previous title: Climate security = national security
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Links:
“LAMPF Accelerator Reaches Full Energy,” The Atom, July-August 1972
“LAMPF: a dream and a gamble,” Los Alamos Science, winter-spring 1983
LA-UR-22-25189
Previous title: The Los Alamos Neutron Science Center turns 50!
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit
discover.lanl.gov
LA-UR-22-24110
Previous title: Cosmic custodians: Los Alamos Scientists make sure nuclear detonation detection equipment can survive space.
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
For more Los Alamos stories, visit discover.lanl.gov.
LA-UR-21-32253
Previous title: Launching Partnerships: Behind the scenes of a rocket launch
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Sciencemagazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
ReadNational Security Sciencemagazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
LA-UR-21-32455
Podcast artwork: 46680597© Elenadesigner | Dreamstime.com
Previous title: Holiday special featuring a 1964 holiday poem from "The Atom"
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It’s been long known that Klaus Fuchs, Theodore Hall, and David Greenglass committed espionage at Project Y—the Los Alamos branch of the Manhattan Project—during World War II. Each worked at the secret laboratory charged with creating the world’s first atomic bombs, each stole classified weapons information, and each shared it with the Soviet Union. Just recently though, in September 2019, historians confirmed a fourth wartime spy: Oscar Seborer.
In this episode of the National Security Science podcast, National Security Science writer Weston Phippen talks to Los Alamos National Laboratory senior historian Alan Carr about Seborer’s time at Los Alamos and the spy’s possible contributions to the Soviet nuclear weapons program.
For more on Seborer at Los Alamos, make sure to read this article in the summer 2021 issue of National Security Science magazine.
The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
Read National Security Science magazine online here. Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
Illustration for this episode's artwork: Los Alamos National Laboratory/Brenda Fleming
LA-UR-21-28652
Previous title: The fourth atomic spy
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons programs—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
In this episode of the National Security Science podcast, on the 76th anniversary of the Trinity test, we examine the test from two angles: from 1945, when the test occurred, and from 2021, when a group of Los Alamos employees traveled to the Trinity site to tour ground zero and the surrounding area.
Previous title: The Trinity Test: Then & Now
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons programs—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
It’s March, Women’s History Month. And for this podcast, we bring you the story of Jane Hall. Jane Hall came to the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory in 1945. She had an incredible career as a nuclear physicist and as a manager. In 1955, she became the Lab’s first female assistant director, working closely with Director Norris Bradbury. In 1966, Jane was the first woman appointed to the General Advisory Committee if the Atomic Energy Commission, which offered guidance to top policy makers about scientific and technical matters relating to atomic energy.
Previous title: Jane Hall: Queen of the hill
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The National Security Science podcast is a spin-off of National Security Science magazine at Los Alamos National Laboratory. We bring you stories from the Lab’s Weapons Program—stories that show how innovative science and engineering are the key to keeping America safe. Or, as we like to say, better science equals better security.
In this episode, siblings Joel and Candace Vargas siblings sing about some of the Laboratory's earliest computers. Read more about the Vargas siblings in “Math and music run in this family” in the winter 2020 issue of the National Security Science magazine. Read “Computing on the Mesa” for a comprehensive history of computing at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
The bulk of this podcast features mathematician Mary Tsingou (now Mary Tsingou Menzel). In the 1950s, Tsingou programmed the MANIAC computer to solve a problem that Enrico Fermi, John Pasta, and Stan Ulam came up with—their famous vibrating string experiment. She went on to become a coding expert, working on many Los Alamos projects during her accomplished 30-year career. Today, she and her husband still live in Los Alamos, and in May of 2020, she talked with NSS writer Virginia Grant about her work at the Laboratory. Read the full story, “We thank Miss Mary Tsingou” in the winter 2020 issue of the National Security Science magazine.
Request a print copy or provide feedback by emailing [email protected].
Photo for this episode's artwork: Dreamstime ID 60149534 Romolo Tavini
LA-UR-20-30482
Previous title: Holiday special featuring Mary Tsingou
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