
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Richard P. Feynman Center for Innovation
- Research Capabilities
- Deploying Innovation
- Technology Opportunities
- Innovation in New Mexico
-
Los Alamos Collaboration for Explosives Detection (LACED)
-
SensorNexus
-
Exascale Computing Project (ECP)
-
User Facilities
- Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies (CINT)
- Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE)
-
Biosurveillance Gateway
-
Pathogen Databases
-
Environmental Protection
- What We Monitor & Why
- Cultural Preservation
- Taking Care of our Trails
- Obeying Environmental Laws
- Protecting Wildlife
-
Environmental Cleanup
- What We Clean Up & Why
- Corrective Actions
- WIPP Accident Investigation Board Report
- Our Stories »
- News Releases »
- News Releases - 2017 »
- September

September
Four Los Alamos scientists named as 2017 Laboratory Fellows
Donald Burton, Stephen Doorn, Manvendra Dubey and Turab Lookman named 2017 Laboratory Fellows. - 9/28/17
Hunt is over for one of the ‘Top 50 Most-Wanted Fungi’
Scientists have characterized a sample of “mystery” fungus collected in North Carolina and found its home in the fungal tree of life. - 9/28/17
Los Alamos gains role in High-Performance Computing for Materials Program
Companies to compete for inclusion, workshop in October - 9/21/17
Pew! Pew! Curiosity’s ChemCam zaps a half million Martian rocks
ChemCam instrument aboard Mars Curiosity rover passes milestone - 9/21/17
Los Alamos recognized as top diversity employer
For the second straight year, the Laboratory was recognized as a top diversity employer by LATINA Style and STEM Workforce Diversity magazine. - 9/19/17
Bidding farewell to Cassini mission that explored Saturn
Scientists led the development of two scientific sensors on NASA’s spacecraft Cassini. - 9/14/17
Senator Pete Domenici of New Mexico
Beloved at Los Alamos for decades, no one has better understood and supported the essential and enduring national security mission of Los Alamos better than Senator Pete Domenici. - 9/13/17
Carlsten, Nguyen and Sheffield win Free-Electron Laser Prize
The honor is an international recognition of key technologies that originally developed at Los Alamos in the 1980s and 1990s. - 9/6/17
Discovery of boron on Mars adds to evidence for habitability
The discovery of boron on Mars gives scientists more clues about whether life could have ever existed on the planet. - 9/5/17
Los Alamos Laboratory Director Charles F. McMillan to retire at end of year
McMillan informed employees that he intends to step down as Laboratory Director at the end of this calendar year. - 9/5/17
News Releases - 2017
Fast Facts
Total employees: 11,738
Los Alamos National Security, LLC: 8,324
Centerra Group, LLC Los Alamos (Guard Force): 268
Compa, Staff and support contractors: 516
Students: 1,191
Unionized craft workers: 1,047
Post doctoral researchers: 392
Located 35 miles northwest of Santa Fe, New Mexico, on 40 square miles of DOE-owned property.
1,280 individual facilities, including 47 technical areas with 9 million square feet under roof.
Replacement value of $14.2 billion
63% Weapons programs
10% Nonproliferation programs
4% Safeguards and Security
7% Environmental Management
4% DOE Office of Science
3% Energy and other programs
9% Work for Others
39% of employees live in Los Alamos, the remainder commute from Santa Fe, Española, Taos and Albuquerque.
Average Age: 45
67% male, 33% female
47% minorities
64% university degrees
28% hold undergraduate degrees
17% hold master’s degrees
19% have earned a PhD
145 R&D100 awards
34 E.O. Lawrence Awards
9 Presidential Early Career Awards
3 Glenn Seaborg Medals
Edward Teller Medal
Nobel Prize in Physics, Frederick Reines
Albuquerque to Los Alamos, NM
98 miles; 1 hr, 51 min.
Driving directions
Click to larger view

Inside | Terms of Use, Privacy | Site Feedback
Operated by Los Alamos National Security, LLC for the U.S. Dept. of Energy's NNSA | © Copyright 2017 LANS, LLC









