This site will work and look better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device.

Idaho National Laboratory

IEA Task 5 2002 Meeting - Photo Gallery
The lounging seals at Seal Beach in La Jolla, California, April 14, 2002. Tonio Pinna stated "It is not a bad life for them.
The DIII-D control room.
Peter Petersen explaining the divertor of DIII-D on the wall display.
Peter was discussing some overhead RF heating transfer lines.
Personnel safety precautions to enter power supply rooms. Keys to unlock the doors must be obtained from the operator.
The on-site helium liquefier (150 liter/h) and the 4,000 liter liquid helium storage dewar.
Electrical isolation for neutral beam power.
One of the CPI gyrotron units.
The Gycom gyrotron unit from Russia, nicknamed Boris. The 2nd unit is nicknamed Natasha.
Outside the DIII-D building, near some of the primary cooling water system piping.
Outdoor transformers and rectifier cabinets for electron cyclotron heating power.
More transformers for ECH power.
Transformers for the neutral beam injectors. Crowbar switches are inside the rooms on the left.
The 138 kV local electrical utility incoming feeder lines to DIII-D.
After machine shutdown, we were able to enter the machine floor and see the torus.
This is the 270R0 port, which has the manhole where personnel enter the vacuum vessel during a vent. The items on the port flange are parts of the Michelson Horizontal Electron Cyclotron Emission diagnostic.
The DIII-D vessel can be seen behind these diagnostics, magnet coils, and other equipment.
Magnet cooling water hoses under the center of the DIII-D torus.
The DIII-D facility sign near the building entryway.
Neutron shielding roof for DIII-D. The roof is in position over the torus in this photograph; DIII-D is in operation.
Contact:
Lee Cadwallader, (208) 526-1232, Send E-mail