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Nuclear lab to relocate hundreds of workers in New Mexico
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US nuclear lab to relocate hundreds of workers in New Mexico
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Los Alamos National Laboratory moves 500 employees to Santa Fe | US Department of Energy Science News
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Los Alamos National Laboratory Moves 500 Employees To Santa Fe, Signs Lease On Pacheco Street Office Complex
The Laboratory plans to move 500 employees to two buildings on Pacheco Street in fall, 2021. The job relocation is the largest in Santa Fe history. Photo Courtesy LANL
LANL NEWS
Los Alamos National Laboratory is strengthening its presence in Santa Fe with the signing of a 10-year-lease of two adjacent office properties totaling 77,856 square feet of space at the corner of Pacheco Street and St. Michael’s Drive. The new location offers meeting rooms, permanent offices, and co-working space for roughly 500 employees in the Laboratory’s administrative services sectors, including human resources, procurement, finance, and information technology. No hazardous work will be carried out there.
Scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory seek to reduce uncertainties with these fires
DOE/Los Alamos National Laboratory
A firefighter starts a fire to serve as a firebreak to prevent spread of a brush fire.
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., March 4, 2021 Scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory and partners have used modeling to highlight the large impact that small changes in wind conditions can have on low-intensity fires or prescribed burns. Conducting safe prescribed fires depends on anticipating the range of potential fire behavior associated with complex wind conditions. This study has important implications for the future use of observations to aid in model development, said Alexandra Jonko, a computational earth scientist at Los Alamos, whose team authored an article published in a special issue in MDPI Atmosphere. Adequately characterizing variations in the wind at multiple scales is critical. Ultimately, this work will lead to scientific improvements that will allow presc