CEA Paris-Saclay

The CEA Paris-Saclay (formerly CEA Saclay) center is one of nine centers belonging to the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA). The Saclay site hosts the administrative headquarters of the CEA. Historically, it was the heart of French nuclear research since Frederic Joliot-Curie founded it after the Second World War.[1] Its campus was designed by the architect Auguste Perret.[2]

CEA Paris-Saclay
Coordinates48.72470°N 2.14876°E / 48.72470; 2.14876
Key people
Michel Bédoucha, director

It is now a part of the confederation of Paris-Saclay University, along with other organizations including CentraleSupélec, CNRS, ENS Paris-Saclay, HEC Paris, and the IHES.

Research

The complex employs more than 7,000 scientists (including other smaller Île-de-France sites) and is located in the Essonne department of northern France, south of Paris on the Saclay Plateau.[3]

The research carried out ranges from fundamental research to applied research and, thanks to the Orpheus research reactor, lasers and magnetic resonance research into the State of Matter.

Research at Saclay is focussed on different topics:

  • Applied nuclear research: Research is carried out to optimise current and future French nuclear reactors using the Osiris experimental reactor and the Tamaris earthquake simulation laboratory as well as further research into nuclear waste management.
  • Technology research: Research into IT systems used in nuclear installations, man-machine interface as well as sensor technology.
  • Health research: Research into the effects of radioactivity on living cells and molecules, protein engineering and Medical imaging.
  • Environmental research: Research into the effects of climate change and greenhouse gases.
  • Fundamental Research.

Notable subsidiaries

  • Institut national des sciences et techniques nucléaires (National Institute for Nuclear Science and Technology) or INSTN which is dedicated to the academic and professional training in the field of atomic energy.
  • NeuroSpin (fr) is a neuroimaging research center with some of the most powerful MRI machines in the world

People

References

  1. Rayner-Canham, Marelene F. (1997). A Devotion to Their Science: Pioneer Women of Radioactivity. Philadelphia, Pa.: Chemical Heritage Foundation. pp. 97–123. ISBN 978-0-7735-6658-3. OCLC 191818978.
  2. "CEA de Saclay : le palais de la science d'Auguste Perret" (in French). Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  3. "CEA Paris-Saclay" (in French). Retrieved 1 December 2022.
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