|
Remarks
by Dr. Raymond L. Orbach
Director, Office of Science
U.S. Department of Energy
Tennessee Valley Corridor 2004 Knoxville-Oak
Ridge Summit
Knoxville, TN
June 1, 2004
It is a great pleasure to be here
in Knoxville. Two days ago, I had the privilege
of “walking the Mall” during the
National World War II Reunion in Washington,
DC. It was a day of the people, with tent after
tent on the Mall providing an opportunity to
reflect and honor the sixteen million men and
women who served our nation, and world.
The crowds were representative
of the 4.4 million alive today, and of you and
me. The tents on the Mall, simple and humble,
but swarming with proud Americans, were a cross-section
of World War II memorabilia: “Preserving
Memories,” “Veterans History Project,”
“Wartime Stories,” “Building
the Memorial,” “Veterans Services,”
and one which vividly remains in my memory,
“Reunion Hall.” There, within its
modest confines, were poster boards, the “Reunion
Wall,” for each of the fighting units
within the Armed Services [Army, Navy, Air Force,
Marines, Coast Guard, and Merchant Marine].
Pinned on each were hundreds of notes, written
by veterans or relatives, recalling some incident
or memory, or asking the whereabouts of a comrade
or friend. They were vivid reminders of the
sacrifice of those who died or were wounded,
and of those who worked so hard at home to support
them.
As I walked between the boards,
I thought about the scientists and their contribution.
I remembered the radar group at Lincoln Labs,
so instrumental in preserving the lives of our
aviators. I remembered the weapons complex,
and the importance of science for arming and
protecting our soldiers. As I pondered the contribution
of science, I came across the poster board titled
“Manhattan Project.” There was a
photo of a medal with the inscription ”Atomic
Bomb,” and a note from an unknown colleague
from UCLA writing about his mother and her role.
My memory immediately went to
a moment in 1943 when I was with my family at
Union Station in Los Angeles, waving goodbye
to my uncle who was off to the Pacific Theater
as an army private. My relatives were in tears,
but as a nine year old, all I could see was
the exciting uniform and the image of so many
brave faces on the train. I learned later that
my uncle was to be part of the force to invade
Japan. It is my firm belief that the atomic
bomb saved his life, and the million casualties
expected from an invasion.
The contribution of Oak Ridge
National Laboratories to the Manhattan Project
--the gaseous diffusion plants that produced
enriched uranium -- enabled the United States
to produce the first atomic bomb, and usher
in the atomic age. That age produced not a "delicate
balance of terror," but rather a period
of freedom from world war -- 60 years to be
precise.
The proud legacy of this region
for service continues. Oak Ridge National Laboratory
has become an engine of regional economic growth
in the 21st century, serving our entire nation.
It is blessed with what will soon be the premier
neutron research laboratory in the world, with
the $1.4 billion Spallation Neutron Source and
the upgraded High Flux Isotope Reactor. Over
2,000 more scientists from around the world
will come each year to Tennessee to work and
live with these wonderful facilities. When combined
with the Center for Nanophase Materials, for
which Secretary Abraham broke ground last year,
a new state-of-the-art Advanced Materials Characterization
Laboratory, and the Aberration Corrected Electron
Microscope, Oak Ridge and the Tennessee Valley
Corridor will be the world-wide center for materials
science. The opportunities for economic development
will be limitless.
And there is more. On May 12th,
Secretary Abraham announced that Oak Ridge was
chosen to develop DOE’s leadership-class
supercomputer. Oak Ridge was chosen from among
four excellent proposals received from Office
of Science laboratories. When complete, we expect
that the Oak Ridge National Leadership Computing
Facility (NLCF) will be the world leader in
scientific computing.
The Secretary commented at the
announcement, “We are making this significant
investment in America’s scientific infrastructure,
with the expectation that it will yield a wealth
of dividends – major research breakthroughs,
significant technological innovations, medical
and health advances, enhanced economic competitiveness,
and improved quality of life for the American
people.” These advances will be occurring
right here in the heart of the Tennessee Valley
Corridor, supporting DOE’s missions of
energy security and economic competitiveness.
Add a new functional genomics
laboratory and a new 300,000 square foot research
complex for engineering and computational sciences,
and you have a breath-taking array of opportunity.
This is just part of the story
of how the partnership of the laboratory, the
University of Tennessee and other universities
in the region, along with the State, businesses
and communities throughout the Tennessee Valley
are transforming the economy in the Tennessee
Valley Corridor:
· The University of Tennessee
has established many partnerships with the laboratory.
There are 10 joint ORNL/UT Distinguished Scientists
(with additional 6 searches/pending offers)
and 23 Joint Faculty with 96 associated graduate
students, and 81 post docs doing research in
materials science, neutron scattering, nuclear
physics, chemistry, condensed matter physics,
chemical engineering, computational science,
and environmental science.
· Laboratory partnerships
are being extended to universities outside of
the state, including Joint Faculty appointments
at North Carolina State, North Carolina A&T,
University of Virginia, University of Georgia,
and Georgia Tech.
· The Joint Institute for
Computational Sciences has been established
with an ORNL/UT Distinguished Scientist as director
and 14 joint post docs and 4 graduate students.
Housed in the same building will be the Oak
Ridge Center for Advanced Studies, an intellectual
center for workshops and study groups on science
and technology issues, in partnership with UT,
ORAU, and the UT-Battelle core universities
(Florida State, Georgia Tech, NC State, Duke,
Virginia, and Virginia Tech).
· Other Joint Institutes
include the well established Joint Institute
for Heavy Ion Research (ORNL, UT, Vanderbilt)
which has provided a focus for nuclear physics
activities throughout the Southeast, and developing
joint institutes for Biological Sciences and
Neutron Sciences.
· ORNL is a partner in
five large UT research centers including the
Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics, the
Tennessee Advance Materials Laboratory, Center
for Environmental Biotechnology, Center for
Structural Biology, Food Safety Center, and
Center for Information Research. These Centers
involve more than 20 ORNL researchers and joint
grants from NIH, NSF, and USDA.
· ORNL is participating
with UT, Vanderbilt, St Jude Hospital, Meharry
Medical School, University of Memphis, and ETSU
on a successful $13.8M NIH grant for targeted
mutagenesis of mouse genome and neural phenotypes.
The capabilities of the laboratory
have spurred the development of over 30 new
companies throughout the region, supported by
the Center for Entrepreneurial Growth.
I would like to briefly return
to high-end computing with high-speed networks
and their critical role in the economic future
of the Tennessee Valley Corridor. On August
14, 2002, I had the privilege of dedicating
the new OC-192 network connection from Oak Ridge,
through Chattanooga to Atlanta. This has already
allowed new scientific collaborations to form
between ORNL and various research universities,
and enabled joint faculty appointments with
Georgia Tech and North Carolina State. High
speed network access to ORNL has also resulted
in establishment of a new Simulation Center
(~$5M computational science center) at UT Chattanooga
and is central to the city’s “Connect
the Valley” initiative to attract additional
high-tech businesses to the region.
On February 24 of this year, the
Southern Governors’ Association approved
a resolution by Governors Sonny Perdue of Georgia
and Phil Bredesen of Tennessee wherein: “…research
universities of the Southern region and the
Oak Ridge National Laboratory share a growing
and mutually beneficial partnership in pursuing
research critical to national security and economic
well-being” as well as their commitment
to “to a high performance supercomputer
network grid…as a way to…enhance
research and education and foster economic development.”
These efforts play an important role in connecting
the Oak Ridge National Laboratory to the Tennessee
Valley and beyond.
These high-speed networks will
allow universities, government, and industries
to access Oak Ridge’s leadership class
computing facility, as well as other Oak Ridge
facilities, to foster future economic development
of the Tennessee Valley Corridor and beyond.
It will enable industry to develop “virtual
prototypes,” reducing costs and time to
market, providing an edge over foreign competition.
Oak Ridge National Laboratory will be the hub
of economic development and energy security
for the Tennessee Valley Corridor, and the entire
Southeastern United States.
In closing, let me thank you for
your assistance in bringing jobs and opportunity
to this region. The Department of Energy is
proud to be your partner.
|