Foundations Following
World War II, the
US Atomic Energy Commission was created to support government-sponsored peacetime research on atomic energy. The effort to build a
nuclear reactor in the American northeast was fostered largely by physicists
Isidor Isaac Rabi and
Norman Foster Ramsey Jr., who during the war witnessed many of their colleagues at
Columbia University leave for new remote research sites following the departure of the
Manhattan Project from its campus. Their effort to house this reactor near
New York City was rivalled by a similar effort at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology to have a facility near
Boston. Involvement was quickly solicited from representatives of northeastern universities to the south and west of
New York City such that this city would be at their geographic center. In March 1946 a nonprofit corporation was established that consisted of representatives from nine major research universities —
Columbia,
Cornell,
Harvard,
Johns Hopkins,
MIT,
Princeton,
University of Pennsylvania,
University of Rochester, and
Yale University. at the
Camp Upton site, which would in 1947 be repurposed as BNL Out of 17 considered sites in the Boston-Washington corridor,
Camp Upton on
Long Island was eventually chosen as the most suitable in consideration of space, transportation, and availability. The camp had been a training center for the
US Army during both
World War I and
World War II, and a
Japanese internment camp during the latter. Following the war, Camp Upton was no longer needed, and a plan was conceived to convert the military camp into a research facility. On March 21, 1947, the Camp Upton site was officially transferred from the
U.S. War Department to the new U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), predecessor to the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
Research and facilities Reactor history In 1947 construction began on the first
nuclear reactor at Brookhaven, the
Brookhaven Graphite Research Reactor. This reactor, which opened in 1950, was the first reactor to be constructed in the United States after World War II. The
High Flux Beam Reactor operated from 1965 to 1999. In 1959 Brookhaven built the first US reactor specifically tailored to medical research, the
Brookhaven Medical Research Reactor, which operated until 2000.
Accelerator history posed with a magnet for the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider in 1991 In 1952 Brookhaven began using its first
particle accelerator, the
Cosmotron. At the time the Cosmotron was the world's highest energy accelerator, being the first to impart more than 1
GeV of energy to a particle. The Cosmotron was retired in 1966, after it was superseded in 1960 by the new
Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS). The AGS was used in research that resulted in three
Nobel Prizes, including the discovery of the
muon neutrino, the
charm quark, and
CP violation. In 1970 in BNL started the
ISABELLE project to develop and build two proton intersecting storage rings. The groundbreaking for the project was in October 1978. In 1981, with the tunnel for the accelerator already excavated, problems with the superconducting magnets needed for the ISABELLE accelerator brought the project to a halt, and the project was eventually cancelled in 1983. The
National Synchrotron Light Source operated from 1982 to 2014 and was involved with two Nobel Prize-winning discoveries. It has since been replaced by the
National Synchrotron Light Source II. After ISABELLE'S cancellation, physicist at BNL proposed that the excavated tunnel and parts of the magnet assembly be used in another accelerator. In 1984 the first proposal for the accelerator now known as the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) was put forward. The construction got funded in 1991 and RHIC has been operational since 2000. One of the world's only two operating heavy-ion colliders, RHIC is as of 2010 the second-highest-energy collider after the
Large Hadron Collider. RHIC is housed in a tunnel 2.4 miles (3.9 km) long and is visible from space. On January 9, 2020, It was announced by Paul Dabbar, undersecretary of the US Department of Energy Office of Science, that the BNL eRHIC design has been selected over the conceptual design put forward by
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility as the future
Electron–ion collider (EIC) in the United States. In addition to the site selection, it was announced that the BNL EIC had acquired CD-0 (mission need) from the Department of Energy. BNL's eRHIC design proposes upgrading the existing Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, which collides beams light to heavy ions including polarized protons, with a polarized electron facility, to be housed in the same tunnel.
Other discoveries In 1958, Brookhaven scientists created one of the world's first
video games,
Tennis for Two. In 1967, Brookhaven scientists patented
Maglev, a transportation technology that utilizes
magnetic levitation. In 2024, Brookhaven National Laboratories scientists discovered a new kind of antimatter nucleus. ==Major facilities==