The Management of Research Institutions: A Look at Government LaboratoriesScientific and Technical Information Branch, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1984 - 306 pages |
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Page 64
... costs ; how to screen proposals for manufacturing operations in a zero - gravity environment ; how to improve the orbiter's ability to operate beyond near - earth orbit . With most expendable rockets to be phased out , NASA has staked a ...
... costs ; how to screen proposals for manufacturing operations in a zero - gravity environment ; how to improve the orbiter's ability to operate beyond near - earth orbit . With most expendable rockets to be phased out , NASA has staked a ...
Page 68
... cost to the government were partially concealed . We concede that special circumstances might justify such an arrangement , although the creation of a new division within an existing laboratory might be less costly . The fundamental ...
... cost to the government were partially concealed . We concede that special circumstances might justify such an arrangement , although the creation of a new division within an existing laboratory might be less costly . The fundamental ...
Page 69
... Cost . The cost of operating a technology development institu- tion is ( in 1983 dollars ) about $ 75 000- $ 100 000 per employee . This number , multiplied by the number of employees , is the institution's budget , and it tends to hold ...
... Cost . The cost of operating a technology development institu- tion is ( in 1983 dollars ) about $ 75 000- $ 100 000 per employee . This number , multiplied by the number of employees , is the institution's budget , and it tends to hold ...
Page 71
... cost . The long - term savings from closing a facility may be outweighed by the closeout costs . When the Navy decided in 1977 to " disestablish " the Naval Electronics Systems Engineering Center in Washington , DC , it estimated annual ...
... cost . The long - term savings from closing a facility may be outweighed by the closeout costs . When the Navy decided in 1977 to " disestablish " the Naval Electronics Systems Engineering Center in Washington , DC , it estimated annual ...
Page 89
... costs FIGURE 33. - General wind tunnel capabilities as a function of time . 2000 $ M cost , ( $ 1,000 / hr ) papers , meetings , presentations , various engineering achievements which 89 A LOOK AT GOVERNMENT LABORATORIES.
... costs FIGURE 33. - General wind tunnel capabilities as a function of time . 2000 $ M cost , ( $ 1,000 / hr ) papers , meetings , presentations , various engineering achievements which 89 A LOOK AT GOVERNMENT LABORATORIES.
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Common terms and phrases
activities Administration agency's Air Force aircraft alternating gradient synchrotron Ames Laboratory Apollo Apollo program applied research areas basic research Bell Labs Bureau of Standards commercial Congress contract contractors Defense Division employees Energy Research established evaluation example executives Federal laboratories Full-Time Equivalent functions funds Headquarters Ibid important industry innovation Jet Propulsion Laboratory laboratory director Langley Research Center laser major Manhattan Project mission Multiprogram multiprogram laboratories NASA NASA centers NASA's National Bureau National Laboratory Naval Navy nuclear Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office Orbiting organization organizational performance personnel planning Polaris problems professional Propulsion reactor research and development research and technology Research Center role RTOP Science and Technology scientific research scientists and engineers Space Shuttle spacecraft sponsoring agency staff task technical technology development laboratory test facilities University uranium Washington weapons wind tunnel York
Popular passages
Page 28 - Act, to the endowment, support and maintenance of at least one college where the leading object shall be, without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts, in such manner as the legislature of the States may respectively prescribe, in order to promote the liberal and practical education of the industrial classes in the several pursuits and professions of life.
Page 28 - Act of 1862 was a comprehensive measure, providing for "the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least one college [in each State] where the leading object shall be, without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts...
Page 265 - Aeronautics to supervise and direct the scientific study of the problems of flight, with a view to their practical solution...
Page 272 - Act to be to establish and vigorously conduct a comprehensive, national program of basic and applied research and development, including but not limited to demonstrations of practical applications, of all potentially beneficial energy sources and utilization technologies, within the Energy Research and Development Administration.
Page 267 - Foundation should develop and promote a national policy for scientific research and scientific education, should support basic research in nonprofit organizations, should develop scientific talent in American youth by means of scholarships and fellowships, and should by contract and otherwise support long-range research on military matters.
Page 72 - Weinberg sought to diversify, while maintaining good relations with the Atomic Energy Commission and the congressional Joint Committee on Atomic Energy.
Page 214 - Laboratory Lawrence Liver-more National Laboratory Los Alamos National Laboratory Oak Ridge National Laboratory Pacific Northwest Laboratory...
Page 259 - Research projects which represent investigation directed to discovery of new scientific knowledge and which have specific commercial objectives with respect to either products or processes.
Page i - Anxiety for the future time disposeth men to inquire into the causes of things; because the knowledge of them maketh men the better able to order the present to their best advantage.
Page 88 - What, then, is time? I know well enough what it is, provided that nobody asks me; but if I am asked what it is and try to explain, I am baffled.