
Address: Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) Trombay, Mumbai-400 085 Telephone: 91 - 22 – 5505050, -5505010 Telex: 011 – 61017, -5519613 Fax: 91 - 22 – 5505151, -5519613 Email: webmaster@magnum.barc.ernet.in Website: www.barc.ernet.in Director of Reactor Group: Mr. S.K. Sharma Subordinate to: Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India Primary Function: Research in reactor design and operation
Description and Activities: Apsara is the oldest of India's research reactors. The reactor was designed by the Bhabha Atomic research Center (BARC) and built with assistance from the United Kingdom (which also provided the initial fuel supply consisting of 80 percent enriched uranium). Apsara first went critical on 4 August 1956. Apsara is a light water swimming pool-type reactor with a maximum power output of one megawatt thermal (MWt). The reactor burns enriched uranium in the form of aluminum alloyed curved plates. Fuel for the reactor is supplied under contract from the United Kingdom, provided that the fuel is safeguarded. The reactor itself is not under International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards. The Apsara reactor is utilized for various experiments including neutron activation analysis, radiation damage studies, forensic research, neutron radiography, and shielding experiments. The reactor is also used for research and the production of radioisotopes. After nearly half a century of operation, BARC plans to refurbish and modify the aging reactor to test a new indigenous design of a 5-10MWt research reactor.
Key Sources: Andrew Koch, "Selected Indian Nuclear Facilities," Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS), 1999, <http://cns.miis.edu/research/india/nuclear.htm>; Bhabha Atomic Research Center (BARC), <http://www.barc.ernet.in>; DAE (Government of India), "Annual Report 2000-2001," Executive Summary available at <http://www.dae.gov.in/ar2001/execsum.htm>; "New reactor being planned in Trombay," The Hindu (Chennai), 28 April 1999, <http://www.hinduonline.com>; "Research Reactors," Nuclear Review, April 1996, p. 17; "Apsara to be decommissioned," Nuclear Engineering International, Vol. 31, No. 387, October 1986, pp. 11-12; 2000 World Nuclear Industry Handbook (Wilmington, UK: Nuclear Engineering International, 2000), p. 198.
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Updated September 2003 |
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