RIKEN(理研,RIKEN?) is a large natural sciences research institute in Japan. It was founded in 1917, and now has approximately 3000 scientists on seven campuses across Japan, the main one in Wako, just outside Tokyo. RIKEN is Independent Administrative Institution and formal name is Rikagaku Kenkyusho(理化学研究所,Rikagaku Kenkyusho?).
In 1913 the well-known scientist Jokichi Takamine (高峰 譲吉) first proposed the establishment of a national science research institute in Japan. This task was taken on by Eiichi Shibusawa (渋沢 栄一), a prominent businessman, and following a resolution by the Diet in 1915, RIKEN came into existence in March 1917. In its first incarnation, RIKEN was a private foundation (zaidan), funded by a combination of industry, the government, and the Imperial Household. It was located in the Komagome (駒込) district of Tokyo, and its first Director was the mathematician Dairoku Kikuchi (菊池 大麓).
In 1927 Masatoshi Ōkōchi (大河内 正敏), the third Director, established the RIKEN Konzern (a zaibatsu). This was a group of spin-off companies that used RIKEN's scientific achievements for commercial ends and returned the profits to RIKEN. At its peak in 1939 the Konzern comprised about 121 factories and 63 companies, including Riken Kankōshi (理研感光紙), which is now Ricoh.
During World War II the Japanese army's atomic bomb program was conducted at RIKEN. In April 1945 the US bombed RIKEN's laboratories in Komagome, and in November, after the end of the war, Allied soldiers destroyed its two cyclotrons.
After the war, the Allies dissolved RIKEN as a private foundation, and it was brought back to life as a company called "Kagaku Kenkyūsho" (科学研究所), or "KAKEN" (科研). In 1958 the Diet passed the RIKEN Law, whereby the institute returned to its original name and entered its third incarnation, as a public corporation (特殊法人 tokushu hōjin), funded by the government. In 1963 it relocated to a large site in Wako, Saitama Prefecture, just outside Tokyo.
Since the 1980s RIKEN has expanded dramatically. New labs, centers, and institutes have been established in Japan and overseas, including:
in 2000, the Yokohama Institute, which now contains four centers for research in the life sciences
in 2002, the Kobe Institute, which contains the Center for Developmental Biology
In October 2003 RIKEN's status changed again, to Independent Administrative Institution. As such, RIKEN is still publicly funded, and it is periodically evaluated by the government, but it has a higher degree of autonomy than before.
Organizational structure
The main divisions of RIKEN are listed here. Purely administrative divisions are omitted.
Headquarters (mostly in Wako)
Center for Intellectual Property Strategies
Advanced Center for Computing and Communication
RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative
Next-Generation Supercomputer R&D Center
XFEL (X-ray Free Electron Laser) Project Head Office
Wako Institute
Discovery Research Institute (curiosity-driven research on a wide range of basic subjects)
Frontier Research Institute (fixed-term projects; also has centers in Sendai and Nagoya)
Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science
Brain Science Institute
Initiative Research Units (research by young scientists in unexplored fields)
The SPring-8 (Super Photon Ring 8GeV) facility in Harima is the world's largest and most powerful third-generation synchrotron radiation facility.
The RIKEN Genomic Sciences Center in Yokohama was one of the sixteen institutions that formed the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium.
In July 2004 a team at RIKEN created the first confirmed instance of element 113. This element has yet to be formally named. On April 2, 2005 the same team successfully created it for the second time.
On May 23, 2005, the eight-storey RI (radioisotope) Beam Factory Experiment Facility opened in Wako.
The RIKEN Super Combined Cluster is one of the world's fastest supercomputers. In January 2006, RIKEN set up the Next-Generation Supercomputer R&D Center, with the purpose of designing and building the fastest supercomputer in the world, and in June 2006, it announced the completion of a one-petaflops computer system designed specially for molecular dynamics simulation. It will have the Next-Generation Supercomputer installed in Kobe in 2010.
There are a small number of graduate students at RIKEN, but it does not award degrees itself.
The name "RIKEN"
The full Japanese name of RIKEN is "Rikagaku Kenkyūsho" (理化学研究所), which literally means "The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research" (though it now also conducts research in biology and other fields). "RIKEN" (理研) is a Japanese abbreviation of this.
"The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research" was formerly used as an alternative English name, or a kind of subtitle, for RIKEN. But in 2003, when it became an Independent Administrative Institution, this name was officially discarded, and the English appellation is now just "RIKEN", in capital letters. The media sometimes refer to it as "Riken" or "the Riken institute".
"RIKEN" is pronounced as a single word, with the "i" as in "bit" and the "e" as in "bet". The full Japanese name, "Rikagaku Kenkyūsho", is sometimes pronounced "Rikagaku Kenkyūjo", though strictly speaking this is not correct.
Notable scientists and other people from RIKEN
Dairoku Kikuchi, mathematician and the first Director of RIKEN
Toshio Takamine, specialist in spectroscopy, author of The "Near Infra-Red Spectra of Helium and Mercury" and "Absorption of Ha Line" and "The structure of mercury lines examined by an echelon grating and a Lummer-Gehrcke plate"