
User Meeting 2024 award recipients
ANSTO and the User Meeting 2024 organising committee celebrate this years award recipients.
Showing 1 - 20 of 32 results
ANSTO and the User Meeting 2024 organising committee celebrate this years award recipients.
ANSTO’s Dr Joanne Lackenby and Dr Katie Sizeland have been selected 2018 Superstars of STEM as some of Australia’s most inspiring scientists, technologists and educators.
Highlighting the contribution of four inspirational ANSTO leaders on International Women's Day.
Australia’s best known carnivorous dinosaur Australovenator is under the microscope at ANSTO
2025 ANSTO Work Experience Program will be open for applications in the new year.
Researchers from Murdoch University and associated collaborators are using ANSTO’s unique nuclear capabilities to gain detailed information about how wheat crops take in administered micronutrients to maximise their efficient use.
Phase contrast tomography shows great promise in early stages of study and is expected to be tested on first patients by 2020.
Research on lunar meteorite and moon crater analogues coincides with Science Week.
Doping with transition metals produced stability in bismuth oxide.
Doping with transition metals produced stability in bismuth oxide.
In May 2023, The Honourable Dr Annabelle Bennett, ANSTO Board Chair, shared ANSTO's Statement of Intent with the Minister for Industry, Science and Technology.
The User Advisory Committee (UAC) are pleased to present this year's invited speakers.
The Infrared microspectroscopy microscopes can record spectra from a range of different samples; from thin microtomed sections to polished blocks and embedded particles. This section highlights the types of samples that can be analysed using the IRM beamline
Read about an ANSTO scientist and their work to prepare for a school project or interview.
A team of scientists from The Australian National University (ANU) has discovered how a powerful “weapon” used by many fungal pathogens enables them to cause disease in major food crops such as rice and corn
ANSTO is collaborating on a project funded with an Australian Research Council linkage grant that will develop new materials and better systems for efficiently storing hydrogen gas.