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Role at ANSTO
Role at ANSTO
Incredible Insects Competition 2022
Are you a school student who likes a creative challenge? Enter our new Incredible Insects Competition during the month of July 2021! You could win yourself a prize pack worth over $100! School students from all States/ Territories of Australia are invited to enter.
A natural radioactive tool for urban pollution studies
Collecting ice cores for research
Dr Andrew Smith has just finished collecting ice cores and snow samples on the summit of Law Dome in Antarctica,
Archive
Archive of ANSTO research publications, seminars and short talks.
Evaluating the impact of nanomaterials on health and the environment
ANSTO has put together a robust multidisciplinary approach to understanding the impacts of nanomaterials, investigating a common food additive, E171 titanium dioxide, used primarily as a colouring agent in everyday foods.
Trash to treasure with 3D printing breakthrough
New technology is being developed in Sydney to recycle used Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and turn it into raw materials for 3D printing.
About the ANSTO Hackathon
Advanced nuclear waste forms
Update: Regional Cooperative Agreement (RCA) Cooperative Projects (Asia and Pacific)
ANSTO is coordinating and facilitating the calling of pre-concept papers for the next cycle of technical cooperative project proposals under the Regional Cooperative Agreement for Research, Development and Training Related to Nuclear Science and Technology for Asia and the Pacific (RCA) | IAEA
Early drawings reveal their secrets under x-ray examination
Determining the extent of soil erosion on a NSW vineyard
Research explains how some plants evolved to depend on fire for survival
Researchers based at Monash University and the Swedish Museum of Natural History have pioneered the use of nuclear imaging techniques at ANSTO’s Centre for Neutron Scattering to resolve long-standing problems in plant evolutionary history linked to wildfires.
Role at ANSTO
Highlights - Magnetism
Highlights of the Magnetism Project.
Significant progress on breakthrough cancer therapy
Research has demonstrated that internally generated neutrons could be used to effectively target micro-infiltrates and cancer cells outside of the defined treatment regions.
Services - Taipan
Sample environments, Data analysis, SpICE and SICS
Improving carbon dating
Study helps make carbon dating a more accurate chronological tool.