Showing 201 - 220 of 1156 results
Study of polar ice confirms carbon-climate feedback
Investigators have verified and quantified the relationship between the Earth’s land biosphere and changes in temperature and provided evidence that temperature impacts the cycling of carbon between land, ocean and the atmosphere.
Eureka Prizes 2024
Role at ANSTO
Access to information
The microstructure of paracetamol
Analysing the microstructure of paracetamol using synchrotron infrared optical technique provides insights.
Understanding landscape evolution in intra-plate areas
Insights into the formation of deep river canyons mountain ranges in intra-tectonic plate areas by SAAFE Scholarship recipient and collaborators.
Graduate Profile - Robert Raposio
A desire to give people around the world greater access to the benefits of nuclear medicine is behind Robert Raposio and his research into producing radioisotopes in more efficient, cheaper and sustainable ways.
2000 year global temperature record published
Lake sediments as environmental archives used in compilation of data.
Digital Media Collection Notice
ANSTO plastic trawling from Hobart to Sydney
Success of Australian Synchrotron Open Day reflects public interest in science
Close to 3000 members of the public decided to have a look at a building that is shaped like a doughnut, is as big as a football field and creates light more powerful than the sun when the Australian Synchrotron held its bi-annual Open Day held on Sunday, 16 October.
Mummified remains reveal breathing and movement in the ancient world of reptiles
An international team has published research in Nature today that identified the oldest known mummified remains of an exceptionally well-preserved terrestrial vertebrate, a 289-million-year-old reptile Captorhinus.
Seeing inside artefact
Seeing inside an ancient Australian Indigenous artefact non-invasively using neutron tomography.
Synchrotron techniques reveal amount of carbon captured in microscopic seams of deep-sea limestone
A collaboration of Australian scientists has used ANSTO’s Australian Synchrotron to measure the amount of carbon that is captured in microscopic seams of deep-sea limestone, which acts as a carbon sink.
Australia joins International Collaboration
ANSTO to contribute to research on Next Gen Nuclear Energy Systems
Head of Nuclear Operations appointed
Pamela Naidoo-Ameglio takes up executive role
ANSTO is helping construct Australia’s first dark matter lab
Launch of the second phase of construction of the underground laboratory to detect dark matter.
2023 Eureka Prize winners announced
Graduate profile - Robert Mardus-Hall & Andrew Pastrello
Nuclear engineer, Robert Mardus-Hall, with his research partner Andrew Pastrello, are developing nuclear power based solutions for space missions to the Moon and Mars.