
Showing 221 - 240 of 1921 results
Work from PLATYPUS and NDF published in Nature Communications
Good Presence at this week's ICALEPCS Meeting in Melbourne
Beam time allocations for the first half of 2016
Finalists for ANSTO Awards in Nuclear Science and Technology
Distinguished Lecture: Big Science can provide value for money
ANSTO contributes to funded ARC Discovery and Linkage projects
Enhancing safety of trailer trucks among research projects
Successful clinical trial for prostate cancer enabled by ANSTO
The new targeted treatment for aggressive prostate cancer, which include lutetium produced at ANSTO, has shown to produce more potent and durable responses in men and with fewer side-effects.
Seeing clearly: Young researcher honoured for pushing microscope boundaries
Major study identifies a potential drug target for lowering cholesterol
Study explored how key proteins manage dietary cholesterol absorption and elucidated crucial transport mechanisms that contribute to cholesterol balance in the body.
Champions are accelerating progress in the empowerment of women
Unusual state of matter in new material holds promise for transformative quantum technologies
ANSTO has provided supporting experimental evidence of a highly unusual quantum state, a quantum spin liquid (QSL), in a two-dimensional material.
Radiocarbon dating supports Aboriginal occupation of South Australia for 29,000 years
Radiocarbon dating at ANSTO has supported research that vastly extends the known timeline of the Aboriginal occupation of South Australia’s Riverland region.
3D printing of single atom catalysts pioneered by research team for industrial chemical and energy applications
A large international collaboration has developed a straightforward and cost-effective synthesizing approach using a 3D printing technique to produce single atom catalysts (SACs)—potentially paving the way for large scale commercial production with broad industrial applications.
Radiocarbon dating at ANSTO informs date of oldest known Aboriginal rock art
Radiocarbon dating capabilities at the Centre for Accelerator Science have provided evidence of a 17,300-year old painting of a kangaroo from the Kimberley region.
Scientist awarded for work probing nanoscale magnetic structures in thin films using neutron scattering

Research to improve food quality and design for better health
We are using nuclear and other methods to improve the traceability of food to ensure safety and security for consumers and industry, optimise the various functions of food and its production and understand the fundamental mechanisms that link some food to an immune response
A way forward for nuclear technology in Australia with public approval
Federal Parliament’s House Standing Committee on the Environment and Energy has presented its report, arising from its Inquiry into the prerequisites for nuclear energy in Australia today.
Australian Synchrotron supports important palaeological cave art study in Borneo
Powder diffraction and X-ray fluorescence microscopy support investigation of pigments in rock art.
Food labels can get mixed up but atoms don’t lie
ANSTO's unique capabilities are being used to develop a quick analytical tool to determine the geographic origin of seafood and authenticates quality.