Let your students lead a 30-minute Q&A session with our ANSTO experts about one of the following three topics:
- Nuclear medicines
- Nuclear techniques to study the environment
- Fission and its applications in reactors
Please ensure your students do some pre-reading about the research topic and come prepared with questions to ask during the session. We also ask that teachers send us a copy of the student questions the day before, so we can adequately prepare for your session. Teachers must be present during the session with their students.
Cost: Free
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Code of Conduct: Powder Diffraction Workshop 2022
Code of Conduct: ANSTO-HZB Neutron School
Role at ANSTO
Seeing inside an advanced material
Synchrotron technique clarifies the location of calcium in a promising material with a relatively high superconducting transition temperature.
First magnetisation curves from PPMS
Sika receives its operating licence
Meet an Expert
Home school group tours (Lucas Heights, Sydney)
Tours can be booked for groups from Monday to Friday, subject to availability. Groups must be at least 12 people. We can cater to a maximum of 32 people, as this is the number we can accommodate in our on-site buses.
When you request a tour, please give us as much information about the age range and learning levels of your participants so we can best accommodate your group. This tour is not intended for children younger than 8 years old.
Duration: 2.5 hours
Cost: $15 each for all tour attendees (parents and children)
Transport of samples
This information is provided as a general advice to shipping or bringing samples to ACNS. You should check that details are current when arranging sample transport.
Infrastructure - Planetary Materials
At ANSTO we have a large range of facilities that can be used to investigate planetary materials.
Synchrotron light illuminates key structures in study on genetic basis for COVID-19 immunity
Today an international team has provided a molecular basis for strong immunity against COVID-19.
Congratulations to scholarship winner
Diabetes Awareness Week: The importance of insulin
Synchrotron scientist in team that makes historic meteorite find
ANSTO’s own meteorite hunter, who is also a planetary scientist and instrument scientist Dr Helen Brand took part in an expedition led by Professor Andy Tomkins of Monash University that has found the largest meteorite strewn field in Australia since the famous Murchison meteorite event in 1969.
Bushfires may have driven a critical ecosystem transition
Research provides insights into Tasmania’s Lake Vera more than 800 years ago
CEO delivers opening remarks at Symposium
Inaugural AONSA Research Fellow at the Bragg Institute
Applications - Emu
Applications and Publications