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Environmental change
Targeted research to improve knowledge of past and present climate and the evolution of landscape.
Impact of contaminants
Research to understand how contaminants move through the soil and affect ecosystems and humans as well estimating emissions.
Exchange of expertise
A specialist in particle therapy treatment planning from the Mayo Clinic in the US, Professor Chris Beltran, recently visited ANSTO for an exchange for information.
Award-winning research publication on superalloys
Industrial Engagement Manager at ANSTO and Professor in Advanced Structural Materials at the University of Sydney, Anna Paradowska is among the authors who contributed to a 2019 paper that was recently awarded the ASM International ASM Henry Marion Howe Medal in Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A.
Building new knowledge of advanced materials in extreme environments
An international research collaboration between the University of New South Wales (UNSW), the Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics (SINAP) and ANSTO has provided insights into the performance of advanced material for use in the high-temperature environment of molten salt systems.
Significant progress on ultraflexible solar cells
A collaborative group including Monash has produced an ultra-thin and ultra-flexible organic solar cell for advanced wearable devices.
Final meeting of the Characterisation Council
Predicting the impact of space radiation on satellite electrical systems
Airbus Australia Pacific has provided students participating in ANSTO’s National Graduate Innovation Forum with a practical challenge relating to technology that is exposed to damaging radiation in space.
Neutron group recognises diverse accomplishments of scientists at User Meeting
The Australian Neutron Beam Users Group (ANBUG) presented annual awards to accomplished neutron scientists at the combined ANSTO User Meeting - AUM2023 held in late November 2023.
A full year of cold neutrons at OPAL
4 Decades of Q using small-angle neutron scattering at OPAL
Sea level rise predicted to dramatically speed up erosion of rock coastlines by 2100
New research published a team from the Imperial College London, University of Glasgow and ANSTO suggests that rock coasts, which make up over half the world’s coastlines, could retreat more rapidly in the future due to accelerating sea level rise.