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Role at ANSTO

Role at ANSTO

Before taking up her appointment at the Australian Synchrotron, Dr Cathy Harland was the ASRP (Australian Synchrotron Research Program) beamline scientist at XOR at the Advanced Photon Source in Chicago.
Celebrating crystallography - New video
Stopping yellow spot fungus that attacks wheat crops
Collaborators used X-ray imaging to understand the fine detail of how a damaging fungal pathogen reduces leaf function and grain yield of wheat crops.

Role at ANSTO
Insights on service life of industrial components
Electron and X-ray diffraction techniques provide insights into material damage under stress-strain conditions.
Researchers uncover how pathogens hijack phosphate pathways to infect crops
A team of scientists from The Australian National University (ANU) has discovered how a powerful “weapon” used by many fungal pathogens enables them to cause disease in major food crops such as rice and corn

Defence and aerospace
Defence requirements push your technology, we can help. ANSTO is home to some of Australia’s most important landmark research infrastructure – more than $1.3bn of it. Our unique capabilities are used by thousands of Australian researchers from industry and academia every year.

UM2022 Speakers
Breakthrough on virus infecting rare and endangered parrots
Potential immunotherapy strategy for HIV
A “super” receptor that helps kill HIV infected cells identified.

Role at ANSTO

ANSTO User Meeting - Speakers
ANSTO User Meeting 2021 - Speakers
Ultra-thin lithium strips show great promise as anode material for enhanced lithium ion batteries
Chinese researchers have eveloped a novel strategy for the scalable production of high-performance, thin, and free-standing lithium anodes for lithium-ion batteries with enhanced cycling stability and electrochemical properties.