International cooperation
Korean physicists concluding placement at ANSTO under a collaborative agreement.
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Korean physicists concluding placement at ANSTO under a collaborative agreement.
Dale Codling leads a team at ANSTO that is responsible for the operation, maintenance, and security of research facilities capable of handling nuclear and radioactive materials.
Collaboration across the Tasman has enabled Australian and New Zealand researchers and scientists to shed light on a protein involved in diseases such as Parkinson’s disease, gastric cancer and melanoma.
Spatz neutron reflectometer becomes 15th neutron scattering instrument that is used for studies of biological materials and other soft matter.
Insights about Mayan Empire relevant for current climate challenges
Prof Lyndon Edwards recognised for for excellent sustained contribution to materials engineering
Research elucidates how in situ cosmogenic radiocarbon is produced, retained and lost in the top layer of compacting snow (the ‘firn layer’) and the shallow ice below at an ice accumulation site in Greenland.
Research has revealed the Lapita cultural group interacted with the indigenous people of Papua New Guinea more than 3,000 years ago and set the stage for the peopling of the Pacific
ANSTO shares expertise on food authenticity research using nuclear techniques with Southeast Asia stakeholders.
Funding awarded for research on an additive manufacturing technique for use on rail infrastructure.
The process by which plastic degrades in the ocean facilitates its entry into the natural carbon cycle efficiently as carbon dioxide.
The instrument is very well suited for the study of kinetic effects, like relaxation following a chemical reaction, or external impulses like mechanical deformation, an electric or magnetic field.