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Dr Robert Ring answers the question: Is the Uranium processing industry prepared for future challenges?
ANSTO Event Code of Conduct
Proposed Facility Access Terms and Conditions
ANSTO sets out the following terms and conditions relating to users who access our facilities for the purpose of research.
Small Modular Reactors: An overview
Think Science! 2026: Bringing science skills together
The Think Science! competition encourages students in Years 3-10 to learn science inquiry skills in a fun and accessible way! Entry is FREE and there are generous prizes for winning schools. Any topic can be chosen, and special materials are not required.
ANSTO: A global leader in radiation safety and radioactive waste management
ANSTO: Australia’s knowledge centre for nuclear science and engineering.
Radiation biology
In space, without the protection of the magnetosphere, the type and dose of radiation is considerably different to what is naturally experienced on earth.
Role at ANSTO
Webinar: Impacts of Decommissioning Oil & Gas Infrastructure
Connect with the businesses and organisations seeking better understanding decommissioning oil and gas infrastructure and the potential impact of contaminants on marine life.
Beam time allocations for the first half of 2016
ANSTO’s virtual and augmented reality experience
An opportunity to take an unforgettable journey and explore ANSTO science virtually at the atomic scale for National #scienceweek
OPAL operating cycles
The OPAL research reactor operates on an annual (calendar year) program. This page provides details of OPAL's operating cycles including maintenance information.
Phoebe joined Taronga as part of the Wildlife Hospital team in 2012, where she developed a research interest in conservation forensics, leading an international project developing forensic tools to help save the world’s most hea
Role at ANSTO
Role at ANSTO
Technical information - SAXS / WAXS
Technical information on the SAXS / WAXS beamline at the Australian Synchrotron.
Scientists untangle the challenging complexities of radiocarbon in ice cores
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.
Snaphot of molecular mechanism at work in lethal virus
X-ray crystallography at the Australian Synchrotron contributed to major research findings.
Dark matter lab funded
ANSTO to ensure ultra-low radiation environment in newly-funded Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory.