Insights on service life of industrial components
Electron and X-ray diffraction techniques provide insights into material damage under stress-strain conditions.
Showing 421 - 440 of 792 results
Electron and X-ray diffraction techniques provide insights into material damage under stress-strain conditions.
An accomplished international photographer has capture dazzling new images of one component of the main ring at our Australian Synchrotron and provided an inside view of the electron’s path when it is used.
The start of ANSTO’s research to support the Securing Antarctica’s Environmental Future (SAEF) program commenced with the official launch of the program and the departure of two students from Queensland University of Technology (QUT), who are affiliated with ANSTO to Antarctica’s Macquarie Island for six months to collect environmental samples as part of the (SAEF) program.
Restoring soil carbon can bring benefits for agricultural productivity and climate change mitigation.
In Australia and the Southeast Asia basin, the ANSTO facility offers a wide range of unique nuclear-beam techniques for cultural heritage research.
ANSTO contributes to new international project to improve how the world assesses the economic viability of Small Modular Reactors
An international collaboration led by The University of Sydney and supported by ANSTO has developed an advanced, innovative artificial intelligence application that could be used to help examine tissue samples and identify signs of disease/
This week women in science from 16 countries came together like never before. Inspiring women, young and old, were the first to complete the W4NSEC (Women for Nuclear Science Education and Communication) program that is designed to support women who are wanting to improve their education and communication skills in nuclear science.
A world-class national research facility that uses accelerator technology to produce a powerful source of light-X rays and infrared radiation a million times brighter than the sun.
Million year lag time in transport of sediment in Murray Darling River Basin system.
Technique provides insights into historic maritime artefact linked to early exploration of Australia.
Taipan is used to study the collective motion of atoms, phonons and magnons in materials, and phase transitions and processes involving thermal energy.
Insights into the behaviour of structural materials in a molten salt environment