The science of fireworks
There is chemistry at work to help us enjoy the New Year's Eve celebration.
Showing 461 - 480 of 1181 results
There is chemistry at work to help us enjoy the New Year's Eve celebration.
International research led by Curtin University and supported by ANSTO, has identified and studied the first sauropod dinosaur gut contents found anywhere in the world. The stomach content was preserved with a reasonably complete skeleton of the Australian Cretaceous species Diamantinasaurus matildae found in Winton Queensland.
Paper on redefinition of the kilogram receives international award
Innovative medical device Rhenium-SCT® therapy for non-melanoma skin cancer is now available in Australia
La Trobe University researchers have used the Australian Synchrotron in a new study that reveals how crocodiles resist fatal fungal infections with a unique pH sensing mechanism despite living in filthy water.
Phenomenon predicted by Nobel Prize recipient
Frequently asked questions about the ANSTO Security Process, travel funding, ANSTO Research Portal and ACNS Customer Portal.
Nine PhD students are taking part in a rare opportunity to deliver an innovative solution to a real-world challenge for an industry partner in ANSTO’s National Graduate Innovation Forum in association with the Australian Council of Deans of Science and the Australian Institute of Nuclear Science and Engineering.
Retrieving an Antarctic ice core more than a million years old presents challenges and opportunities.
ANSTO is celebrating the official opening of HIFAR, Australia’s first nuclear reactor, sixty-five years ago.
Using neutron imaging techniques at ANSTO, researchers from Macquarie University have gained a better understanding of how corrosion forms and spreads through concrete that is commonly used in sewer pipes.
Collaboration finds that old carbon reservoirs are unlikely to cause a massive greenhouse gas release in a warming world.
A fun educational app that teachers about nuclear medicine and industrial isotopes, and their benefits to society.
Study reveals that properties of polycrystalline materials can be derived from microscopic single crystal samples
An international team led by scientists at City University of Hong Kong has found flexible metal-organic framework (MOF) with one-dimensional channels that acts as a “molecular trapdoor” to selectively adsorb gases, such as carbon dioxide, in response to temperature and pressure changes.