Robotics hub to improve management of Australian infrastructure and assets
ANSTO participation in ARC on Intelligent Robotic Systems for Real-time Asset Management has potential benefit in the management of infrastructure and assets
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ANSTO participation in ARC on Intelligent Robotic Systems for Real-time Asset Management has potential benefit in the management of infrastructure and assets
Advances in radon measurement technology by ANSTO researchers over the past decade have enabled the improved characterisation of the composition of pristine air masses that reach Antarctica.
ANSTO is collaborating on a project funded with an Australian Research Council linkage grant that will develop new materials and better systems for efficiently storing hydrogen gas.
Using isotopes to understand saltwater intrusion of Rottnest Island groundwater
Experiments at the Synchrotron enable researchers to produce a 3D structure of a molecular scaffold with role in cancer
Best and brightest recognised in 2017 research awards
Melbourne researchers have used the Australian Synchrotron to produce structure of molecule known to play a critical role in the development and spread of aggressive cancer.
A world-first processing technology developed in collaboration by ANSTO’s Minerals unit.
Ongoing media statements relating to nuclear medicine production.
ANSTO is taking its innovative ANSTO Synroc® and CORIS360® technologies to the world stage at the Waste Management Symposia 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona USA this week (10 – 14 March 2024). Joining over 45 other countries and around 3,000 attendees, an Australian Government contingent comprising of ANSTO and the Australian Radioactive Waste Agency is in attendance to showcase Australia’s extensive radioactive waste management capabilities.
The ARC Centre of Excellence (CoE) for Green Electrochemical Transformation of Carbon Dioxide, GETCO2, will support innovative approaches to carbon capture.
An international team of academic researchers led by Curtin University have provided a description of a new species of pterosaur, a flying reptile.
ANSTO has secured a $1.62 million Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) grant under the Australian Brain Cancer Mission’s 2024 Brain Cancer Discovery and Translation program, administered by the Department of Health and Aged Care.
Dr Mitra Safavi Naeini continues her commentary of the radiation studies being undertaken in the Artemis II mission.
Collaborative research predicted the distortion and performance of metal parts made by laser deposition.
ANSTO Big Ideas encourages students to creatively communicate the work of an Australian scientist, and explain how their work has inspired them to come up with a Big Idea to make our world a better place. This competition is intended to engage and support Australian students in years 7-10 in Science and encourage them to pursue studies and careers in STEM.
MABI instrument can determine both the concentration and source of black carbon pollution in the atmosphere.
The 3D structure of a fungal and plant enzyme solves 50-year-old mystery.
The process by which plastic degrades in the ocean facilitates its entry into the natural carbon cycle efficiently as carbon dioxide.