Using uranium to create order from disorder
The first demonstration of reversible symmetry lowering phase transformation with heating.
Showing 941 - 960 of 1965 results
The first demonstration of reversible symmetry lowering phase transformation with heating.
ANSTO scientists share approach on the global stage at the IAEA General Conference.
New oxygen ion conducting material for use in solid oxide fuel cells and other devices
First publication from PELICAN and National Deuteration Facility
On average, there is now 17 per cent less rainfall across Western Australia’s south-western region than was recorded prior to 1970. This rainfall reduction has economic, social and environmental implications for the region, in particular for the growing capital of Perth, as well as water-dependent industries in the state.
A collaboration of scientists from RMIT, ANSTO and the CSIRO has published pioneering research that brings new insights into intrinsically disordered proteins and protein regions (IDPs)/ (IDRs) and how they behave under various physiological processes.
Dr Rezwanul Haque, now a senior lecturer at the University of the Sunshine Coast, received a national Young Scientist Award for his earlier research using nuclear techniques at ANSTO’s Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering to find cracks and signs of stress in riveted joints in sheet metal in car bodies.
Modelling and experimentation - a powerful combination in probing mechanical properties of ion irradiated materials through nanoindentation.
The Titan Krios cryo-electron microscope reveals the inner workings of life at the cellular level.
The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) has joined a team, lead by the US Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), to install a high resolution monitoring system at ANSTO’s medical isotope production facility in Lucas Heights, Australia.
Million year lag time in transport of sediment in Murray Darling River Basin system.
The proof of concept for the approach used in the early development of the new gamma-ray imaging system has been published,
Research has demonstrated that internally generated neutrons could be used to effectively target micro-infiltrates and cancer cells outside of the defined treatment regions.
Research has helped build a record of rainfall during the late Pleistocene and Holocene, and shed light on the strategies of Indigenous Australians to cope with a changing landscape.