
Quokka - Small Angle Neutron Scattering
The QUOKKA instrument provides the powerful technique of small-angle neutron scattering which can look at sizes and structures of objects on the nanoscale including soft matter.
Showing 1001 - 1020 of 1525 results
The QUOKKA instrument provides the powerful technique of small-angle neutron scattering which can look at sizes and structures of objects on the nanoscale including soft matter.
Scandium 47, a therapeutic radioisotope and potential theranostic, has been produced for the first time at ANSTO. Theranostics are used to both diagnose and treat disease.
Funding for the reconstructing of Australia’s fire history.
Frequently Asked Questions on the Macromolecular Crystallography beamlines (MX1 and MX2)
A team of researchers from ANSTO and University of Technology Sydney have set a record by conducting thin film experiments at 1100 degrees C.
Dr Jessica Hamilton, a beamline scientist at the Australian Synchrotron, has won the Falling Walls Lab competition hosted by the Australian Academy of Science for her 3 minute presentation on a novel approach to using mining waste for carbon dioxide capture and a source of carbonate minerals. The event is held to deliver solutions to some of the most promising challenges of our time.
Radiocarbon dating is a well-known method for determining the age of materials up to the age of approximately 50,000 years.
Specifications, Instrument layout, and Instrument reference
Research to identify past human interactions with the environment and clarify information which may result from human impact or responses to changing environments.
ANSTO has provided supporting experimental evidence of a highly unusual quantum state, a quantum spin liquid (QSL), in a two-dimensional material.
The Panel Pledge aims to increase the visibility and contribution of women and diverse leaders in public and professional forums.
Griffith University researchers are conducting an experiment at ANSTO that will test a revolutionary physics theory that time reversal symmetry-breaking by neutrinos might cause a time dilation at the quantum scale.