ANSTO provides groundwork for promising new nuclear medicine
Clarity Pharmaceuticals is building on comprehensive work on chelators carried out at ANSTO.
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Clarity Pharmaceuticals is building on comprehensive work on chelators carried out at ANSTO.
The Australian led regional cancer care project in medical physics held its first regional training course in Malaysia to progress Rays of Hope.
The 3D structure of a fungal and plant enzyme solves 50-year-old mystery.
The Graduate Institute is part of ANSTO’s Innovation Precinct and links all graduates together to create a network of Australia’s brightest young minds focused on the future.
The X-ray Fluorescence Nanoprobe beamline undertakes high-resolution X-ray microspectroscopy, elemental mapping and coherent diffraction imaging – providing a unique facility capable of spectroscopic and full-field imaging. Elemental mapping and XANES studies will be possible at sub-100 nm resolution, with structural features able to be studied down to 15 nm using scanning X-ray diffraction microscopy.
Sarah joined ANSTO in May as a part-time Marketing and Events Coordinator for the Nuclear Science and Technology group.
In May 2023, The Honourable Dr Annabelle Bennett, ANSTO Board Chair, shared ANSTO's Statement of Intent with the Minister for Industry, Science and Technology.
ANSTO showcased its significant contribution to security, safety, and public health during a visit of the Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Rafael Grossi, Minister for Industry and Science Ed Husic, Australian Ambassador to Austria Richard Sinclair and Ambassador for Arms Control and Counter-Proliferation Ian Biggs and other dignitaries at the weekend.
ANSTO radiocarbon facilities and scientists are featured in a new IMAX documentary film released in the United States.
ANSTO’s unique capabilities in cosmogenic nuclides included in glacial study grant.
ANSTO as a leading science research organization in Australia is committed to the ethical, humane and responsible care of animals used for scientific purposes.
A rare collection of traditional Aboriginal wooden objects in varying degrees of preservation found along a dry creek bed in South Australia have been dated to a period spanning 1650 to 1830 at the Centre for Accelerator Science at ANSTO.