Smartcrete on the horizon
Research infrastructure will support research and development of advanced concrete.
Showing 1021 - 1040 of 1472 results
Research infrastructure will support research and development of advanced concrete.
This week palaeontologists from Curtin University announced that a specimen from the collection of the Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum in Winton Queensland as the first near complete skull of a sauropod, a massive, long-tailed, long-necked, small-headed plant-eating dinosaur, found in Australia and other parts of the world.
Twenty-four participants from Asia and the Pacific travelled to ANSTO for an International Atomic Energy Agency Regional Training Course on ‘Production and preclinical evaluation of emerging cyclotron-based radiopharmaceuticals’
Australia’s new Mo-99 manufacturing facility reaches practical completion
Australian and New Zealand Society of Nuclear Medicine recognises Nigel Lengkeek
Highlighted at radiation protection congress
Launch of the second phase of construction of the underground laboratory to detect dark matter.
Incredible Insect Competition Winners of 2021. Digital colouring-in competition.
New cathode material provides a direction for the design of high performing sodium ion batteries for large scale energy storage
ANSTO to receive a new grant to continue to fight chronic kidney disease killer in Sri Lanka.
Consumers want to know that the foods they consume provide health benefits. Food materials science can monitor changes during digestion as well as assist in the development of low-fat products.
Elizabeth joined ANSTO at the beginning of 2024 and works as a Research Support Officer for Environment where she is involved in diverse research including ground water sampling and coral provenance.
ANSTO has been tracking and publishing data on fine particle pollution from key sites around Australia, and internationally, for more than 20 years.
ANSTO physicist will gain further experience in particle therapy technologies.