National Science Week: Success with virtual events
Virtual activities celebrating the benefits of nuclear science and technology held for National Science Week
Showing 1241 - 1260 of 2006 results
Virtual activities celebrating the benefits of nuclear science and technology held for National Science Week
State- of-the-art microdosimeters used in research
Radiocarbon dating of mud wasp nests was used as an indirect method of dating the Gwion Gwion style.
Elastic Recoil Detection Analysis (ERDA) is used principally as a method for measuring hydrogen in thin layers, and in the near-surface region of materials.
Research undertaken by Flinders University, the University of Cincinnati (US), Guangzhou University (China) and ANSTO has evaluated a new process to encapsulate fish oil in nanoparticles
Over the past 70 years ANSTO has been building Australia’s nuclear expertise and despite being small in scale, today we are complex and sophisticated nuclear nation.
ANSTO is participating in a new Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Indigenous and Environmental Histories and Futures (CIEHF) to be headquartered at James Cook University (JCU) that aims to bring Indigenous and environmental histories to the forefront of land and sea management.
Applications, Recent results, publications.
Supercomputing power helps unlock secrets in the ice.
Science and medical experts meet in Adelaide to discuss great potential of particle therapy in Australia
Principal Research Scientist Andrew Smith is travelling to the Taylor Glacier in Antarctica with American collaborators on a 3-year National Science Foundation project now in its final year that involves mining tonnes of ice for palaeoclimate research.
Two ANSTO physicist explain the three-body problem as featured in science fiction series of the same name
Dr Helen Maynard-Casely will be taking neutron physics on a road trip
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